On X11 we already had to wait as window managers might scroll windows
in. On macOS we also waited - albeit a bit shorter - also because
screens scroll in slowly.
We didn't wait on Windows, and on Windows the test is quite flaky.
Attempting to make it run stably by waiting for long enough so that all
paint events are flushed to the screen.
As a drive-by, break some overly long lines.
Task-number: QTBUG-100412
Pick-to: 6.3
Change-Id: I49b1e447aced2fe1af3c5d30b514f8df3cc1813c
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
The test also fails on Windows 11
Pick-to: 6.2 6.3
Task-number: QTBUG-98475
Change-Id: Iab079587d743500d222f2272d1145424e079b4a3
Reviewed-by: Heikki Halmet <heikki.halmet@qt.io>
If id == 0, then we should grab the specified rect from the screen.
To do that, find all windows intersecting with the screen geometry, and
compose their backing store images into a screen-size pixmap.
Otherwise, find the respective backing store and grab only that.
Remove the old code respecting the desktop widget, which is no longer a
thing in Qt 6. The code was also wrongly grabbing only the first
containing - not intersecting - window's backing store into the screen
pixmap.
Enable the QScreen::grabImage test for the offscreen platform, where it
now passes.
Task-number: QTBUG-99962
Change-Id: I16eca7b082d65095a62c73624f86a4423e997a7a
Reviewed-by: Qt CI Bot <qt_ci_bot@qt-project.org>
Reviewed-by: Laszlo Agocs <laszlo.agocs@qt.io>
This code didn't actually use QMutableEventPoint::from(), so didn't
run into the UB that from() depended on, but it's in the way of making
QMutableEventPoint a befriendable namespace instead of a public
subclass of QEventPoint.
Replaced the QMutableEventPoint ctor that takes a timestamp, and
therefore isn't compatible with the ctors on QEventPoint, with a
static function that returns QEventPoint instead.
Port QList initialization to braced-initialization as a drive-by.
Task-number: QTBUG-99615
Pick-to: 6.3
Change-Id: If5a1dbea21cc31cdefdb640716793421c8ec0af4
Reviewed-by: Shawn Rutledge <shawn.rutledge@qt.io>
The header no longer uses QMutableEventPoint.
Fix TUs that relied on the transitive include.
Task-number: QTBUG-99615
Pick-to: 6.3
Change-Id: Iae4ff34ea708304fcd365fd763875dd4a97a1cf8
Reviewed-by: Fabian Kosmale <fabian.kosmale@qt.io>
The test is impacted by the position of the mouse cursor, and fails if
the mouse enters the test window when it gets shown. Try to move the
cursor away from the window.
As a drive-by, const'ify some of the local variables.
Revert 7b4b5115dd by removing the
blacklisting of the test on macOS in CI.
Pick-to: 6.3 6.2
Change-Id: Ia0c554fdf161fd4eb4aa3965e937c7db8ceeef8f
Reviewed-by: Shawn Rutledge <shawn.rutledge@qt.io>
setPos() takes a screen argument, however this argument
indicates which cursor should be moved only and is
not usable as an argument to toNativePixels() since
the position may be on a sibling screen.
Add call to QScreen::virtualSiblingAt to get the target
screen.
Task-number: QTBUG-99009
Pick-to: 6.3 6.2 5.15
Change-Id: I8714ebc93a283c58bc67911315f787c484fb0dd8
Reviewed-by: Liang Qi <liang.qi@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
QWidget and QWindow use bits in QObjectPrivate to provide for a couple
of shortcuts -- one in qobject_cast, and another in the isWidgetType() /
isWindowType() functions in QObject. These can be optimized by simply
looking at the bits, without actually doing more expensive runtime
casts.
These bits were set on construction, but not unset on destruction. The
result was for instance that destroying a QWidget would report that the
object was still a QWidget when ~QObject was reached.
Fix this
1) by setting the bits only when QWidget / QWindow constructors start;
2) by resetting the bits once ~QWidget / ~QWindow are completed.
Technically speaking this is not 100% correct in the presence of data
members, but luckily those classes don't have any.
Amend an existing test for QWidget (whose comment said exactly the
opposite of what the test actually did) and add a test for QWindow.
Some other code was wrongly relying on isWidgetType() returning true
for destroyed QWidgets; amend it as needed.
[ChangeLog][QtCore][QObject] Using qobject_cast on partially constructed
or destroyed QWidget/QWindow instances now yields correct results.
Similarly, using the convenience isWidgetType() / isWindowType()
functions now correctly return false on such instances. Before,
qobject_cast (and the convenience functions) would erroneously report
that a given object was a QWidget (resp. QWindow) even during that
object's construction (before QObject's constructor had completed) or
destruction (after QWidget's (resp. QWindow's) destructors had been
completed). This was semantically wrong and inconsistent with other ways
of gathering runtime type information regarding such an object (e.g.
dynamic_cast, obj->metaObject()->className() and so on).
Pick-to: 6.3
Change-Id: Ic45a887951755a9d1a3b838590f1e9f2c4ae6e92
Reviewed-by: Qt CI Bot <qt_ci_bot@qt-project.org>
Reviewed-by: Marc Mutz <marc.mutz@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
We were clipping the source rect to the image, both pre and post
scrolling, but did not apply the same logic to the target position.
By computing the target position based on the already clipped source
rect we ensure that the target position is also correct.
This was causing valgrind warnings on Linux, and crashes on Windows,
when trying to test the lower level QBackingStore::scroll() function.
The reason we were not seeing this in practice was that QWidget does
its own sanitation and clipping of the arguments before passing them
on.
As a drive-by, fix the access of image to use constBits instead of a
manual cast, and rename variables to better reflect their use.
Pick-to: 6.3 6.2 5.15
Change-Id: Ibc190c2ef825e634956758f612a018f642f4202b
Reviewed-by: Qt CI Bot <qt_ci_bot@qt-project.org>
Reviewed-by: Eirik Aavitsland <eirik.aavitsland@qt.io>
After 556511f9f3, which moved the resolve
mask storage into the palette's d-pointer, modifying the resolve mask
requires a detach. As of now, we only detached when setting a different
brush, but always modified the resolve mask, which broke palettes that
shared the d-pointer (likely the global default palette).
However, detaching has negative side effects when styles set brushes on
temporary palette objects and then use that palette object's cache key
to build a cache of pixmaps. As each drawing would detach the palette
(even if the palette doesn't change, which is likely), the cache key
changes with each detach, and the cache would quickly increase in size.
This was addressed in changes d7bcdc3a44
and 1e75dcf251.
We can either detach and find other ways to address the issues from
QTBUG-65475, or we can not change the resolve mask when the brush doesn't
change and completely ignore the call.
Since QFont ignores the setting of any attribute to a value that is
identical to the current value, and since it's possible to force that
the resolve-bit is set by calling setBrush twice with different brushes,
ignoring the call seems like the better solution.
[ChangeLog][QtGui][QPalette] Setting a brush on a palette that is
identical to the current brush no longer sets the resolve mask bit for
that particular role, so items using the palette will continue to
inherit changes from parent items.
Fixes: QTBUG-98762
Task-number: QTBUG-65475
Pick-to: 6.2
Change-Id: Ife0f934b6a066858408ef75b7bb7ab61193ceb47
Reviewed-by: Simon Hausmann <hausmann@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
QWidget will call close() in its destructor, which we might end up
in if a user deletes the widget in the closeEvent.
Pick-to: 6.2
Change-Id: I39684aec0ca130033dad60f2bbf823364a5edcec
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
In a512e210ac5b032c5fc2edf1ddf72e5a414485fda512e21 quitOnLastWindowClosed
was changed to be implemented in terms of quitLockEnabled, but without
any documentation to that end.
Although the two features are similar (automatic quit under certain
conditions), and interact, it doesn't make sense to overlap them until
we actually expose them as a single property (automaticQuit e.g.)
The logic for determining whether we can can quit automatically has
been refactored to take both properties into account, on both a Core
and Gui level. The call sites still need to check the individual
properties to determine whether to activate automatic quit for
that particular code path.
Change-Id: I38c3e8cb30db373ea73dd45f150e5048c0db2f4d
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
They return a pointer to the actual header, skipping the magic string.
This is done in preparation for the header located in an ELF note, which
won't have the magic.
Change-Id: I3eb1bd30e0124f89a052fffd16a8229bec2ad588
Reviewed-by: Qt CI Bot <qt_ci_bot@qt-project.org>
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
After the recent refactoring in 28b14b966f
this test should run stable on all platforms. However, the way the test
was written made it quite flaky. Simplify it to verify that closing one
window doesn't prevent a second timer to fire (which it would if closing
the first window already quit the application).
Change-Id: I0306792cd7573ebd3418d1aabffe2b78700ec2d9
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
Verifies that we get the messages we want, and makes it easier to see
relevant debug output.
Pick-to: 6.2
Change-Id: Ide92959b120f325badbf200236cdc85f72226e1e
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
- process environment/DNS are OFF for INTEGRITY
Task-number: QTBUG-96176
Pick-to: 6.2
Change-Id: I189a97f88c96a428586c31a66b8d250e04482900
Reviewed-by: Edward Welbourne <edward.welbourne@qt.io>
Export configuration() and setConfiguration() from the offscreen
platform plugin using QPlatformNativeInterface. tst_qighdpi can
then resolve and make use of them since it always uses the offscreen
platform plugin.
Add screenDpiChange() auto test.
Change-Id: I459b4df5d94ec4991234a346e3a94618cb3485e9
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
Verify that closing a QWindow using either the close()
API or a close event works as expected, and that the window
can be re-created. Also test QWindows with child windows.
