GDK

GDK
Original author(s) GIMP authors
Developer(s) The GNOME Project
Stable release 3.18 (September 23, 2015 (2015-09-23)[1]) [±]
Preview release 3.19.4 (January 20, 2016 (2016-01-20)) [±][2]
Development status active
Written in C
Operating system Linux, OS X, Microsoft Windows
Platform X11, Wayland, others
Type Software library
License GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL)
Website developer.gnome.org/gdk3/stable/
Simplified software architecture of GTK+.

GDK (GIMP Drawing Kit) is a library that acts as a wrapper around the low-level functions provided by the underlying windowing and graphics systems. GDK lies between the display server and the GTK+ library, handling basic rendering such as drawing primitives, raster graphics (bitmaps), cursors, fonts, as well as window events and drag-and-drop functionality.

Like GTK+, GDK is licensed under the GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL).

Software architecture

GDK contains back-ends to X11, Wayland, Broadway (HTTP), Quartz and GDI and relies on Cairo for the rendering. Its new scene graph (canvas) is work-in-progress, its arrival should herald GTK+ 4.0.

GTK+ is implemented on top of an abstraction layer called GDK, freeing GTK+ from low-level concerns like input gathering and pixel format conversion.

GDK is an important part of GTK+'s portability. Since low-level cross-platform functionality is already provided by GLib, all that is needed to make GTK+ run on other platforms is to port GDK to the underlying operating system's graphics layer. Hence, the GDK ports to the Windows API and Quartz are what makes GTK+ applications run on Windows and OS X, respectively.

Starting with GTK+ 2.8, GDK supports Cairo which should be used with GTK+ 3 instead of GDK's drawing functions.[3]

GDK is an intermediate layer which isolates GTK+ from the details of the windowing system. GDK is a thin wrapper around Xlib. The X Window System comes with a low-level library called Xlib. Almost every function in GDK is a very thin wrapper around a corresponding Xlib function; but some of the complexity (and functionality) of Xlib is hidden, to simplify programming and to make GDK easier to port to other windowing systems, such as Wayland or Microsoft Windows. The concealed Xlib functionality will rarely be of interest to application programmers; for example, many features used solely by window managers are not exposed in GDK.

GDK lets you do low level stuff, like e.g. "blit this pixmap to the screen".

GDK provides a layer that is much more portable than say the X protocol, without sacrificing any of the low-level accessibility that systems such as X provide. The true power of this abstraction is that if you choose to use it rather than say, X, your software will automatically render on the Linux Framebuffer and Windows.

Having OpenGL (or OpenGL ES) support in GDK, facilitates a slightly better control of the graphics pipeline; OpenGL is well suited for compositing textured data but totally unsuited for drawing.

Canvas (Scene graph)

In its history GDK contained and linked with a couple of different Canvases.

Developers are also considering new directions for the library, including removing deprecated API components and adding an integrated scene graph (canvas) system, similar to the Clutter graphics library, effectively integrating GTK+ with OpenGL.[6][7]

Windowing systems

GDK contains back-ends to a couple of windowing systems, namely to the X11 and Wayland protocols, to Quartz and GDI, and even to the Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) named "Broadway".

With the release of GNOME 3.16 in March 2015, GDK obtained an experimental back-end for the Mir display server protocol.[8] The Mir display server protocol is competing with the Wayland display server protocol and so far only to be supported and implemented by Canonical's Mir display server.

So far nobody has bother to write a back-end for KMS.

GdkPixbuf

GdkPixbuf is a toolkit for image loading and pixel buffer manipulation. In GTK+ version 2.22 from 2010-09-23 GdkPixbuf was split off from GDK into a separate package in preparation for the transition to GTK+ 3.

History

GDK was originally developed on the X Window System for the GIMP raster graphics editor.[9]

See also

References

  1. Clasen, Matthias (September 23, 2015). "GNOME 3.18". gnome-announce-list (Mailing list). Retrieved September 23, 2015.
  2. "GNOME 3.19.x Development Series". Retrieved January 27, 2016.
  3. Migrating from GTK+ 2.x to GTK+ 3 - Use cairo for drawing
  4. "The GTK+ Scene Graph Kit". 2014-07-29.
  5. "Graphene". 2014-05-02.
  6. Alberto Ruiz's Blog
  7. Havoc Pennington's scene graph proposal
  8. "add an experimental backend for mir".
  9. http://www.gimp.org/about/ancient_history.html

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, January 24, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.