This allows color operations to happen in linear space between sRGB input and sRGB output. This is currently supported on the direct3d11, direct3d12 and opengl renderers.
This is a good resource on blending in linear space vs sRGB space:
https://blog.johnnovak.net/2016/09/21/what-every-coder-should-know-about-gamma/
Also added testcolorspace to verify colorspace changes
The usable fullscreen bounds need to be queried after window creation, as Wayland can send different usable bounds depending on the focused window's scaling mode.
The drawing uses the origin of the viewport as the coordinate origin, so we only need to clip against the size of the viewport.
Also added a unit test to catch this case in the future
These functions historically didn't set the error indicator on overflow.
Before commit 447b508a "error: SDL's allocators now call SDL_OutOfMemory
on error", their callers would call SDL_OutOfMemory() instead, which was
assumed to be close enough in meaning: "that's a silly amount of memory
that would overflow size_t" is similar to "that's more memory than
is available". Now that responsibility for calling SDL_OutOfMemory()
has been pushed down into SDL_calloc() and friends, the functions that
check for overflows might as well set more specific errors.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
A surface of width (0x7fff'ffff) / 2 = 0x3fff'ffff is not quite large
enough to make the pitch overflow in the way we wanted to test here:
with a 32-bit format, that makes each row 0xffff'fffc bytes, which
(just) fits in a 32-bit unsigned size_t. Increasing it to 0x4000'0000
pixels per row is enough to trigger the overflow we intended to test.
In SDL 2, this test bug was hidden by the fact that allocating
0xffff'fffc bytes on a 32-bit platform is very likely to fail, and SDL 2
reported both "malloc() failed" and "this amount of memory is too large
for a size_t" with the same error code.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Adding 3 bytes of alignment to 0x7fff'ffff is not enough to make it
overflow a 4-byte unsigned size_t, so this test was not exercising
the intended failure mode. We cannot actually make this overflow
with a signed 32-bit width and an 8-bit format: the maximum width is
not enough to achieve that. However, if we switch to a 24-bit format,
we can make the calculation overflow.
In SDL 2, this test bug was hidden by the fact that allocating
0x7fff'ffff bytes on a 32-bit platform will usually fail, and SDL 2
reported both "malloc() failed" and "this amount of memory is too large
for a size_t" with the same error code.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Add the ability to import and wrap external surfaces from external toolkits such as Qt and GTK.
Wayland surfaces and windows are more intrinsically tied to the client library than other windowing systems, so it is necessary to provide a way to initialize SDL with an existing wl_display object, which needs to be set prior to video system initialization, or export the internal SDL wl_display object for use by external applications or toolkits. For this, the global property SDL_PROPERTY_GLOBAL_VIDEO_WAYLAND_WL_DISPLAY_POINTER is used.
A Wayland example was added to testnative, and a basic example of Qt 6 interoperation is provided in the Wayland readme to demonstrate the use of external windows with both SDL owning the wl_display, and an external toolkit owning it.
Allow for the creation of SDL windows with a roleless surface that applications can use for their own purposes, such as with a windowing protocol other than XDG toplevel.
The property `wayland.surface_role_custom` will create a window with a surface that SDL can render to and handles input for, but is not associated with a toplevel window, so applications can use it for their own, custom purposes (e.g. wlr_layer_shell).
A test/minimal example is included in tests/testwaylandcustom.c
When a test has been disabled because it's known not to work reliably
or it's a test for unimplemented functionality, we probably don't want
to encourage developers and testers to run it and report its failures
as a bug.
Helps: #8798, #8800
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>