Task-number: QTBUG-46701
Change-Id: I4c12452ff58e1233536c2d6932e72cf924d8ed74
Reviewed-by: Richard Moe Gustavsen <richard.gustavsen@qt.io>
The QtTest best practices documentations recommends using output
mechanisms such as qDebug() and qWarning() for diagnostic messages,
and this is also what most of our own tests do.
The QWARN() macro and corresponding internal QTest::qWarn() function
was added when QtTest was first implemented, but was likely meant as
an internal implementation detail, like its cousin QTestLog::info(),
which does not have any corresponding macro.
This theory is backed by our own QtTest self-test (tst_silent)
describing the output from QWARN() as "an internal testlib warning".
The only difference between QWARN() and qWarning(), besides the much
richer feature set of the latter, is that qWarning() will not pass
on file and line number information in release mode, but QWARN() will.
This is an acceptable loss of functionality, considering that the user
can override this behavior by defining QT_MESSAGELOGCONTEXT.
[ChangeLog][QtTest] QWARN() has been deprecated in favor of qWarning()
Pick-to: 6.2
Change-Id: I5a2431ce48c47392244560dd520953b9fc735c85
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Fixes compiler warnings:
warning: implicit capture of ‘this’ via ‘[=]’ is deprecated in C++20 [-Wdeprecated]
Change-Id: Ia7cf50f491e92f39162c69afb2a8320afedba056
Reviewed-by: Giuseppe D'Angelo <giuseppe.dangelo@kdab.com>
We need those events to trigger palette color group changes in QQuickItem
without having to connect every item to yet another QWindow signal.
Task-number: QTBUG-93752
Pick-to: 6.2
Change-Id: I8534808cdaab828e5876f8fda31567aeb1b4272a
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
Currently, we test at 1x, 2x, and mixed typical desktop
DPI values. Add android DPI values, with scale factors
in the 2.5 - 3.75 range.
This test currently uses 96 as the base DPI (and so
does the Android platform plugin), so we normalize
the values to use that base DPI.
Change-Id: I25b66f5e16d37c01758d5623b805e4141247a74a
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
Test the name=factor format and various incorrect spec
strings. We expect that the screen DPI is used if the
scale factor specification is incorrect.
Change-Id: Ia990e70cf71e370dd2bb4b1047a101dfe9e59cb0
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
This reverts commit 40330b8f0a.
It was a bad idea to use QFlatMap here, because it is a sorted map, but
we need to keep the passive grabbers in the same order as the grabs happened.
So need to go back to an earlier version of the patch that uses two parallel QLists.
Pick-to: 6.1
Change-Id: I9e6013c2565986fe1eb9fd754f8259766f83bee5
Reviewed-by: Fabian Kosmale <fabian.kosmale@qt.io>
QHighDpiScaling has two init/update functions:
- initHighDpiScaling(): called once during QGuiApplication construction
- updateHighDpiScaling(): called whenever (relevant) screen configuration changes
Currently the calls to updateHighDpiScaling() are made from
multiple places including platform code. Simplify by calling
it from two locations:
- QWindowSystemInterface::handleScreenAdded()
- QGuiApplicationPrivate::processScreenLogicalDotsPerInchChange()
Replace comment about early calls to qt_defaultDpi with a
test which calls qt_defaultDpiX/Y with no screens attached.
(Looking at the qt_defaultDpiX() implementation, it is unlikely
that there will be a problem as long as updateHighDpiScaling()
is called before QGuiApplication::primaryScreen() starts returning
a non-null value.)
Change-Id: I447db42894617495843a5cb531a1322b000fed62
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
In Qt Quick we now need to keep track of which QQDeliveryAgent is
responsible when a point is grabbed, either passively or exclusively.
When we re-deliver to that grabber, we need to do it via the same agent,
so that the same scene transform is used, and the grabber will see the
event in the correct coordinate system. It's easier to track this
mapping here instead of in a separate map in Qt Quick.
Pick-to: 6.1
Task-number: QTBUG-92944
Change-Id: I69f769c694d0da24885cdf4087e5032022bff629
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
Those tests don't fail anymore and show in CI as BPASS, so we
can safely, hopefully, unblock them
Task-number: QTBUG-87429
Fixes: QTBUG-68974
Fixes: QTBUG-69166
Fixes: QTBUG-87403
Fixes: QTBUG-87411
Fixes: QTBUG-69083
Fixes: QTBUG-69084
Fixes: QTBUG-87426
Pick-to: 6.1
Change-Id: I831b955116c0f465319b9c5fc726dd98804d1c00
Reviewed-by: Edward Welbourne <edward.welbourne@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
Test that setting QT_USE_PHYSICAL_DPI uses physical
DPI instead of logical DPI.
Change-Id: I7f89cf1af5e013454cc3d8ec3559f2719514fea3
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
Add auto-tests for QT_SCALE_FACTOR and QT_SCREEN_SCALE_FACTORS
Change-Id: I57bffa266be910f2ba26cb1a870e09ae202fcae0
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
The tst_qwindow test failed with a warning that programmatically
moving the mouse cursor is not possible with Wayland.
Task-number: QTBUG-91418
Change-Id: I02ceb2af43fbc83a4e6ae09718315f5f79ff8285
Reviewed-by: Liang Qi <liang.qi@qt.io>
There was a race condition in the test, since the window
might be exposed before the event to activate the
application has been received. And the short cut is not
triggered before the application is active, which
means it could just be discarded and the window would
never be closed.
This happened consistently when testing on Wayland.
Task-number: QTBUG-91418
Change-Id: I40cb143985175f5f2b5405e9502a48475c93074a
Reviewed-by: Paul Olav Tvete <paul.tvete@qt.io>
When a foreign event loop that does not enter an alertable wait state
is running (which is also the case when a native dialog window is
modal), pipe handlers would freeze temporarily due to their APC
callbacks not being invoked.
We address this problem by moving the I/O callbacks to the Windows
thread pool, and only posting completion events to the main loop
from there. That makes the actual I/O completely independent from
any main loop, while the signal delivery works also with foreign
loops (because Qt event delivery uses Windows messages, which foreign
loops typically handle correctly).
As a nice side effect, performance (and in particular scalability)
is improved.
Several other approaches have been tried:
1) Using QWinEventNotifier was about a quarter slower and scaled much
worse. Additionally, it also required a rather egregious hack to
handle the (pathological) case of a single thread talking to both
ends of a QLocalSocket synchronously.
2) Queuing APCs from the thread pool to the main thread and also
posting wake-up events to its event loop, and handling I/O on the
main thread; this performed roughly like this solution, but scaled
half as well, and the separate wake-up path was still deemed hacky.
3) Only posting wake-up events to the main thread from the thread pool,
and still handling I/O on the main thread; this still performed
comparably to 2), and the pathological case was not handled at all.
4) Using this approach for reads and that of 3) for writes was slightly
faster with big amounts of data, but scaled slightly worse, and the
diverging implementations were deemed not desirable.
Fixes: QTBUG-64443
Change-Id: I66443c3021d6ba98639a214c3e768be97d2cf14b
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@gmx.de>
Avoid painting errors with dpr < 1, also for the PassThrough
mode.
This limits the minimum high-dpi scale factor to 1,
for the code path which determines the scale factor
based on screen DPI.
Pick-to: 6.1
Task-number: QTBUG-89948
Change-Id: I14b3f130f0ae141d5f05c87437f926a9f76d1dec
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
Initialize the offscreen platform plugin with no screens,
create QGuiApplication object.
Not much of the high-dpi related Qt API can be used
in this configuration, but at least Qt should not crash
on startup.
Task-number: QTBUG-71034
Change-Id: I6620843c3bd8b692c5c2419b1ba290e16175ba5b
Reviewed-by: Morten Johan Sørvig <morten.sorvig@qt.io>
QGuiApplicationPrivate::processMouseEvent() sends a
QWindowSystemInterfacePrivate::TouchEvent if the mouse event is not
accepted and AA_SynthesizeTouchForUnhandledMouseEvents is enabled.
A QPA TouchEvent always contains native touch points, which is why
it calls QWindowSystemInterfacePrivate::fromNativeTouchPoints to
translate the QMouseEvent's device-independent position back to the
raw position that it would have had if it came from a real touchscreen.
Therefore we must give that function touchpoints that are actually in
native coordinates.
It may be that some of this transformation could be avoided entirely,
but here we prove that the existing way works correctly, by adding
coordinate checking to the tst_QWindow::mouseToTouchTranslation() test.
Pick-to: 6.0
Task-number: QTBUG-86165
Change-Id: I4c9ca2b11e9eb76d79712c187db3eb9865da581a
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
Android and Wasm do not build the offscreen platform
plugin (see src/plugins/platforms/CMakeLists.txt).
Skip building the tst_qhighdpi test as well in this
case. Remove the BLACKLIST entry.
Task-number: QTBUG-88505
Change-Id: I172198c8c24759b14f73ad07260c449fc6ab893f
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
Those serve no purpose anymore, now that the .pro files are gone.
Task-number: QTBUG-88742
Change-Id: I39943327b8c9871785b58e9973e4e7602371793e
Reviewed-by: Cristian Adam <cristian.adam@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Edward Welbourne <edward.welbourne@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Kai Koehne <kai.koehne@qt.io>
With the introduction of QKeyCombination, the result of |'ing together
a set of modifiers and a key goes always through the same QKeySequence
constructor, no matter the order.
The implicit conversion through int when the wrong order is used
causes a compiler warning as that conversion is deprecated. So remove
that test case.
