| # Linux GTK Theme Integration |
| |
| The GTK+ port of Chromium has a mode where we try to match the user's GTK theme |
| (which can be enabled under Settings -> Appearance -> Use GTK+ theme). |
| |
| # GTK3 |
| |
| At some point after version 57, Chromium will switch to using the GTK3 theme by |
| default. |
| |
| ## How Chromium determines which colors to use |
| |
| GTK3 added a new CSS theming engine which gives fine-tuned control over how |
| widgets are styled. Chromium's themes, by contrast, are much simpler: it is |
| mostly a list of about 80 colors (see //src/ui/native_theme/native_theme.h) |
| overridden by the theme. Chromium usually doesn't use GTK to render entire |
| widgets, but instead tries to determine colors from them. |
| |
| There are three types of colors Chromium needs from widgets: |
| |
| * Foreground color: determined by the CSS "color" property |
| * Background color: determined by the CSS "background-color" and "background-image" properties |
| * Border color: determined by the "border-color", "border-image", |
| "border-style", and "border-width" properties |
| |
| Backgrounds and borders are complicated because in general they might have |
| multiple gradients or images. To get the color, Chromium uses GTK to render the |
| background or border into a single pixel and uses the resulting color for |
| theming. This mostly gives reasonable results, but in case theme authors do not |
| like the resulting color, they have the option to theme Chromium widgets |
| specially. |
| |
| ## Note to GTK theme authors: How to theme Chromium widgets |
| |
| Every widget Chromium uses will have a "chromium" style class added to it. For |
| example, a texfield selector might look like: |
| |
| ``` |
| .window.background.chromium .entry.chromium |
| ``` |
| |
| If themes want to handle Chromium textfields specially, for GTK3.0 - GTK3.19, |
| they might use: |
| |
| ``` |
| /* Normal case */ |
| .entry { |
| color: #ffffff; |
| background-color: #000000; |
| } |
| |
| /* Chromium-specific case */ |
| .entry.chromium { |
| color: #ff0000; |
| background-color: #00ff00; |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| For GTK3.20 or later, themes will as usual have to replace ".entry" with |
| "entry". |
| |
| Additional requirements for border colors to be picked up: |
| |
| * Must have a border-style that is not none. |
| * Must have a border-width that is nonzero. |
| |
| The list of CSS selectors that Chromium uses to determine its colors is in |
| //src/chrome/browser/ui/libgtkui/native_theme_gtk3.cc. |
| |
| # GTK2 |
| |
| Chromium's GTK2 theme will soon be deprecated, and this section will be removed. |
| |
| ## Describing the previous heuristics |
| |
| The heuristics often don't pick good colors due to a lack of information in the |
| GTK themes. The frame heuristics were simple. Query the `bg[SELECTED]` and |
| `bg[INSENSITIVE]` colors on the `MetaFrames` class and darken them |
| slightly. This usually worked OK until the rise of themes that try to make a |
| unified titlebar/menubar look. At roughly that time, it seems that people |
| stopped specifying color information for the `MetaFrames` class and this has |
| lead to the very orange chrome frame on Maverick. |
| |
| `MetaFrames` is (was?) a class that was used to communicate frame color data to |
| the window manager around the Hardy days. (It's still defined in most of |
| [XFCE's themes](http://packages.ubuntu.com/maverick/gtk2-engines-xfce)). In |
| chrome's implementation, `MetaFrames` derives from `GtkWindow`. |
| |
| If you are happy with the defaults that chrome has picked, no action is |
| necessary on the part of the theme author. |
| |
| ## Introducing `ChromeGtkFrame` |
| |
| For cases where you want control of the colors chrome uses, Chrome gives you a |
| number of style properties for injecting colors and other information about how |
| to draw the frame. For example, here's the proposed modifications to Ubuntu's |
| Ambiance: |
| |
| ``` |
| style "chrome-gtk-frame" |
| { |
| ChromeGtkFrame::frame-color = @fg_color |
| ChromeGtkFrame::inactive-frame-color = lighter(@fg_color) |
