On Thursday, March 19, 2020 7:18 PM, Hans de Goede hdegoede@redhat.com wrote:
The only way to fix that is to stop Weston from putting non-cursor content on the cursor plane.
Correct.
Is that something that should be done? If the hotspot property also had a "disabled" value, then Weston could set the hotspot to disabled when it is using the cursor plane for non-cursor content and not lose the feature. And of course set hotspot correctly when it in fact is a cursor (but for what input?).
I believe cursor planes in the affected virtual gfx-cards do not really have a mode where they can actually be used as a generic overlay plane, certainly not in a useful manner (if anything works it will all be software emulation), implementing a hotspot disabled mode would be tricky and this would needs to be duplicated in all virtual-gfx cards kms drivers.
If I understood Daniel's proposal for how to deal with this properly, then only cursor planes which actually need them would get the new hotspot x/y properties. If we do that then Weston could use the presence of the hotspot x/y properties to detect if it is dealing with a proper hw plane which can also be used as a generic plane; or a virtual-gfx cards cursor-plane, and then just not bother with trying to use the plane as a generic hw plane.
Would that work?
That would need to at least be hidden behind a DRM capability, otherwise it would break existing user-space ignoring the hotspot props (e.g. current Weston).