Pick-to: 6.0
Change-Id: I04e27bcd51723ee0efc77e52e45ca3eb8bac5fc7
Reviewed-by: Mitch Curtis <mitch.curtis@qt.io>
Remove the qmake project files for most of Qt.
Leave the qmake project files for examples, because we still test those
in the CI to ensure qmake does not regress.
Also leave the qmake project files for utils and other minor parts that
lack CMake project files.
Task-number: QTBUG-88742
Change-Id: I6cdf059e6204816f617f9624f3ea9822703f73cc
Reviewed-by: Edward Welbourne <edward.welbourne@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Qt CI Bot <qt_ci_bot@qt-project.org>
Reviewed-by: Kai Koehne <kai.koehne@qt.io>
Complete search and replace of QtTest and QtTest/QtTest with QTest, as
QtTest includes the whole module. Replace all such instances with
correct header includes. See Jira task for more discussion.
Fixes: QTBUG-88831
Change-Id: I981cfae18a1cabcabcabee376016b086d9d01f44
Pick-to: 6.0
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
Apparently some library definitions went overboard, link them directly.
Pick-to: 6.0
Change-Id: I009737f7e3edff5619241b700a627dc4e25e6018
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@qt.io>
The QFont::fromString() needs to differ between strings
produced before and after Qt 6.0 when interpreting the
weight value, since in older strings this will be the legacy
scale.
Luckily the number of tokens in the string can be used for this
purpose, since many tokens were added in Qt 6.0.
This broke KDE, where font settings are stored in QSettings
and serialized using QFont::toString() from Qt 5.
Fixes: QTBUG-88589
Pick-to: 6.0.0 6.0
Change-Id: I199737fed61917f8b9d8f86176ead29a89eb8e0c
Reviewed-by: Andy Shaw <andy.shaw@qt.io>
This reverts commit ee122077b0.
Reason for revert: This causes QProcess::readAll() to sometimes
return nothing after the process has ended.
Fixes: QTBUG-88624
Change-Id: I34fa27ae7fb38cc7c3a1e8eb2fdae2a5775584c2
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Paul Wicking <paul.wicking@qt.io>
(cherry picked from commit 23100ee61e)
Reviewed-by: Qt Cherry-pick Bot <cherrypick_bot@qt-project.org>
Ensure the values are reasonable regardless of screen DPI. Velocity
is supposed to be in logical pixels / second.
Task-number: QTBUG-88252
Task-number: QTBUG-88346
Change-Id: Ic209887f8ed0381c033a9ff04ae48b072c444df4
Reviewed-by: Morten Johan Sørvig <morten.sorvig@qt.io>
A QWindow created without an explicit geometry needs to pick up
a default geometry in the platform plugin. If the window has a
maximized of fullscreen window state, it will fill the entire
available geometry of the parent window (or the screen if there's
not parent window).
Fixes: QTBUG-69159
Fixes: QTBUG-69156
Fixes: QTBUG-69154
Pick-to: 5.15
Change-Id: If8565d92a97bb4b3fa44757e68969d54d0bc7ebe
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
When a foreign event loop that does not enter an alertable wait state
is running (which is also the case when a native dialog window is
modal), pipe handlers would freeze temporarily due to their APC
callbacks not being invoked.
We address this problem by moving the I/O callbacks to the Windows
thread pool, and only posting completion events to the main loop
from there. That makes the actual I/O completely independent from
any main loop, while the signal delivery works also with foreign
loops (because Qt event delivery uses Windows messages, which foreign
loops typically handle correctly).
As a nice side effect, performance (and in particular scalability)
is improved.
Several other approaches have been tried:
1) Using QWinEventNotifier was about a quarter slower and scaled much
worse. Additionally, it also required a rather egregious hack to
handle the (pathological) case of a single thread talking to both
ends of a QLocalSocket synchronously.
2) Queuing APCs from the thread pool to the main thread and also
posting wake-up events to its event loop, and handling I/O on the
main thread; this performed roughly like this solution , but scaled
half as well, and the separate wake-up path was still deemed hacky.
3) Only posting wake-up events to the main thread from the thread pool,
and still handling I/O on the main thread; this still performed
comparably to 2), and the pathological case was not handled at all.
4) Using this approach for reads and that of 3) for writes was slightly
faster with big amounts of data, but scaled slightly worse, and the
diverging implementations were deemed not desirable.
Fixes: QTBUG-64443
Change-Id: I1cd87c07db39f3b46a2683ce236d7eb67b5be549
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@gmx.de>
Tests in tst_qhighdpi are crashing on Android.
Task-number: QTBUG-88505
Task-number: QTBUG-87025
Change-Id: Ie1350e06fb30d90f20c550f91555f4023eee56b6
Reviewed-by: Alexandru Croitor <alexandru.croitor@qt.io>
It's unnecessary, and copying QEvents is a bad practice since it's a
polymorphic class.
Change-Id: Ieb6de106084f838c5e6c8a0643c54fd3c7f4a7a8
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
This makes high-level event dispatching easier: for example we often
need to cast an event to access getters like button() and buttons().
We can so far assume that any QPointerEvent that is not a QTouchEvent
is a QSinglePointEvent; but more explicit type-checking looks safer.
Implemented in a similar way as c7f7279969.
Change-Id: I980d759e2a7538b6b30fd3bdc3be0c351ec6c246
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
We want to re-enable Android tests in QTQAINFRA-3867. However,
many tests are failing already preventing that from happening.
QTBUG-87025 is currently keeping track (links) to all of those
failing tests.
The current proposal is to hide those failing tests, and enable
Android test running in COIN for other tests. After, that try
to fix them one by one, and at the same time we can make sure
no more failing tests go unnoticed.
Task-number: QTBUG-87025
Change-Id: Ic1fe9fdd167cbcfd99efce9a09c69c344a36bbe4
Reviewed-by: Alexandru Croitor <alexandru.croitor@qt.io>
In 4e400369c0 we deprecated
normalizedPos() because we suspect it's a legacy feature that few
users will need. However Qt developers keep bringing up the continued
usage in autotests over and over. (It's IMO not wrong to keep testing
deprecated functions in autotests, but the warning keeps attracting
attention.)
Of course it will turn out that normalizedPos() has users; we just
don't know how many. One way to look at it is: why should they copy
a snippet of code to calculate it, when it costs us so little to
continue to provide this accessor.
It might also turn out that some users will complain that in Qt 5
it was passed through from the device driver (or at least from the
window system API) to the application, and perhaps the replacement will
not always work, for example if availableVirtualGeometry() ends up
wrong, or there is some strange scenario that generates events that are
out-of-bounds for the device that the event professes to come from, so
that the "normalized" coordinates also go outside the [0..1] range.
We reserve the right to put back the storage in QEventPointPrivate if
the need arises; so that's why this function is not inline.
We continue to hope that startNormalizedPos() and lastNormalizedPos()
are used even less and won't be missed much, because it would be
wasteful to store them all the time if only a few users need them.
Change-Id: I23ed78843e3f9e16133c5b6f462884a3845f91b6
Reviewed-by: David Skoland <david.skoland@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
It's been obsolete for a long time already. Make sure
the compiler now warns about it and remove all remaining
uses in qtbase.
Change-Id: I0ff80311184dba52d2ba5f4e2fabe0d47fdc59d7
Reviewed-by: Fabian Kosmale <fabian.kosmale@qt.io>
Keep this in sync with the changes we have done in QTypeInfo.
Change-Id: Iaacb0f3cc5c46d3486084a1f6eca480a233d5e1a
Reviewed-by: Fabian Kosmale <fabian.kosmale@qt.io>
In Qt Quick, when we deliver an item-specific QTouchEvent that contains
only the subset of eventpoints that are inside the Item's bounds,
traditionally the Item can accept the event to tell the delivery logic
that the event is handled and doesn't need to be delivered further.
But an Item cannot be expected to have total scene awareness; so now,
the delivery is "done" only when all eventpoints in the original event
are accepted. This behavior has been working well enough already due to
logic in QQuickWindow that iterates the points and accepts them if the
event is accepted; but it seems appropriate to move this enforcement
into QPointerEvent itself. Making setAccepted() virtual gives us a
useful degree of freedom.
Event-handling code should alternatively use QEventPoint:setAccepted()
or QPointerEvent::setExclusiveGrabber() to take resonsibility for only
a subset of the touchpoints.
Another way to put it is that we treat QPointerEvent::setAccepted() as a
convenience method: accepting the QEventPoints is what counts (at least
in Qt Quick).
Change-Id: Icec42dc980f407bb5116f5c0852c051a4521105a
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
Leave the normalizedPos warnings, there is no equivalent function.
Change-Id: I50c72ab24b4855e36941aafdee30cdb0e94c1684
Reviewed-by: Friedemann Kleint <Friedemann.Kleint@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Shawn Rutledge <shawn.rutledge@qt.io>
Expose event would not be sent when window was resized
Fixes: QTBUG-69155
Pick-to: 5.15
Change-Id: I81bf2d54f830a0dabf15398e1f25b55ff7ff4479
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Rami Potinkara <rami.potinkara@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Andy Shaw <andy.shaw@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Heikki Halmet <heikki.halmet@qt.io>
Failure to copy m_inputEvent and m_pointerEvent actually left them
uninitialized, and resulted in random behavior in Qt Quick when
Flickable clones a pointer event for later replay.
Remove the comment about copying events being a "bad idea" in Qt 4,
while we're at it. Copying became more common in Qt 5, and we
probably won't be able to stop doing it now.
Change-Id: I40b6ba5ad696e7aaafbeefbca86eca00cab40616
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Move the factor() test, drop scale() which should be
covered already.
