- added mutant implementation in ntdll, and use it for mutex
implementation in kernel32
- added access parameter on event, semaphore, timer creation in
wineserver (as ntdll interface requires it)
- added missing definitions in include/winternl.h
Allocate a timer id when the window is 0 instead of relying on the
client to do it.
Allow setting timers on windows belonging to other threads (found by
Mike McCormack).
- fixed console-related fields in RTL_USER_PROCESS_PARAMETERS
- various clean-up in kernel32.SetConsoleCtrlHandler
- only send a console event once to a process and not to all the
process' threads
return it on create_window and destroy_class.
Only create a single instance of the desktop class for the whole
session.
Added some missing locking in the client-side class management.
dlls/kernel subdir (also splitting 16bit APIs in a separate file)
- implemented ntdll.Nt{Lock|Unlock}File, and made use of those for the
kernel32 equivalent
- implemented a few information classes in NtQueryInformationFile and
NtSetInformationFile (still lots of missing classes)
- enhanced the get_file_info server request in order to implement
correctly NtQueryInformationFile (change time & file alloc size)
- rewrote registry loading to comply with latest changes
- add timeout when calling XCheckTypedWindowEvent
- fix broken IsClipboardFormatAvailable; it tried to do a trick with
EnumClipboardFormats by making incorrect assumptions
- in X11DRV_IsClipboardFormatAvailable do a quick exit if no one owns
the selection
- add 1 second *minimum* time lapse between XSelectionOwner calls
- sync clipboard ownership between different wine processes
- prevents apps from getting into wierd state where they thought they
didn't own the selection but they did and as a result queried
themselves for available selection data
handles as wineserver handles
- console input handle object is no longer waitable (input record
synchronisation is now implemented as a simple semaphore), and removed
FD_TYPE_CONSOLE from fd types in wineserver
- console handles now always have their two lower bit set so one can
distinguish a console handle from a kernel object handle
- implemented some undocumented kernel32 console related APIs
(CloseConsoleHandle, GetConsoleInputWaitHandle, OpenConsoleW,
VerifyConsoleIoHandle, DuplicateConsoleHandle)
- allowed a few kernel32 APIs to take console pseudo-handles
(FlushFileBuffer, GetFileType, WaitFor*Object*)
- simplified the console inheritance at process creation
- in console tests, no longer create a console if one already exists