Wayland video subsystem uses a mix of libc and SDL function.
This patch switches libc functions to SDL ones and fixes a mismatch in memory
allocation/dealoccation of SDL_Cursor in SDL_waylandmouse.c (calloc on line 201
and SDL_free on line 313) which caused memory corruption if custom memory
allocator where provided to SDL.
As written, these contain undefined stack contents, which in practice
causes crashes/hangs and/or triggers the validation layers (they
complain about `pNext` and `flags` not being NULL).
When building SDL2 from git with CMake, you got libSDL2-2.0.so.1
instead of .0 (as it's the case when building with autotools).
This was caused by using LT_REVISION instead of LT_MAJOR for SOVERSION.
fixes#4310
The GCC-style SDL2_LIBRARIES were lacking the rpath on Linux, which
seems to be implicitly set when linking path/to/libSDL2-2.0.so.0.*
and is explicitly set in the SDL2_LIBRARIES in sdl2-config.cmake
(from some autotools variable), so I removed that hack and the format
remains sth like "path/to/libSDL2main.a;path/to/libSDL2-2.0.so.0.14.1".
It's still in the revision history in case it turns out that some
platform really needs the "-L/path/to/bla/lib -lSDL2main -lSDL2" format
It didn't work at all because shared libs defined in CMake with
add_library() need something like IMPORTED_IMPLIB (pointing to a .dll.a
or .lib for th DLLs) set to link on Windows.
But even with that it didn't work because the order of the libs is very
important: it must be -lmingw32 -lSDL2main -lSDL -mwindows - but
with normal add_library(SDL2::SDL2 SHARED IMPORTED) libs, SDL2 itself
is always linked first.
So I use an "INTERFACE" library (usually used for header-only libs), which
doesn't implicitly/automatically link anything so I can specify the whole
order of the linked libs.
(SDL2::SDL2-static is completely untested)
this makes it easier to create a portable sdl2-config.cmake that doesn't
hardcode its path (by replacing the hardcoded prefix with something
like "${CMAKE_CURRENT_LIST_DIR}/../../..")
When hint SDL_HINT_OPENGL_ES_DRIVER is set to "1" (e.g. for ANGLE support), assertion due to !_this->gl_config.driver_loaded can be causes while EGL is available.
When relative mode is enabled and not using warp mode, the cursor is
being clipped to the window. Therefore there is no reason to restore the
cursor position to the center.
Avoiding the warp to center simplifies mouse position event flow, as we
are no longer potentially receiving mouse events for the automated
movement of the cursor and can be (mostly) assured that an incoming
event from the windowing system is that of external means.
The implementation of clip logic for relative mode seemed to
unnecessarily limit the usable area to the middle of the window, in a
2x2 pixel region. This has the adverse side effect of moving the
operating system cursor to that location, even if it is in a valid
location in the window.
While in most scenarios this is handled correctly (by storing the
original position of the cursor in the window and restoring when leaving
relative mode), there are edge cases where this clip operation can cause
WM_MOUSEMOVE to fire at a point in time where it counts as a relative
delta from SDL's perspective.