Change-Id: Id2079536a91c7e9f7199960bdf6b33489d0a6670
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Friedemann Kleint <Friedemann.Kleint@qt.io>
Use the new screen config feature of the offscreen
platform plugin to run tests on virtual screen setup.
This has the benefit that we can auto-test the QHighDpiScaling
implementation (as well as its usage in QtGui) on any platform
with a fixed mock screen setup which does not rely on physical
screen configuration.
Test the following configurations:
- three screens: 96 DPI. (reference)
- three screens: 192 DPI
- three screens: mixed (high) DPI
Change-Id: I2fac889d896cf30ab2a79c306cee22177ad8f4ac
Reviewed-by: Morten Johan Sørvig <morten.sorvig@qt.io>
The return value can be ignored here, so make intention clear.
Change-Id: I116869c47039b159db96f133b5850a2215873c2f
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@gmx.de>
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
We were already using the 'native' nomenclature when referring to these
kinds of APIs, e.g. when talking about native handles, or the existing
QPlatformNativeInterface on a QPA level. Using 'native' for the user
facing APIs also distinguishes them from the 'platform' backend layer
in QPA and elsewhere.
Change-Id: I0f3273265904f0f19c0b6d62471f8820d3c3232e
Reviewed-by: Friedemann Kleint <Friedemann.Kleint@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
During delivery of a TouchBegin event, if no widget accepts it,
we begin treating the first touchpoint as a synth-mouse, as before.
If a second touchpoint is pressed or released in any order, it's
irrelevant: the fake mouse button is released as soon as the first
touchpoint is released. This fixes the bug that such a scenario
caused the mouse release not to be sent, so that a widget could get
"stuck" in pressed state.
Done-with: Tang Haixiang <tanghaixiang@uniontech.com>
Fixes: QTBUG-86253
Pick-to: 5.15
Change-Id: I7fbbe120539d8ded8ef5e7cf712a27bd69391e02
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
It also demonstrated that the tests were out of sync with reality:
since a97759a336c597327cb82eebc9f45c793aec32c9 QMouseEvent::button()
and QWindowSystemInterfacePrivate::MouseEvent::button should be the
button that changes state of course; but when a button is pressed,
we are reacting to it after the fact, so QMouseEvent::buttons() and
QWindowSystemInterfacePrivate::MouseEvent::buttons should include the
new button that was just pressed. Likewise when a button was released,
we send the event with buttons _omitting_ the button that was just
released.
Amends 147a8bc4c8 and
6d6ed64d6c
Change-Id: I670289019fcfa7de685ca38799804772dc0f1c8f
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
This reverts commit b1ef104866.
This test is BPASS on openSUSE_42_3 for 5.12 and PASS on openSUSE_15_1
for 5.15.
Pick-to: 5.15
Pick-to: 5.12
Change-Id: Ia1d81ed38491c27c01f270623c5082663f4da699
Reviewed-by: Tony Sarajärvi <tony.sarajarvi@qt.io>
Change lots of code to avoid the deprecated operator+() or implicit
casts to int.
Change-Id: I0c343cd5b28603afdf1214eefb85e928313345e2
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
Modify special case locations to use the new API as well.
Clean up some stale .prev files that are not needed anymore.
Clean up some project files that are not used anymore.
Task-number: QTBUG-86815
Change-Id: I9947da921f98686023c6bb053dfcc101851276b5
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Qt CI Bot <qt_ci_bot@qt-project.org>
Clean up the state of the projects,
before changing the internal CMake API function names.
Task-number: QTBUG-86815
Change-Id: I90f1b21b8ae4439a4a293872c3bb728dab44a50d
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@qt.io>
tst_qguiapplication was missing an Info.plist file.
We can't directly reference the tst_qcoreapplication Info.plist
file like the qmake project does, because that breaks ninja
(says multiple rules create the same output file), so use a
copy instead.
Blacklist the qpluginloader loadMachO test when doing CMake builds.
The qmake projects use multiple custom rules to build the macho
plugins, which need to be ported to CMake.
Task-number: QTBUG-86053
Task-number: QTBUG-86792
Change-Id: Iaff2b2d5e9e84a457b4f2ffc011a580388498f00
Reviewed-by: Qt CI Bot <qt_ci_bot@qt-project.org>
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@qt.io>
Do not use QVariant::Type anymore, instead use QMetaType
For some reason, this pushed the qvariant autotest over the limit where
MSVC requires the /bigobj flag, so add that one.
[ChangeLog][QtCore][QMimeData] The signature of the virtual retrieveData()
function has changed and now takes a QMetaType instead of a QVariant::Type.
Change-Id: Ib46773bd731ee2177b1ef74d8162d744be7017ef
Reviewed-by: Mårten Nordheim <marten.nordheim@qt.io>
These states correspond well with ScrollPhase, and this abstraction
makes it possible to handle wheel events the same way as mouse events
in Qt Quick: on "begin" we deliver to all Items and Handlers until
all points (the only point) are accepted; on "update" and "end" we
deliver only to the exclusive grabber, if there is one, and to any
passive grabbers.
Change-Id: I702dbd4f2c1bf5962eb3dbb9e4b725300a00a887
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Paul Wicking <paul.wicking@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
In 4e400369c0 we began to send synth-mouse
events from the touch device, but in the opposite direction it was not
consistent.
Add autotests to prove that it's consistent both ways now.
Change-Id: I7df2328fef224dc1529ca5d27411cd8a5a9c8df9
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
This functionality was only in Qt Quick in Qt 5. Now we move it up to QtGui
so that every QEventPoint will have a valid velocity() before being delivered
anywhere.
[ChangeLog][QtGui][QPointerEvent] Every QEventPoint should now carry a valid
velocity(): if the operating system doesn't provide it, Qt will calculate it,
using a simple Kalman filter to provide a weighted average over time.
Fixes: QTBUG-33891
Change-Id: I40352f717f0ad6edd87cf71ef55e955a591eeea1
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
QQuickEventPoint instances were very long-lived and got reused from one
event to the next. That was initially done because they were "heavy"
QObjects; but it also became useful to store state in them between
events. But this is in conflict with the ubiquitous event replay
code that assumes it's OK to hold an event instance (especially
a QMouseEvent) for any length of time, and then send it to some widget,
item or window. Clearly QEventPoints must be stored in the QPointerEvent,
if we are to avoid the need for workarounds to keep such old code working.
And now they have d-pointers, so copying is cheap. But replay code
will need to detach() their QEventPoints now.
QEventPoint is useful as an object to hold state, but we now store
the truly persistent state separately in an EventPointData struct,
in QPointingDevicePrivate::activePoints. Incoming events merely
update the persistent points, then we deliver those instead.
Thus when event handler code modifies state, it will be remembered
even when the delivery is done and the QPA event is destroyed.
This gets us a step closer to supporting multiple simultaneous mice.
Within pointer events, the points are moved up to QPointerEvent itself:
QList<QEventPoint> m_points;
This means pointCount(), point(int i) and points() can be non-virtual.
However in any QSinglePointEvent, the list only contains one point.
We hope that pessimization is worthwhile for the sake of removing
virtual functions, simplifying code in event classes themselves, and
enabling the use of the range-for loop over points() with any kind of
QPointerEvent, not just QTouchEvent. points() is a nicer API for the
sake of range-for looping; but point() is more suited to being
non-const.
In QML it's expected to be OK to emit a signal with a QPointerEvent
by value: that will involve copying the event. But QEventPoint
instances are explicitly shared, so calling setAccepted() modifies
the instance in activePoints (EventPointData.eventPoint.d->accept);
and the grabbers are stored separately and thus preserved between events.
In code such as MouseArea { onPressed: mouse.accepted = false }
we can either continue to emit the QQuickMouseEvent wrapper
or perhaps QEvent::setAccepted() could become virtual and set
the eventpoint's accepted flag instead, so that it will survive
after the event copy that QML sees is discarded.
The grabChanged() signal is useful to keep QQuickWindow informed
when items or handlers change exclusive or passive grabbers.
When a release happens at a different location than the last move event,
Qt synthesizes an additional move. But it would be "boring" if
QEventPoint::lastXPosition() accessors in any released eventpoint always
returned the same as the current QEventPoint::xPosition()s just because
of that; and it would mean that the velocity() must always be zero on
release, which would make it hard to use the final velocity to drive an
animation. So now we expect the lastPositions to be different than
current positions in a released eventpoint.
De-inline some functions whose implementations might be subject to
change later on. Improve documentation.
Since we have an accessor for pressTimestamp(), we might as well add one for
timestamp() too. That way users get enough information to calculate
instantaneous velocity, since the plan is for velocity() to be somewhat
smoothed.
Change-Id: I2733d847139a1b1bea33c00275459dcd2a145ffc
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
Remove around 1000 compiler warnings about missing overrides
in our auto tests.
This significantly reduce the compiler warning noise in our auto
tests, so that one can actually better see the real problems
inbetween.
Change-Id: Id0c04dba43fcaf55d8cd2b5c6697358857c31bf9
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
Gives it its own changed signal, and simplifies setting from group,
while fixing an inconsistency in propagation.
Change-Id: I22b243210260a8878144fa4b60204df46f847f37
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
I still have doubts that QEventPoint can't be made small enough that
copying would be cheaper than reference-counting and all the indirections
in now-noninline accessors, but this gives us the usual freedom to
change the data members later on.
Change-Id: I792f7fc85ac3a9538589da9d7618b647edf0e70c
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
Because we removed public setters from QTouchEvent and QEventPoint in
4e400369c0 and now it's proposed to give
QEventPoint a d-pointer again, the implementation of QTouchEventSequence
needs to start using QMutableEventPoint: being a friend will no longer
be enough, because the member variables won't be accessible in the future.
