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authorPeter Wu <peter@lekensteyn.nl>2018-09-03 16:54:47 +0200
committerGerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>2018-09-27 08:10:07 +0200
commit36ffc122dcd69ab66db4afab3a13cfca46bfc323 (patch)
tree26507e6d8babcc3781a3000267ac91e6f59c0d59 /ui/cursor.c
parent979f7ef8966bc4495a710ed9e4af42098f92ee79 (diff)
downloadfocaccia-qemu-36ffc122dcd69ab66db4afab3a13cfca46bfc323.tar.gz
focaccia-qemu-36ffc122dcd69ab66db4afab3a13cfca46bfc323.zip
qxl: support mono cursors with inverted colors
Monochrome cursors are still used by Windows guests with the
QXL-WDDM-DOD driver. Such cursor types have one odd feature, inversion
of colors. GDK does not seem to support it, so implement an alternative
solution: fill the inverted pixels and add an outline to make the cursor
more visible. Tested with the text cursor in Notepad and Windows 10.

cursor_set_mono is also used by the vmware GPU, so add a special check
to avoid breaking its 32bpp format (tested with Kubuntu 14.04.4). I was
unable to find a guest which supports the 1bpp format with a vmware GPU.

The old implementation was buggy and removed in v2.10.0-108-g79c5a10cdd
("qxl: drop mono cursor support"), this version improves upon that by
adding bounds validation, clarifying the semantics of the two masks and
adds a workaround for inverted colors support.

Fixes: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1611984
Signed-off-by: Peter Wu <peter@lekensteyn.nl>
Message-id: 20180903145447.17142-1-peter@lekensteyn.nl

[ kraxel: minor codestyle fix ]

Signed-off-by: Gerd Hoffmann <kraxel@redhat.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'ui/cursor.c')
-rw-r--r--ui/cursor.c42
1 files changed, 40 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/ui/cursor.c b/ui/cursor.c
index f3da0cee79..26ce69fe5e 100644
--- a/ui/cursor.c
+++ b/ui/cursor.c
@@ -128,13 +128,25 @@ void cursor_set_mono(QEMUCursor *c,
     uint32_t *data = c->data;
     uint8_t bit;
     int x,y,bpl;
-
+    bool expand_bitmap_only = image == mask;
+    bool has_inverted_colors = false;
+    const uint32_t inverted = 0x80000000;
+
+    /*
+     * Converts a monochrome bitmap with XOR mask 'image' and AND mask 'mask':
+     * https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-hardware/drivers/display/drawing-monochrome-pointers
+     */
     bpl = cursor_get_mono_bpl(c);
     for (y = 0; y < c->height; y++) {
         bit = 0x80;
         for (x = 0; x < c->width; x++, data++) {
             if (transparent && mask[x/8] & bit) {
-                *data = 0x00000000;
+                if (!expand_bitmap_only && image[x / 8] & bit) {
+                    *data = inverted;
+                    has_inverted_colors = true;
+                } else {
+                    *data = 0x00000000;
+                }
             } else if (!transparent && !(mask[x/8] & bit)) {
                 *data = 0x00000000;
             } else if (image[x/8] & bit) {
@@ -150,6 +162,32 @@ void cursor_set_mono(QEMUCursor *c,
         mask  += bpl;
         image += bpl;
     }
+
+    /*
+     * If there are any pixels with inverted colors, create an outline (fill
+     * transparent neighbors with the background color) and use the foreground
+     * color as "inverted" color.
+     */
+    if (has_inverted_colors) {
+        data = c->data;
+        for (y = 0; y < c->height; y++) {
+            for (x = 0; x < c->width; x++, data++) {
+                if (*data == 0 /* transparent */ &&
+                        ((x > 0 && data[-1] == inverted) ||
+                         (x + 1 < c->width && data[1] == inverted) ||
+                         (y > 0 && data[-c->width] == inverted) ||
+                         (y + 1 < c->height && data[c->width] == inverted))) {
+                    *data = 0xff000000 | background;
+                }
+            }
+        }
+        data = c->data;
+        for (x = 0; x < c->width * c->height; x++, data++) {
+            if (*data == inverted) {
+                *data = 0xff000000 | foreground;
+            }
+        }
+    }
 }
 
 void cursor_get_mono_image(QEMUCursor *c, int foreground, uint8_t *image)