58ee271bff
For years it's been common practice to free the object containing the wl_listener inside resource destruction notifiers, but not remove the listener from the list. That is: It's been safe to assume (when only one listener is present) that the wl_listener will never be touched again, since this is a destruction callback. Recently some patches were reviewed that made some positive changes to our internal signal handling code, but would've violated this assumption, and changed free()d memory in several existing compositors (weston, mutter, enlightenment). Since the breakage was extremely subtle, codify this assumption in a test case (thus promoting it to an ABI promise). Reviewed-by: Pekka Paalanen <pekka.paalanen@collabora.co.uk> Reviewed-by: Markus Ongyerth <wl@ongy.net> Signed-off-by: Derek Foreman <derekf@osg.samsung.com> |
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cursor | ||
doc | ||
egl | ||
m4 | ||
protocol | ||
spec | ||
src | ||
tests | ||
.gitignore | ||
autogen.sh | ||
configure.ac | ||
COPYING | ||
Makefile.am | ||
publish-doc | ||
README | ||
TODO | ||
wayland-scanner.m4 | ||
wayland-scanner.mk |
What is Wayland? Wayland is a project to define a protocol for a compositor to talk to its clients as well as a library implementation of the protocol. The compositor can be a standalone display server running on Linux kernel modesetting and evdev input devices, an X application, or a wayland client itself. The clients can be traditional applications, X servers (rootless or fullscreen) or other display servers. The wayland protocol is essentially only about input handling and buffer management. The compositor receives input events and forwards them to the relevant client. The clients creates buffers and renders into them and notifies the compositor when it needs to redraw. The protocol also handles drag and drop, selections, window management and other interactions that must go through the compositor. However, the protocol does not handle rendering, which is one of the features that makes wayland so simple. All clients are expected to handle rendering themselves, typically through cairo or OpenGL. The weston compositor is a reference implementation of a wayland compositor and the weston repository also includes a few example clients. Building the wayland libraries is fairly simple, aside from libffi, they don't have many dependencies: $ git clone git://anongit.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland $ cd wayland $ ./autogen.sh --prefix=PREFIX $ make $ make install where PREFIX is where you want to install the libraries. See http://wayland.freedesktop.org for more complete build instructions for wayland, weston, xwayland and various toolkits.