But because we have separate test libs for Gui and Widgets, it needs to
be further refactored into two classes.
Change-Id: I0bfc0978fc4187348ac872e1330d95259d557b69
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
Following the introduction of QKeyCombination, reduce the number
of warnings raised by the test. Drive-by, remove some pointless
math like Qt::SHIFT+0, which does not make any sense and would
actually fail to compile (shortly).
Refactoring the test to fully use QKeyCombination (instead of
ints) is left as a future exercise; some QKeyCombination->int
warnings are still around.
Change-Id: If825bc4c369986623447927bb11493c4f58b544f
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
C++20 via P1120 is deprecating arithmetic operations between
unrelated enumeration types, and GCC 10 is already complaining.
Hence, these operations might become illegal in C++23 or C++26 at
the latest.
A case of this that affects Qt is in key combinations: a
QKeySequence can be constructed by summing / ORing modifiers and a
key, for instance:
Qt::CTRL + Qt::Key_A
Qt::SHIFT | Qt::CTRL | Qt::Key_G (recommended, see below)
The problem is that the modifiers and the key belong to different
enumerations (and there's 2 enumerations for the modifier, and one
for the key).
To solve this: add a dedicated class to represent a combination of
keys, and operators between those enumerations to build instances
of this class.
I would've simply defined operator|, but again docs and pre-existing
code use operator+ as well, so added both to at least tackle simple
cases (modifier + key).
Multiple modifiers create a problem: operator+ between them yields
int, not the corresponding flags type (because operator+ is not
overloaded for this use case):
Qt::CTRL + Qt::SHIFT + Qt::Key_A
\__________________/ /
int /
\______________/
int
Not only this loses track of the datatypes involved, but it would
also then "add" the key (with NO warnings, now its int + enum, so
it's not mixing enums!) and yielding int again.
I don't want to special-case this; the point of the class is
that int is the wrong datatype. Everything works just fine when
using operator| instead:
Qt::CTRL | Qt::SHIFT | Qt::Key_A
\__________________/ /
Qt::Modifiers /
\______________/
QKeyCombination
So I'm defining operator+ so that the simple cases still work,
but also deprecating it.
Port some code around Qt to the new class. In certain cases,
it's a huge win for clarity. In some others, I've just added
the necessary casts to make it still compile without warnings,
without attempting refactorings.
[ChangeLog][QtCore][QKeyCombination] New class to represent
a combination of a key and zero or more modifiers, to be used
when defining shortcuts or similar.
[ChangeLog][Potentially Source-Incompatible Changes] A keyboard
modifier (such as Qt::CTRL, Qt::AltModifier, etc.) should be
combined with a key (such as Qt::Key_A, Qt::Key_F1, etc.) by using
operator|, not operator+. The result is now an object of type
QKeyCombination, that stores the key and the modifiers.
Change-Id: I657a3a328232f059023fff69c5031ee31cc91dd6
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
Without an override for logicalDpi() the base class implementation
would use the geometry of the screen to figure out the DPI, and end
up with ~100, which combined with a 96DPI base logical DPI would
give a wrong scale factor.
Change-Id: I68aecce44d2ee672c7b707dfe5444af8f551e961
Reviewed-by: Morten Johan Sørvig <morten.sorvig@qt.io>
The explicit paint event on QtGui and QPA level allows us to untangle
the expose event, which today has at least 3 different meanings.
It also allows us to follow the platform more closely in its semantics
of when painting can happen. On some platforms a paint can come in
before a window is exposed, e.g. to prepare the first frame. On others
a paint can come in after a window has been de-exposed, to save a
snapshot of the window for use in an application switcher or similar.
The expose keeps its semantics of being a barrier signaling that the
application can now render at will, for example in a threaded render
loop.
There are two compatibility code paths in this patch:
1. For platform plugins that do not yet report the PaintEvents
capability, QtGui will synthesize paint events on the platform's
behalf, based on the existing expose events coming from the platform.
2. For applications that do not yet implement paintEvent, QtGui will
send expose events instead, ensuring the same behavior as before.
For now none of the platform plugins deliver paint events natively,
so the first compatibility code path is always active.
Task-numnber: QTBUG-82676
Change-Id: I0fbe0d4cf451d6a1f07f5eab8d376a6c8a53ce8c
Reviewed-by: Paul Olav Tvete <paul.tvete@qt.io>
Remove QTypeInfo::isStatic, as that's not used anymore in Qt 6.
Also remove sizeOf, it's unused, and we have QMetaType for that if
required.
Remove all typeinfo declaractions for trivial types, as the default
template covers them correctly nowadays.
Finally set up a better default for isPointer, and do some smaller
cleanups all over the place.
Change-Id: I6758ed37dfc701feaaf0ff105cc95e32da9f9c33
Reviewed-by: Fabian Kosmale <fabian.kosmale@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
Having three methods with the same name doing different things is
unnecessarily confusing, so follow the standard naming convention in
Qt and call the getter of the resolve mask resolveMask, and the setter
setResolveMask. These methods were all documented as internal.
The publicly documented resolve() method that merges two fonts and
palettes based on the respective masks remains as it is, even though
'merge' would perhaps be a better name.
Change-Id: If90b1ad800834baccd1dbc38fc6b861540d6df6e
Reviewed-by: Qt CI Bot <qt_ci_bot@qt-project.org>
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
This makes high-level event dispatching easier: for example in Qt Quick,
all pointer events should eventually be delivered to items in a similar way.
Implemented in a similar way as d1111632e2.
Change-Id: I2f0c4914bab228162f3b932dda8a88051ec2a4d7
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
event()->device() was the most common use case anyway.
The idea that the "parent" of a QEventPoint is the QPointerEvent
interferes with the ability to copy and move event objects: the parent
pointers are dangling unless we use the QPointerEvent subclass
destructors to set the points' parents to null. Since there is no move
constructor, even returning a QEventPoint from a function by value
results in destroying the temporary instance and copying it to the
caller's space. So the parent pointer is often useless, unless we do
even more work to maintain it when the event moves.
If we optimize to avoid copying QEventPoints too much (and perhaps
enable exposing _mutable_ points to QML) by storing reusable instances in
QPointingDevice (which is the current plan), then the actual parent will
no longer be the event. Events are usually stack-allocated, thus
temporary and intended to be movable.
Change-Id: I24b648dcc046fc79d2401c781f1fda6cb00f47b0
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
And remove one of the type id to name mapping that still
existed in QMetaType. QMetaTypeInterface can provide that,
so there's no need to have a second copy of the data.
qMetaTypeTypeInternal() can still map all the names of all
builtin types to ids. That functionality is for now still
required by moc and can't be removed yet.
Change-Id: Ib4f8e9c71e1e7d99d52da9e44477c9a1f1805e57
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
And remove the old manual registration code for those operators.
Add some special handling for long/ulong, as these types could be
streamed as a QVariant so far, but are not directly streamable
through QDataStream.
[ChangeLog][QtCore][QMetaType] The QMetaType::registerStreamOperators()
and QMetaType::registerDebugStreamOperator() methods have been
removed. The streaming operators for a type are now automatically
registered together with the type registration. This implies that the
operators should be visible wherever the type is visible and being used.
[ChangeLog][Behavior Incompatible Changes] Because the QDataStream and
QDebug serialization operators are automatically registered with
QMetaType, the declarations of those functions must be present at any
point where the type is used with QMetaType and QVariant.
Change-Id: I4a0732651b20319af4a8397ff90b848ca4580d99
Reviewed-by: Fabian Kosmale <fabian.kosmale@qt.io>
This extends to/fromString to include style strategy, capitalization,
letter and word spacing and stretch. QFont::fromString() keeps
compatibility with strings from earlier versions as well.
Fixes: QTBUG-67687
Change-Id: I5e95a58f1cd850214af2a7d8906a214facd4e661
Reviewed-by: Eskil Abrahamsen Blomfeldt <eskil.abrahamsen-blomfeldt@qt.io>
MidButton had its // ### Qt 5: remove me
upgraded to Qt 6 at 5.0; but it dates back to 4.7.0
Replace the many remaining uses of MidButton with MiddleButton in the
process.
Pick-to: 5.15
Change-Id: Idc1b1b1816673dfdb344d703d101febc823a76ff
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
It was marked internal anyway. Use the constructor taking a
QMetaType instead.
Change-Id: I15b9cd0911aac063a0f0fe0352fa2c84b7f7c691
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
isNull() would forward to the contained type and check that type's
isNull() method for some of the builtin types. Remove that behavior
and only return true in isNull(), if the variant is invalid, doesn't
contain data or contains a null pointer.
In addition, implement more consistent behavior when constructing
a QVariant using the internal API taking a copy from a void *.
isNull() should return true in both cases. This mainly changes behavior
for some corner cases and when using our internal API.
[ChangeLog][Important Behavior Changes] QVariant::isNull()
no longer returns true when the variant contains an object of some
type with an isNull() method, that returns true for the object;
QVariant::isNull() now only returns true when the variant contains
no object or a null pointer.
Change-Id: I3125041c4f8f8618a04aa375aa0a56b19c02dcf5
Reviewed-by: Fabian Kosmale <fabian.kosmale@qt.io>
Remove the compare method in the QVariant::Handler struct. Rely
on the generic support provided by QMetaType instead.
[ChangeLog][Important Behavior Changes][QVariant] QVariant will now use builtin support in
QMetaType to compare its content. This implies a behavioral change
for some graphical types like QPixmap, QImage and QIcon that will
never compare equal in Qt 6 (as they do not have a comparison
operator).
