Thank You!!!
On 1/24/2022 10:02 AM, Jon Turney wrote:
On 20/01/2022 01:01, Ken Whitesell wrote:
On 1/19/2022 2:28 PM, Jon Turney wrote:
On 19/01/2022 00:02, Ken Whitesell wrote:
On 1/17/2022 1:29 PM, Ken Whitesell wrote:
Is there a known solution for this? (Or is it known that there is
no solution?)
Thanks for reporting this.
Any guidance, pointers, suggestions of avenues for further
research, or other information, will all be greatly appreciated.
After more research and experimentation, it appears to be related
to one of xorg-server, xorg-server-common, or xorg-server-xorg.
Installing the older version 1.20.12-1 of these packages allows the
windows to be moved between monitors without any issues. Upgrading
to the current version 21.1.3-1 creates the problems. I'm able to
replicate this behavior on two different laptops with two different
external monitors.
It seems likely that this is an unintended effect of changes in
xorg-server 21.1.0-1, trying to fix problems in this area (See [1])
Thanks for the references. I've read all the messages in the thread -
I was particularly intrigued by this comment:
wrt the font scaling issue, looking at the source, it seems that we
don't re-consider the display dpi after a WM_DISPLAYCHANGE message, but
keep on using the value determined at startup. This is probably a bug.
I'm curious enough to want to take a look at the code, but I've got
no belief that I'm going to be able to find an answer. (I'm *not* a
C++ programmer. I can read it and write a little of it, but that's
about it.) I was going to start by comparing the last known-working
version to the first known-non-working version, but given that it's a
major release change, that's not likely going to be a useful
approach. (I'm way out of my league here. It's probably going to take
me a long time just to get to the point where I can even begin to
explore this.)
The relevant change, which tries to fix the issue identified in that
comment, and probably introduces this issue is:
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/jturney/xserver/-/commit/b19b6266d33f2b911dc1826ad5c03da135a39957
[...]
If I change the scaling from 125% to 100% on the laptop's display,
the problem appears until I restart Cygwin/X. Restarting Cygwin/X
shows it displaying properly, until I change the scaling again.
I could only reproduce this problem with mis-rendering when changing
the scaling on the secondary monitor.
Wow, I did a really poor job of writing that. I'm sorry.
For clarity, just in case you were unable to interpret what I meant
by what I wrote -
At start: Laptop scaling set at 125%, second monitor at 100%.
Mis-rendering occurs at start, on the second monitor only.
If I change the scaling on the laptop, while the current instance of
XWin is running - the same mis-rendering now occurs on the laptop.
Interestingly enough, if I change the laptop from 125% to 100%, the
tops are clipped as previously reported. But if I change the scaling
from 125% to 150%, then the bottoms are clipped. (It kinda makes
sense from what you've written.)
If I then stop and restart XWin after having reset the scaling such
that both monitors have the same setting, then the problem doesn't
appear.
Thanks for the clarification.
The laptop display is the primary monitor in all cases, correct?
Yes, the laptop display is the primary monitor in all cases.
But, the real reason for my reply at this point is to report that I have
found a solution for _my_ issue.
I make no guarantees about any problems anyone else may be facing, nor
can I make any statement about whether or not this causes other problems.
Obligatory disclaimer: I don't really know what I'm doing here. I'm not
a Windows developer, and I know just enough about cygwin to muddle my
way through doing what I want to do with the help of the mailing lists
and other resources. I'm not in a position to _explain_ anything. This
works for me, but that's as far as I can go.
First, the bottom line:
XWin.exe.manifest, line 21
change:
<dpiAwareness>PerMonitorV2,PerMonitor</dpiAwareness>
to
<dpiAwareness>PerMonitor</dpiAwareness>
Some details:
I managed to get to a point where I could build the packages from source
and install them. I looked at the commit you referred me to, and started
reverting changes, one-by-one - at least in so far as the change
appeared to make sense to me.
Anyway, I got to this change, and sure enough, it worked. Removing the
"PerMonitorV2" solved the issue. Also, I confirmed that it's the
"PerMonitorV2" that is causing the issue and not having both of them by
running another test with just the "PerMonitorV2" - and that still shows
the problem.
References with further information if it's going to be helpful to
anyone:
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/hidpi/setting-the-default-dpi-awareness-for-a-process
and
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/hidpi/high-dpi-desktop-application-development-on-windows
--
Problem reports: https://cygwin.com/problems.html
FAQ: https://cygwin.com/faq/
Documentation: https://cygwin.com/docs.html
Unsubscribe info: https://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple