Make Drag and Drop an application-wide operation.
This allows do drop on Controls in other Viewports/Windows.
In order to achieve this, `Viewport::_update_mouse_over` is adjusted to
remember the Control, that the mouse is over (possibly within nested
viewports). This Control is used as a basis for the Drop-operation, which
replaces the previous algorithm, which was only aware of the topmost
Viewport.
Also now all nodes in the SceneTree are notified about the Drag and Drop
operation, with the exception of SubViewports that are not children of
SubViewportContainers.
While experimenting with the recent "extent to title" PR, I noticed that
it's not guaranteed for a "button released" event to be emitted when
the pointer leaves the main surface, leaving some buttons stuck.
Not doing this for tablets since the spec makes this behavior clear and
explicit, so we (hopefully) shouldn't have this issue there.
Features:
- Debug-only tracking of objects by type. See
get_driver_allocs_by_object_type et al.
- Debug-only Breadcrumb info for debugging GPU crashes and device lost
- Performance report per frame from get_perf_report
- Some VMA calls had to be modified in order to insert the necessary
memory callbacks
Functionality marked as "debug-only" is only available in debug or dev
builds.
Misc fixes:
- Early break optimization in RenderingDevice::uniform_set_create
============================
The work was performed by collaboration of TheForge and Google. I am
merely splitting it up into smaller PRs and cleaning it up.
Before, they would always complain even if there was no attempt at
initializing them (e.g. because there's no X11 display).
While we're at it, this patch also adds a specific message for OpenGL ES
and rewords "OpenGLES" to "OpenGL ES" in an error, for consistency
(AFAIK we either say "GLES" or "OpenGL ES").
Before, multiple capability events would instantiate the same object
over and over as long as its bit was set. This caused issues with
hotplug and device suspension.
On Windows this allows to avoid having to change the owner of the window
after it has been created, which in rare circumstances may cause the
window to bug out.
Allocated XImages are improperly free'd with XFree.
The X11 documentation says that XImage should use
XDestroyImage to free both the image structure and
the data pointed to by the image structure.
Also fix a potential use-after-free bug.
This reduces even further the amount of work we have to do when scaling
and potentially improves input accuracy as now the input code is free
from any form of rounding.
Before of this patch, as explained in the usual
commented-wall-of-text-longer-than-the-actual-patch-itself™, due to the
multithreaded nature of the Wayland thread, it was possible to commit a
surface while the renderer was doing stuff, which was _very_ wrong.
Initially the consequences of such a sin weren't obvious but, now that
explicit synchronization is becoming more and more common, we can't
commit a buffer randomly without basically guaranteeing a nasty, nasty
crash (and we should have avoided commits altogether in the first place
to ensure atomic surface updates).
We now only trigger a commit _in the main thread_ when low processor usage
mode is on _and_ if we know that we won't be rendering anything as, due to
its intermittent nature, it makes "legacy" (pre xdg_wm_base v6) frame
callback based suspension quite annoying.
- Make warnings print only once per session.
- Tweak the message to be less confusing, and mention that the issue
most likely stems from a graphics driver limitation.
Input events go to the tooltip because it's added to `popup_list` in
DisplayServer `popup_open`. I think there's no harm in tooltips being omitted
from the list, so this commit blocks non-popup windows from being added if they
have `FLAG_NO_FOCUS` and `FLAG_MOUSE_PASSTHROUGH`.
I'm not happy with this way of detecting tooltips. It'll also catch other
windows where this behavior may or may not be wanted.
I thought about adding `FLAG_TOOLTIP`, but went with the smaller change for
now.
Fixes#79500.
This avoids any assumption from the driver, which would otherwise select
a specific platform and potentially mess up everything, resulting
usually in a display server failure.