Change-Id: I30a6e7116c89124d11ed9052537cecc23f78116e
Reviewed-by: Edward Welbourne <edward.welbourne@qt.io>
mkspecs/features/qt.prf adds a dependency on the system threading
library if the Qt Core thread feature is enabled. Because qt.prf is
loaded by any public or internal Qt project, it's essentially a public
dependency for any Qt consumer.
To mimic that in CMake, we check if the thread feature is enabled, and
and set the Threads::Threads library as a dependency of Qt6::Platform,
which is a public target used by all Qt modules and plugins and Qt
consumers.
We also need to create a Qt6Dependencies.cmake file so we
find_package(Threads) every time find_package(Qt6) is called.
For the .prl files to be usable, we have to filter out some
CMake implementation specific directory separator tokens
'CMAKE_DIRECTORY_ID_SEP' aka '::@', which are added because we call
target_link_libraries() with a target created in a different scope
(I think).
As a result of this change, we shouldn't have to hardcode
Threads::Threads in other projects, because it's now a global public
dependency.
Task-number: QTBUG-85801
Task-number: QTBUG-85877
Change-Id: Ib5d662c43b28e63f7da49d3bd77d0ad751220b31
Reviewed-by: Qt CI Bot <qt_ci_bot@qt-project.org>
Reviewed-by: Cristian Adam <cristian.adam@qt.io>
QQuickPointerEvent had them, so despite how trivial they look,
it's very convenient to keep using them in QQuickWindow rather than
duplicating these kinds of checks in various places, and for multiple
event types too.
Change-Id: I32ad8110fd2361e69de50a679ddbdb2a2db7ecee
Reviewed-by: Fabian Kosmale <fabian.kosmale@qt.io>
The previous implementation multiplexed callback-based event
notification into a single proxy event (cf. 85403d0af), which was
in turn object-waited for (this was the case since the beginning
of public qt history). It makes more sense to multiplex into a
posted message, because that also works with foreign event loops
that do not know anything about our event objects.
Task-number: QTBUG-64443
Change-Id: I97945ac8b5d7c8582701077134c0aef4f3b5a18f
Reviewed-by: Oswald Buddenhagen <oswald.buddenhagen@gmx.de>
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
Move QWindowsMime (which was a public class in Qt 4 and moved to the QPA
plugin in Qt 5) to the platform namespace and add register functions to the
native application.
Move in test code from QtWinExtras.
Task-number: QTBUG-83252
Change-Id: Iaac440e2d5cb370110919921b1eeb779600b5b65
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
Expand the getSetCheck to include all properties, and add a test to
verify the fallback logic for the tooltip property.
Use the meta object system to set and check properties in the
tooltip-test to verify that things don't break when migrating to
the new property system.
Change-Id: I56355e8b436ede46701a124a9241ed26d2c706c5
Reviewed-by: Friedemann Kleint <Friedemann.Kleint@qt.io>
Change the functions to operate in float and add the
QPoint versions as overload calling them. This is
more in-line with the event accessors using float
and allows for removing some workarounds using a delta when
converting touch points.
Leave QPlatformWindow::map(To/From)Global() as is
for now and add helpers for float.
Change-Id: I2d46b8dbda8adff26539e358074b55073dc80b6f
Reviewed-by: Shawn Rutledge <shawn.rutledge@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
Some goals that have hopefully been achieved are:
- make QPointerEvent and QEventPoint resemble their Qt Quick
counterparts to such an extent that we can remove those wrappers
and go back to delivering the original events in Qt Quick
- make QEventPoint much smaller than QTouchEvent::TouchPoint, with no pimpl
- remove most public setters
- reduce the usage of complex constructors that take many arguments
- don't repeat ourselves: move accessors and storage upwards
rather than having redundant ones in subclasses
- standardize the set of accessors in QPointerEvent
- maintain source compatibility as much as possible: do not require
modifying event-handling code in any QWidget subclass
To avoid public setters we now introduce a few QMutable* subclasses.
This is a bit like the Builder pattern except that it doesn't involve
constructing a separate disposable object: the main event type can be
cast to the mutable type at any time to enable modifications, iff the
code is linked with gui-private. Therefore event classes can have
less-"complete" constructors, because internal Qt code can use setters
the same way it could use the ones in QTouchEvent before; and the event
classes don't need many friends. Even some read-accessors can be kept
private unless we are sure we want to expose them.
Task-number: QTBUG-46266
Fixes: QTBUG-72173
Change-Id: I740e4e40165b7bc41223d38b200bbc2b403e07b6
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
Qt::UNICODE_ACCEL had no effect since at least Qt 4.0. We can drop
it in Qt 6. The whole Qt::Modifier enumeration is still widely
used, so we can't drop it yet, but we should aim at doing so in
Qt 7. Add a note.
[ChangeLog][QtCore][Qt::Modifier] The Qt::UNICODE_ACCEL enumerator
has been removed. It had no effect since Qt 4.0.
[ChangeLog][QtCore][Qt::Modifier] Usage of the enumerators in
the Qt::Modifier enumeration is discouraged. The enumeration
will likely get removed in the next major version of Qt.
Change-Id: If25f30d920878d32903b91a38044f5da042c7eab
Reviewed-by: Friedemann Kleint <Friedemann.Kleint@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Shawn Rutledge <shawn.rutledge@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
Use pro2cmake with '--api-version 2' to force regenerate
projects to use the new prefixed qt_foo APIs.
Change-Id: I055c4837860319e93aaa6b09d646dda4fc2a4069
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@qt.io>
This is in preparation for regenerating them with the new qt_foo
prefixed APIs.
Change-Id: Iff34932d642b1c0186ee39f952adf3ad367fd602
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@qt.io>
There doesn't seem to be any reason users will need to query tablet
devices by their IDs, because every event comes with a complete
instance already, and we have QInputDevice::devices() to list them all.
QPointingDevicePrivate::tabletDevice() can create a new instance if a
matching one is not found (and complains about that); it's intended
for use in QtGui, as a way to find the device if it was not part of the
QWSI event. Now it sets the parent of those auto-created instances
to QCoreApplication to avoid a memory leak.
On the other hand, queryTabletDevice() is intended for use in platform plugins
that need to check whether an instance exists; but they will take care
of creating new instances themselves, and thus have more control over the
parent and the details being stored. Now that the systemId can also be given,
the search is more likely to have a unique result, on window systems
that provide device IDs.
Rename id() to systemId() to clarify that it's a system-specific unique
device ID of some sort, not the same as the uniqueId that a stylus has.
However it seems that in practice, this will often be 0; so clarify that
if it's not unique, QInputDevicePrivate::fromId() and queryTabletDevice()
may not always find the right instance.
Clarify the function usage via comments.
Change-Id: I82bb8d1c26eeaf06f07c290828aa17ec4a31646b
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
This is required to remove the ; from the macro with Qt 6.
Task-number: QTBUG-82978
Change-Id: I3f0b6717956ca8fa486bed9817b89dfa19f5e0e1
Reviewed-by: Friedemann Kleint <Friedemann.Kleint@qt.io>
Skip crashing tests and ignore failing tests on CMake platforms.
Add missing QTEST_ENVIRONMENT=ci env var assignment to Coin test
instructions. This was hardcoded by the Coin code for qmake
configurations.
Task-number: QTBUG-85364
Change-Id: Id2312e504a0d36b8f8596d4cebaa49c63731406e
Reviewed-by: Qt CI Bot <qt_ci_bot@qt-project.org>
Reviewed-by: Joerg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@qt.io>
The platform plugins are implemented to grab the entire screen if
no window ID is provided. They do not grab the entire virtual
screen, just the screen the method is called on.
On macOS, the implementation ignored the window parameter, and
always grabbed the entire virtual screen. This change fixes the
cocoa implementation. The test passes in local tests (with two
displays with different dpr). Since grabbing a screen returns an
image with managed colors, we need to convert it to sRGB color
spec first, otherwise displaying a grabbed image will produce
different results. This will need to be changed once Qt supports
a fully color managed flow.
The test does not cover the case where a window spans multiple
displays, since this is generally not supported at least on macOS.
The code that exists in QCocoaScreen to handle that case is
untested, but with the exception of the optimization it is also
unchanged.
Done-with: Morten Sørvig <morten.sorvig@qt.io>
Change-Id: I8ac1233e56d559230ff9e10111abfb6227431e8c
Fixes: QTBUG-84876
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
The idea was to keep nagging us to update all the platform plugins to
do device registration. But besides being annoying, it would cause
test failures if we start adding QTest::ignoreMessage() all over,
and then some platforms start doing device registration properly.
Change-Id: Ia0fbb64cf86f33532be032ec9eebe6e4ad607f20
Reviewed-by: Laszlo Agocs <laszlo.agocs@qt.io>
There is no reason for keep using our macro now that we have C++17.
The macro itself is left in for the moment being, as well as its
detection logic, because it's needed for C code (not everything
supports C11 yet). A few more cleanups will arrive in the next few
patches.
Note that this is a mere search/replace; some places were using
double braces to work around the presence of commas in a macro, no
attempt has been done to fix those.
tst_qglobal had just some minor changes to keep testing the macro.
Change-Id: I1c1c397d9f3e63db3338842bf350c9069ea57639
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
This was causing some bogus failures in Qt Quick autotests.
Existing APIs like QQuickWindow::mouseGrabberItem() are not really
compatible with the idea of a mouse-less system; but perhaps we can
revisit this later.
