This adds a DRM/KMS based backend to the system, as per #42. This system finds a CRTC and a connector, then uses that to create a frame buffer and a DUMB buffer that it can render to.
There's much more to do, and is left as an exercise for anyone with a significant DRM-based use case to pick up and fix.
Signed-off-by: John Nunley <dev@notgull.net>
My new tiny-xlib crate takes up a fraction of the space that the x11-dl crate uses, supports
feature-based static linking and involves less of Xlib's ridiculous surface.
This function is useful for testing the window contents in certain cases. In addition,
this means that we can now have reliable tests for softbuffer's actual functionality.
Signed-off-by: John Nunley <jtnunley01@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: dAxpeDDa <daxpedda@gmail.com>
This is based on the API that will be used for no-copy presentation. But
wraps it in `set_buffer`.
This also fixes the Wayland buffer code to set `self.width` and
`self.height` on resize, and set the length of the shared memory file
when the buffer is created.
Co-authored-by: jtnunley <jtnunley01@gmail.com>
This adds a fallback using `shm_open`/`shm_unlink` for platforms where
`memfd_create` doesn't exist. This seems to be how this is normally
handled, though it's a bit ugly.
This also builds the wayland/x11 code for NetBSD/OpenBSD/DragonFlyBSD.
Add CI builds for FreeBSD and NetBSD. We would need some kind of
virtualisation though to actually run tests on such targets.
I've tested the `shm_open` logic on Linux, but haven't run it on any
BSDs.