First: disable d'n'd events by default; most apps don't need these at all, and
if an app doesn't explicitly handle these, each drop on the window will cause
a memory leak if the events are enabled. This follows the guidelines we have
for SDL_TEXTINPUT events already.
Second: when events are enabled or disabled, signal the video layer, as it
might be able to inform the OS, causing UI changes or optimizations (for
example, dropping a file icon on a Cocoa app that isn't accepting drops will
cause macOS to show a rejection animation instead of the drop operation just
vanishing into the ether, X11 might show a different cursor when dragging
onto an accepting window, etc).
Third: fill in the drop event details in the test library and enable the
events in testwm.c for making sure this all works as expected.
Eric Wasylishen
This bug was reintroduced by https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/fcf24b38a28a
The steps to reproduce are the same: run the "testrelative" SDL demo with "--info all",
connect a USB mouse with a scroll wheel, and roll the scroll wheel one "notch". You'll get log output like:
testdraw2[1644:67222] INFO: SDL EVENT: Mouse: wheel scrolled 0 in x and 0 in y (reversed: 1) in window 1
As far as I can tell macOS doesn't have an API for getting the number of "wheel notches"; I get a deltaY of 0.100006 for one "notch", and it's heavily accelerated (if you roll the wheel quickly you'll get large deltas). So NSEvent's deltaY is only meant to be used for scrolling a scroll view, with the given distance in points, not something like selecting an item in a game.
Here's a temporary patch that at restores the foor/ceil in Cocoa_HandleMouseWheel.
Not ideal, but at least it restores the ability to scroll one notch of a mousewheel.
This tries to load vulkan.framework or libvulkan.1.dylib before MoltenVK.framework
or libMoltenVK.dylib. In the previous version, layers would not work for applications
run-time loading the default library.
SDL now builds with gcc 7.2 with the following command line options:
-Wall -pedantic-errors -Wno-deprecated-declarations -Wno-overlength-strings --std=c99
Andrey
Seems latest google angle library successfully built & tested under macOS'es.
https://github.com/google/angle
We need to use GLES2 to implement true cross-platform code.
C Snover
SDL_AddDisplayMode returns an SDL_bool corresponding to whether or not the given display mode was added or not. It will return SDL_FALSE if a matching display mode already exists in the display's list of display modes, which causes ownership of the mode driverdata to remain with the caller. Some video drivers ignore the return value of SDL_AddDisplayMode, so leak the driverdata memory when SDL_AddDisplayMode returns SDL_FALSE.
Changing the background color causes the titlebar to blend against it on
modern macOS releases, making all SDL windows look wrong by default. This was
set to make the window not flash white before a GL context is ready, but we
can accomplish this in our window's view's drawRect implementation, too.
Andreas Falkenhahn
My app opens a 640x480 window. When I click on the window's maximize button, the window correctly fills the entire screen and loses its borders. But clicking on the restore button now doesn't restore the window to its original 640x480 size. Instead, the window size is identical to the screen size now. The only difference to the previous state is that the window now has borders again but it isn't restored to 640x480.
bastien.bouclet
The window is now resized to its specified size, but it moves to the top left corner of the screen. That is unexpected because neither the user nor the program moved it there. Test program attached (the same one as before).
This also seems to fix the follow-up issue in bug #3719, whereby the initial fix caused the SDL window to move, after transitioning from fullscreen to windowed-mode
bastien.bouclet
When exiting a "fullscreen space" on OS X, windows don't go to their defined "windowed mode size", but go back to their previous size.
Steps to reproduce:
1. Create a windowed mode SDL window
2. Toggle it to fullscreen with the SDL_WINDOW_FULLSCREEN_DESKTOP flag
3. While in fullscreen, change the windowed mode size using SDL_SetWindowSize
4. Toggle the window back to windowed mode
Expected result:
- The window has the size specified during step 3.
Actual result:
- The window has the size specified when creating the window in step 1.
Attached is a minimal reproduction test case.
The attached test case works as expected on X11 and Windows.
Ozkan Sezer
Since the Vulkan merge, building against a Mac OS X SDM older than
10.11 fails in SDL_cocoametalview.m because Metal.framework is not
present. There is no conditional compiling in SDL_cocoametalview.m
either, so --disable-video-vulkan doesn't help with anything. (The
configury doesn't check darwin for x86_64 either, but it's another
story.)
I cross-build against 10.8 SDK on linux using clang-3.4.2 and this
is a problem for me. Will this be fixed?
Error message was:
[mvk-info] MoltenVK version 0.18.2. Vulkan version 1.0.51.
[***MoltenVK ERROR***] VK_ERROR_INITIALIZATION_FAILED: On-screen rendering requires a view that is backed by a layer of type CAMetalLayer.
2017-08-28 02:17:29.579 testvulkan[95627:1716939] ERROR: SDL_Vulkan_CreateSurface(): vkCreateMacOSSurfaceMVK failed: VK_ERROR_INITIALIZATION_FAILED
Martijn Courteaux
I implemented precise scrolling events. I have been through all the folders in /src/video/[platform] to implement where possible. This works on OS X, but I can't speak for others. Build farm will figure that out, I guess. I think this patch should introduce precise scrolling on OS X, Wayland, Mir, Windows, Android, Nacl, Windows RT.
The way I provide precise scrolling events is by adding two float fields to the SDL_MouseWheelScrollEvent datastructure, called "preciseX" and "preciseY". The old integer fields "x" and "y" are still present. The idea is that every platform specific code normalises the scroll amounts and forwards them to the SDL_SendMouseWheel function. It is this function that will now accumulate these (using a static variable, as I have seen how it was implemented in the Windows specific code) and once we hit a unit size, set the traditional integer "x" and "y" fields.
I believe this is pretty solid way of doing it, although I'm not the expert here.
There is also a fix in the patch for a typo recently introduced, that might need to be taken away by the time anybody merges this in. There is also a file in Nacl which I have stripped a horrible amount of trailing whitespaces. (Leave that part out if you want).
Eric Wasylishen
I think I found a better fix.
The problem with https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/ebdc0738b1b5 is setting the styleMask to 0 clears the NSWindowStyleMaskFullScreen bit, which then confuses Cocoa later when you try to leave fullscreen. Instead I'm just clearing the NSWindowStyleMaskResizable bit, although SetWindowStyle(window, NSWindowStyleMaskFullScreen); seems to also work.
Eric Wasylishen
Unfortunately this commit seems to have broken exiting desktop-fullscreen.
- Launch testgl2.
- Press alt+enter to go fullscreen-desktop
- Press alt+enter again. The spinning cube will freeze, and the window stays fullscreen desktop.