Task-number: QTBUG-85114
Change-Id: Id1c2e5894e5cf13a79998aaea28d5f42fad920cf
Reviewed-by: Shawn Rutledge <shawn.rutledge@qt.io>
We want every QInputEvent to carry a valid device pointer. It may be
some time until all QPA plugins are sending it, but it's necessary to
provide the functions for them to start doing that.
We now try to maintain the same order of arguments to all the functions.
handleTouchEvent(window, timestamp, device, the rest) was already there
(except "device" has changed type now), and is used in a lot of platform
plugins; so it seems easiest to let that set the precedent, and modify
the rest to match. We do that by adding new functions; we can deprecate
the older functions after it becomes clear that the new ones work well.
However the handleGestureEvent functions have only ever been used in
the cocoa plugin, so it's easy to change their argument order right now.
Modify tst_qwindow::tabletEvents() to test new tablet event API.
Task-number: QTBUG-46412
Change-Id: I1828b61183cf51f3a08774936156c6a91cfc9a12
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
...starting with a new feature: registering different devices at
different seats and verifying their capabilities and that we can get
them back again.
Change-Id: I8e58a49080633753d02a76e5fdc4932f5c674e0a
Reviewed-by: Jan Arve Sæther <jan-arve.saether@qt.io>
We have seen during the Qt 5 series that QMouseEvent::source() does
not provide enough information: if it is synthesized, it could have
come from any device for which mouse events are synthesized, not only
from a touchscreen. By providing in every QInputEvent as complete
information about the actual source device as possible, we will enable
very fine-tuned behavior in the object that handles each event.
Further, we would like to support multiple keyboards, pointing devices,
and named groups of devices that are known as "seats" in Wayland.
In Qt 5, QPA plugins registered each touchscreen as it was discovered.
Now we extend this pattern to all input devices. This new requirement
can be implemented gradually; for now, if a QTWSI input event is
received wtihout a device pointer, a default "core" device will be
created on-the-fly, and a warning emitted.
In Qt 5, QTouchEvent::TouchPoint::id() was forced to be unique even when
multiple devices were in use simultaneously. Now that each event
identifies the device it came from, this hack is no longer needed.
A stub of the new QPointerEvent is added; it will be developed further
in subsequent patches.
[ChangeLog][QtGui][QInputEvent] Every QInputEvent now carries a pointer
to an instance of QInputDevice, or the subclass QPointingDevice in case
of mouse, touch and tablet events. Each platform plugin is expected to
create the device instances, register them, and provide valid pointers
with all input events. If this is not done, warnings are emitted and
default devices are created as necessary. When the device has accurate
information, it provides the opportunity to fine-tune behavior depending
on device type and capabilities: for example if a QMouseEvent is
synthesized from a touchscreen, the recipient can see which touchscreen
it came from. Each device also has a seatName to distinguish users on
multi-user windowing systems. Touchpoint IDs are no longer unique on
their own, but the combination of ID and device is.
Fixes: QTBUG-46412
Fixes: QTBUG-72167
Task-number: QTBUG-69433
Task-number: QTBUG-52430
Change-Id: I933fb2b86182efa722037b7a33e404c5daf5292a
Reviewed-by: Shawn Rutledge <shawn.rutledge@qt.io>
Many of these were generated by clazy using the new qevent-accessors check.
Change-Id: Ie17af17f50fdc9f47d7859d267c14568cc350fd0
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
Macros and the await helper function from qfunctions_winrt(_p).h are
needed in other Qt modules which use UWP APIs on desktop windows.
Task-number: QTBUG-84434
Change-Id: Ice09c11436ad151c17bdccd2c7defadd08c13925
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
The helper processes were not in the correct location.
Change-Id: I0a80a22a931625ea0c9370db38ff29c881b964cb
Reviewed-by: Cristian Adam <cristian.adam@qt.io>
Windows unexpectedly passes PM_NOYIELD flag in wParam parameter to the
hook procedure, if ::PeekMessage(..., PM_REMOVE | PM_NOYIELD) is called
from the event loop. So, to ignore undocumented flag, we should
interpret wParam as a bit field.
Thanks to Robin Lobel for research.
Pick-to: 5.15
Fixes: QTBUG-84562
Change-Id: Ib16d7d747aebc9a3628e4ee67478c4d3edeb96f1
Reviewed-by: Friedemann Kleint <Friedemann.Kleint@qt.io>
It simplifies the API and reduces surprise to have rotation working by default.
On Android, the manifest specifies which orientations the application has
been designed to support; on iOS, it is controlled via the
UISupportedInterfaceOrientations property list key.
In addition, QWindow::contentOrientation() is another way to give
a hint to the window manager, or on iOS to directly control whether
the window's rotation is locked or not.
Task-number: QTBUG-35427
Task-number: QTBUG-38576
Task-number: QTBUG-44569
Task-number: QTBUG-51012
Task-number: QTBUG-83055
Change-Id: Ieed818497f686399db23813269af322bfdd237af
Reviewed-by: Richard Moe Gustavsen <richard.gustavsen@qt.io>
Those can be trivially removed as they have direct replacements, or
are completely unused.
The migration path for QCursor::bitmap and QCursor::mask is
QBitmap *pb = c.bitmap(); // up to 5.15, warns in 5.15
QBitmap vb = c.bitmap(Qt::ReturnByValue); // from 5.15, works in 6
QBitmap b = c.bitmap(); // from 6.0 on
Change-Id: I3b3acd1c7f09c4c8414e98b3ce11986f1ecd5eda
Reviewed-by: Shawn Rutledge <shawn.rutledge@qt.io>
Conflicts:
examples/opengl/doc/src/cube.qdoc
src/corelib/global/qlibraryinfo.cpp
src/corelib/text/qbytearray_p.h
src/corelib/text/qlocale_data_p.h
src/corelib/time/qhijricalendar_data_p.h
src/corelib/time/qjalalicalendar_data_p.h
src/corelib/time/qromancalendar_data_p.h
src/network/ssl/qsslcertificate.h
src/widgets/doc/src/graphicsview.qdoc
src/widgets/widgets/qcombobox.cpp
src/widgets/widgets/qcombobox.h
tests/auto/corelib/tools/qscopeguard/tst_qscopeguard.cpp
tests/auto/widgets/widgets/qcombobox/tst_qcombobox.cpp
tests/benchmarks/corelib/io/qdiriterator/qdiriterator.pro
tests/manual/diaglib/debugproxystyle.cpp
tests/manual/diaglib/qwidgetdump.cpp
tests/manual/diaglib/qwindowdump.cpp
tests/manual/diaglib/textdump.cpp
util/locale_database/cldr2qlocalexml.py
util/locale_database/qlocalexml.py
util/locale_database/qlocalexml2cpp.py
Resolution of util/locale_database/ are based on:
https://codereview.qt-project.org/c/qt/qtbase/+/294250
and src/corelib/{text,time}/*_data_p.h were then regenerated by
running those scripts.
Updated CMakeLists.txt in each of
tests/auto/corelib/serialization/qcborstreamreader/
tests/auto/corelib/serialization/qcborvalue/
tests/auto/gui/kernel/
and generated new ones in each of
tests/auto/gui/kernel/qaddpostroutine/
tests/auto/gui/kernel/qhighdpiscaling/
tests/libfuzzer/corelib/text/qregularexpression/optimize/
tests/libfuzzer/gui/painting/qcolorspace/fromiccprofile/
tests/libfuzzer/gui/text/qtextdocument/sethtml/
tests/libfuzzer/gui/text/qtextdocument/setmarkdown/
tests/libfuzzer/gui/text/qtextlayout/beginlayout/
by running util/cmake/pro2cmake.py on their changed .pro files.
Changed target name in
tests/auto/gui/kernel/qaction/qaction.pro
tests/auto/gui/kernel/qaction/qactiongroup.pro
tests/auto/gui/kernel/qshortcut/qshortcut.pro
to ensure unique target names for CMake
Changed tst_QComboBox::currentIndex to not test the
currentIndexChanged(QString), as that one does not exist in Qt 6
anymore.
Change-Id: I9a85705484855ae1dc874a81f49d27a50b0dcff7
QShortcut has only one widget specific feature, which is whatsThis; that
is just a QString, so the setters and getters can just as well be in
QtGui.
The widgets specific implementation of shortcut matching and of showing
the whatsThis balloon stays in QtWidgets, in the private implementation.
Using virtual functions in the private we can override the empty default
in QtGui, and by adding a virtual factory function in QGuiApplication,
the correct private is instantiated depending on the kind of application
running.
Change-Id: I09ae4a5482f9fb70940c5e2bfe76d3d7fd710afc
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
Duplicating the number of classes is a high price to pay to be able to
have some QAction functionality behave differently, or be only available
in widgets applications.
Instead, declare the entire API in QtGui in QAction* classes, and
delegate the implementation of QtWidgets specific functionality to
the private. The creation of the private is then delegated to the
Q(Gui)ApplicationPrivate instance through a virtual factory function.
Change some public APIs that are primarily useful for specialized tools
such as Designer to operate on QObject* rather than QWidget*. APIs that
depend on QtWidgets types have been turned into inline template
functions, so that they are instantiated only at the caller side, where
we can expect the respective types to be fully defined. This way, we
only need to forward declare a few classes in the header, and don't
need to generate any additional code for e.g. language bindings.
Change-Id: Id0b27f9187652ec531a2e8b1b9837e82dc81625c
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
Currently depending if user uses QApplication
or QGuiApplication we end up in different behavior
when running post routines. For example QApplication
destructor calls post routines before stopping event dispatcher,
In case of QGuiApplication post routines are called
from QCoreApplication destructor, so no more event dispatcher.
This behavior is not consistent and creates troubles
when releasing resources of web engine.
Attached test will hang on windows with QGuiApplication,
however works fine with QApplication.
