In gimp_image_merge_layers() -- the internal function used by the
various layer-merging/flattenning functions -- process the merged-
layer graph in chunks, using gimp_gegl_apply_operation(), instead
of in one go, using gegl_node_blit_buffer(). Processing in chunks
better utilizes the cache, since it reduces the size of
intermediate buffers, reducing the chances of hitting the swap when
merging large images (see, for example, issue #3012.)
Additionally, this allows us to show progress indication. Have the
relevant gimpimage-merge functions take a GimpProgress, and pass it
down to gimp_image_merge_layers(). Adapt all callers.
(cherry picked from commit e83d8ac4f2)
If you click on a zone filled in several visible layers, you don't
necessarily want the top layer. You may want one below. With this
change, as long as you hold alt, you will loop through all candidate
layers from top to bottom (then looping back top when reaching the
bottom).
In a first alt-click, you will always end up to the top candidate.
(cherry picked from commit 90e9eb3fca)
Use gimp_babl_is_valid(), added in the previous commit, to validate
image-type/precision combinations in various functions.
(cherry picked from commit 49ca383fa4)
so plug-ins cannot thaw what they haven't frozen, and the code
can clean up frozen stuff left behind by crashed or broken plug-ins.
Also redo the cleanup code so it only keeps track of the undo group
counts and freeze counts of what *this* GimpPlugInProcFrame did
itself. That should make it even stricter against broken code that
could mess up internals.
These procedures freeze/thaw the corresponding containers of the
image, allowing plug-ins that perform many changes affecting any of
these containers to suppress updates to the corresponding dialogs,
significantly improving performance.
which is just a #define to g_assert for now, but can now easily be
turned into something that does some nicer debugging using our new
stack trace infrastructure. This commit also reverts all constructed()
functions to use assert again.
...in both the core and libgimp.
Images now know what the default mode for new layers is:
- NORMAL for empty images
- NORMAL for images with any non-legacy layer
- NORMAL_LEGAVY for images with only legacy layers
This changes behavior when layers are created from the UI, but *also*
when created by plug-ins (yes there is a compat issue here):
- Most (all?) single-layer file importers now create NORMAL layers
- Screenshot, Webpage etc also create NORMAL layers
Scripts that create images from scratch (logos etc) should not be
affected because they usually have NORMAL_LEGACY hardcoded.
3rd party plug-ins and scripts will also behave old-style unless they
get ported to gimp_image_get_default_new_layer_mode().
It was agreed that we should write "plug-in" consistently. Only possibly
user-visible strings were updated.
Thanks to scootergrisen for a first patch which could not make it
after changing decision on the canonical writing.
...when a color profile is active
This commit doesn't fix anything, but it prepares the code to do the
right thing:
It passes the actual raw image pixels through the entire color picking
mechanism to the widgets which display colors, particularly
GimpColorFrame.
This is needed for GimpColorFrame's "Pixel" mode (as opposed to its
RGB, HSV etc. modes) which is supposed to show the raw pixel values
from the image.
Before this commit, it was recreating the raw pixel values from the
GimpRGB value it knows, which will become impossible when we correctly
pick color managed GimpRGB values soon.
- gimp-image-set-filename PDB wrapper: implement the same there in
a few lines
- xcf-load.c: use gimp_image_set_file() instead, and get rid of the
last use of filename in xcf/ in favor of GFile
- change start() and set_text() to use "format" and "..." instead of
"message", allowing to format progress messages in place
- s/cancelable/cancellable/
- move "cancellable" to be the second argument of start()
when they are added to items, images or globally, from the PDF or an
XCF file. None of the validation functions does anything currently,
they simply return TRUE.
Change the gimp-image-get-name procedure to return the same string
as shown in the image title, and mention in its API docs that this
string is meant for annotating UI elements only.
Based on original patches from Hartmut Kuhse and modified
by Michael Natterer. Changes include:
- remove libexif dependency and add a hard dependency on gexiv2
- typedef GExiv2Metadata to GimpMetadata to avoid having to
include gexiv2 globally
- add basic GimpMetadata handling functions to libgimpbase
- add image and image file specific metadata functions to libgimp,
including the exif orientation image rotate dialog
- port plug-ins to use the new APIs
- port file-tiff-save's UI to GtkBuilder
- add new plug-in "metadata" to view the image's metadata
- keep metadata around as GimpImage member in the core
- update the image's metadata on image size, resolution and precision
changes
- obsolete the old metadata parasites
- migrate the old parasites to new GimpMetadata object on XCF load
- Add new enum GimpComponentType which contains u8, u16, u32 etc.
- Change GimpPrecision to be u8-linear, u8-gamma, u16-linear etc.
- Add all the needed formats to gimp-babl.c
- Bump the XCF version to 5 and make sure version 4 with the old
GimpPrecision enum values is loaded correctly
This change blows up the precision enums in "New Image" and
Image->Precision so we can test all this stuff. It is undecided what
format will be user-visible options in 2.10.
Such comment should not be included in the general PDB
documentation as it is specific to the C bindings and can
be easily added by the pdbgen infrastructure.
This reverts commit c9888f2222.
called GimpPDBItemModify that currently has one member
GIMP_PDB_ITEM_CONTENT, in order to be prepared for adding
the "lock position" feature from bug 674160.
Fix the docs, the function does what it's supposed to do. Passing
"0, -1" actually means "insert where the ui would insert" and is
supposed to be used when e.g. scripts create layers.
Fix this and other issues more globally by moving the logic that
formats the image's display name into the GimpImage object, and return
the properly formatted name, e.g. "Foo.xcf", or "[Foo] (imported)"
from gimp_image_get_display_name().
Also add gimp_image_get_display_path() which returns the full path
instead. Use the two functions for formatting the image title, and
apply various other fixes that make sure the UI always uses the same
string to identify the image.
Call gimp_object_name_changed() whenever the save/export status
changes, so the image's cached display name and path get cleared.