Comment 4 for bug 1842971

Revision history for this message
Launchpad Janitor (janitor) wrote :

This bug was fixed in the package mutter - 3.34.0-1ubuntu1

---------------
mutter (3.34.0-1ubuntu1) eoan; urgency=medium

  * Merge with debian. Remaining changes:
    + debian/control:
      - Update VCS flags to point to launchpad
      - Update maintainer to ubuntu
    + debian/gbp.conf: update branch to point to ubuntu/master
    + debian/patches/x11-Add-support-for-fractional-scaling-using-Randr.patch:
      - X11: Add support for fractional scaling using Randr

mutter (3.34.0-1) experimental; urgency=medium

  [ Simon McVittie ]
  * libmutter-5-0: Add Breaks on apparmor (<< 2.13.3-5~).
    This ensures that #935058 has been fixed, so X11 apps with the X
    abstraction can read /run/user/1000/.mutter-Xwaylandauth.*
    (Closes: #939736)
  * d/tests: Add a superficial build-test for the -dev package.
    I'm deliberately not testing the included forks of clutter and cogl here
    since those are an implementation detail of Mutter.
  * Use default libexecdir.
    The version of the FHS used in Debian has supported this since
    Policy 4.1.5.
  * d/rules: Use a temporary home directory for build-time tests
  * d/clean: Clean up temporary home directory and XDG_RUNTIME_DIR
  * Standards-Version: 4.4.0 (no changes required)
  * Rewrite package descriptions based on the upstream README.
    This removes the strange breakfast cereal references, and reframes
    Mutter as primarily a shared library used by GNOME Shell and only
    secondarily a standalone window manager, matching its real upstream
    maintenance status.

  [ Iain Lane ]
  * d/p/x11*: Cherry pick fixes from upstream to fix focus order on X11
    (LP: #1842971)
  * New upstream release
    + Fix xdg-output v3 support
    + Fix crash when changing decoration state
    + Add and remove connectors on hot-plug
  * d/p/*: Drop upstream cherry-picks
  * d/p/build-Compile-with-ffloat-store-on-x86-32-bit.patch: Take from MR 785.
    This fixes the testsuite on i386, which is broken because of the use of
    x87 extended precision introducing rounding errors.

 -- Iain Lane <email address hidden> Tue, 10 Sep 2019 12:56:51 +0100