Task-number: QTBUG-79864
Change-Id: Ice05e66a467feaf3ad6addfbc14973649da8065e
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
Takes care of the first round of todos and deprecations for Qt6 in
qevent.
Not touching anything that might interfere with changing the class
hierarchy as the file also suggest.
Change-Id: If72d63d8932f1af588785bf77b34532358639a63
Reviewed-by: Allan Sandfeld Jensen <allan.jensen@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Shawn Rutledge <shawn.rutledge@qt.io>
Make the order checkable and checked are set in insignificant, by
storing ignored checked value for un-checkable actions.
Also gives checkable its own changed signal.
Change-Id: If03db7c92481a542b6220604860abddb322bb517
Reviewed-by: Friedemann Kleint <Friedemann.Kleint@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Shawn Rutledge <shawn.rutledge@qt.io>
Test was failing due to missing windows resource files which contain the
version information for the executable.
Change-Id: I19b0c747c6b833bac64f3667e9286350e7842b7c
Reviewed-by: Alexandru Croitor <alexandru.croitor@qt.io>
Teste executables were not built in the right location.
Change-Id: Ice05d44d53f7d8c2e9ec5a7b5c011a24ceb02a09
Reviewed-by: Alexandru Croitor <alexandru.croitor@qt.io>
Make the order of visible, group and enabled insignificant, by storing
ignored explicit values of enabled.
Also adds resetEnabled method QQuickAction has on the enabled property.
Change-Id: I9299dec0d1f74fdf655721bb4f72ba565ae85c7a
Reviewed-by: Friedemann Kleint <Friedemann.Kleint@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Shawn Rutledge <shawn.rutledge@qt.io>
Conflicts:
tests/manual/rhi/hellominimalcrossgfxtriangle/CMakeLists.txt
Hopefully final merge from wip/cmake, and then all cmake changes
should target dev directly.
Change-Id: I29b04c9b0284e97334877c77a32ffdf887dbf95b
Conflicts:
examples/widgets/graphicsview/boxes/scene.h
src/corelib/Qt5CoreMacros.cmake
src/corelib/Qt6CoreMacros.cmake
src/network/ssl/qsslsocket.cpp
src/network/ssl/qsslsocket.h
src/platformsupport/fontdatabases/windows/qwindowsfontenginedirectwrite.cpp
src/testlib/CMakeLists.txt
src/testlib/.prev_CMakeLists.txt
tests/auto/corelib/tools/qscopeguard/tst_qscopeguard.cpp
Disabled building manual tests with CMake for now, because qmake
doesn't do it, and it confuses people.
Done-With: Alexandru Croitor <alexandru.croitor@qt.io>
Done-With: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
Change-Id: I865ae347bd01f4e59f16d007b66d175a52f1f152
Change-Id: I55cb9a6b3aebac68fb1b20127ba7aa501b4a3f2b
Reviewed-by: Edward Welbourne <edward.welbourne@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Simon Hausmann <simon.hausmann@qt.io>
On the mac, the push button's bevel doesn't cover the entire widget
rectangle, but is smaller to leave space for focus frame, shadow, and
in general to meet style guidelines. Without this change, a click
anywhere inside the widget would activate the button.
QAbstractButton::hitButton can be reimplemented to limit the area in
which the button is triggered. However, getting the rectangle also
requires an addition to QStyle, so that we can query
QStyle::subElementRect for the actual area the button's bevel covers.
As a side effect, tests that use QPushButton and assume that it
responds to clicks at position 0,0 have to be fixed so that they
don't fail on mac.
Change-Id: I01b60a763bccf39090aee5b2369af300f922d226
Fixes: QTBUG-81452
Reviewed-by: Richard Moe Gustavsen <richard.gustavsen@qt.io>
We don't know which versions these blacklistings actually apply on
unless we actually get macOS 10.14 and 10.15 into the CI and running
tests, so let's start with that, and then granularize the blacklists
after that.
Task-number: QTBUG-75786
Change-Id: Id79642afa50cb20efa2cd209286b6933918d3a4a
Reviewed-by: Simon Hausmann <simon.hausmann@qt.io>
Additional data should also be taken into account when using move
operator and function swap. This is already implemented for move
constructor.
Task-number: QTBUG-78544
Change-Id: I24ba34b0957a8fba7e15a934f2d08222dc95650f
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
The logic is now mostly handled in QGuiApplication, with QApplication
only dealing with the widget-specific palettes and interaction between
the style and the palette.
The application now picks up changes to the platform theme and will
re-resolve the current application palette appropriately. This also
works even if an explicit application palette has been set, in which
case any missing roles are filled in by the theme.
The palette can now also be reset back to the default application
palette that's fully based on the theme, by passing in the default
constructed palette (or any palette that doesn't have any roles set).
This is also correctly reflected in the Qt::AA_SetPalette attribute.
Conceptually this means QGuiApplication and QApplication follow the
same behavior as QWidget, where the palette falls back to a base or
inherited palette for roles that are not set, in this case the theme.
Behavior-wise this means that the default application palette of the
application does not have any roles set, but clients should not have
relied on this, nor does QWidget rely on that internally.
It also means that setting a palette on the application and then
getting it back again will not produce the same palette as set,
since the palette was resolved against the theme in the meantime.
This is the same behavior as for QWidget, and although it's a
behavior change it's one towards a more sane behavior, so we
accept it.
[ChangeLog] Application palettes are now resolved against the platform's
theme palette, the same way widget palettes are resolved against their
parents, and the application palette. This means the application palette
reflected through QGuiApplication::palette() may not be exactly the same
palette as set via QGuiApplication::setPalette().
Change-Id: I76b99fcd27285e564899548349aa2a5713e5965d
Reviewed-by: Vitaly Fanaskov <vitaly.fanaskov@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Friedemann Kleint <Friedemann.Kleint@qt.io>
The previous implementation did not take into account different color
groups in resolve mask. It led to some issues when resolving a
palette or checking whether a brush is set or not.
Task-number: QTBUG-78544
Change-Id: I9b67b2c444eb62c022643022a874dc400005e6ee
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Shawn Rutledge <shawn.rutledge@qt.io>
[ChangeLog][QtGui] Added QGuiShortcut and made the equivalent
existing classes in Qt Widgets derive from them. This provides
basic functionality for adding shortcut handling in QML.
Fixes: QTBUG-79638
Task-number: QTBUG-76493
Change-Id: I5bbd2c8f192660e93c4690b9f894643275090e4d
Reviewed-by: Volker Hilsheimer <volker.hilsheimer@qt.io>
The include does not join the required libraries. When building the
tests in a separate build directory this works for some reason (that's
why the CI doesn't catch it). Building everything top level breaks
though.
Considering this happens in maybe two places, I'm not sure it's worth
the effort of fixing the porting scripts.
Change-Id: I104ab9717257cbe8dfd5112dffd0d0b002cdb09e
Reviewed-by: Alexandru Croitor <alexandru.croitor@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Qt CMake Build Bot
The target naming has been fixed, it used to be taken from the include,
but now that we added the real tst_qeventloop we have a name clash.
All that's needed to fix the situation is regeneration of this cmake list.
Change-Id: Id336906f30494dfa92cf5e2812f8b1a8771a992f
Reviewed-by: Qt CMake Build Bot
Reviewed-by: Alexandru Croitor <alexandru.croitor@qt.io>
The macro is not documented, so not part of the public Qt API. It is
made obsolete by the alignof keyword in C++11.
Remove the usage of the macro across qtbase, in particular the
workarounds for compilers that didn't support alignof, and that will
not be supported in Qt 6.
The macro definition is left in place, no need to break existing
code.
Task-number: QTBUG-76414
Change-Id: I1cfedcd4dd748128696cdfb546d97aae4f98c3da
Reviewed-by: Allan Sandfeld Jensen <allan.jensen@qt.io>
Move the feature to corelib so that the QMetaType enumeration
values can be properly excluded and there is no need for a
dummy class.
Use QT_REQUIRE_CONFIG in the headers of classes to be disabled.
Add headers/source files in the .pro file depending on the configure
feature in libraries and tests.
Add the necessary exclusions and use QT_CONFIG.
Task-number: QTBUG-76493
Change-Id: I02499ebee1a3d6d9a1e5afd02517beed5f4536b7
Reviewed-by: Mitch Curtis <mitch.curtis@qt.io>
QDesktopWidget is marked as obsolete in docs, but it is not yet
completely deprecated, some of its methods are still in use.
Replace uses of the following methods marked as obsolete:
- QDesktopWidget::screenNumber(QWidget*) -> QWidget::screen()
- QDesktopWidget::screenGeometry(QWidget*) -> QWidget::screen()->geometry()
- QDesktopWidget::availableGeometry(QWidget*) -> QWidget::screen()->availableGeometry()
Task-number: QTBUG-76491
Change-Id: I2cca30f2b4caa6e6848e8190e09f959d2c272f33
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
It is conceivable that during the try-compare loop of processing
windowing system events we loose and regain the focus. That would
explain the occasional test failure where instead of the expected 3
focus in events, we have received four.
Task-number: QTBUG-77769
Change-Id: I2221440d09a74d4d18a72f7786232b4491cf45a8
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
(cherry picked from commit 56f084781e)
Reviewed-by: Edward Welbourne <edward.welbourne@qt.io>
It is conceivable that during the try-compare loop of processing
windowing system events we loose and regain the focus. That would
explain the occasional test failure where instead of the expected 3
focus in events, we have received four.
Task-number: QTBUG-77769
Change-Id: I2221440d09a74d4d18a72f7786232b4491cf45a8
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>