| |
| ChromeGtkFrame::frame-gradient-size = 16 |
| ChromeGtkFrame::frame-gradient-color = "#5c5b56" |
| |
| ChromeGtkFrame::scrollbar-trough-color = @bg_color |
| ChromeGtkFrame::scrollbar-slider-prelight-color = "#F8F6F2" |
| ChromeGtkFrame::scrollbar-slider-normal-color = "#E7E0D3" |
| } |
| |
| class "ChromeGtkFrame" style "chrome-gtk-frame" |
| ``` |
| |
| ### Frame color properties |
| |
| These are the frame's main solid color. |
| |
| | **Property** | **Type** | **Description** | **If unspecified** | |
| |:-------------|:---------|:----------------|:-------------------| |
| | `frame-color` | `GdkColor` | The main color of active chrome windows. | Darkens `MetaFrame::bg[SELECTED]` | |
| | `inactive-frame-color` | `GdkColor` | The main color of inactive chrome windows. | Darkens `MetaFrame::bg[INSENSITIVE]` | |
| | `incognito-frame-color` | `GdkColor` | The main color of active incognito windows. | Tints `frame-color` by the default incognito tint | |
| | `incognito-inactive-frame-color` | `GdkColor` | The main color of inactive incognito windows. | Tints `inactive-frame-color` by the default incognito tint | |
| |
| ### Frame gradient properties |
| |
| Chrome's frame (along with many normal window manager themes) have a slight |
| gradient at the top, before filling the rest of the frame background image with |
| a solid color. For example, the top `frame-gradient-size` pixels would be a |
| gradient starting from `frame-gradient-color` at the top to `frame-color` at the |
| bottom, with the rest of the frame being filled with `frame-color`. |
| |
| | **Property** | **Type** | **Description** | **If unspecified** | |
| |:-------------|:---------|:----------------|:-------------------| |
| | `frame-gradient-size` | Integers 0 through 128 | How large the gradient should be. Set to zero to disable drawing a gradient | Defaults to 16 pixels tall | |
| | `frame-gradient-color` | `GdkColor` | Top color of the gradient | Lightens `frame-color` | |
| | `inactive-frame-gradient-color` | `GdkColor` | Top color of the inactive gradient | Lightents `inactive-frame-color` | |
| | `incognito-frame-gradient-color` | `GdkColor` | Top color of the incognito gradient | Lightens `incognito-frame-color` | |
| | `incognito-inactive-frame-gradient-color` | `GdkColor` | Top color of the incognito inactive gradient. | Lightens `incognito-inactive-frame-color` | |
| |
| ### Scrollbar control |
| |
| Because widget rendering is done in a separate, sandboxed process that doesn't |
| have access to the X server or the filesystem, there's no current way to do |
| GTK+ widget rendering. We instead pass WebKit a few colors and let it draw a |
| default scrollbar. We have a very |
| [complex fallback](http://git.chromium.org/gitweb/?p=chromium.git;a=blob;f=chrome/browser/gtk/gtk_theme_provider.cc;h=a57ab6b182b915192c84177f1a574914c44e2e71;hb=3f873177e192f5c6b66ae591b8b7205d8a707918#l424) |
| where we render the widget and then average colors if this information isn't |
| provided. |
| |
| | **Property** | **Type** | **Description** | |
| |:-------------|:---------|:----------------| |
| | `scrollbar-slider-prelight-color` | `GdkColor` | Color of the slider on mouse hover. | |
| | `scrollbar-slider-normal-color` | `GdkColor` | Color of the slider otherwise | |
| | `scrollbar-trough-color` | `GdkColor` | Color of the scrollbar trough | |
| |
| ## Anticipated Q&A |
| |
| ### Will you patch themes upstream? |
| |
| I am at the very least hoping we can get Radiance and Ambiance patches since we |
| make very poor frame decisions on those themes, and hopefully a few others. |
| |
| ### How about control over the min/max/close buttons? |
| |
| I actually tried this locally. There's a sort of uncanny valley effect going on; |
| as the frame looks more native, it's more obvious that it isn't behaving like a |
| native frame. (Also my implementation added a startup time hit.) |
| |
| ### Why use style properties instead of (i.e.) bg[STATE]? |
| |
| There's no way to distinguish between colors set on different classes. Using |
| style properties allows us to be backwards compatible and maintain the |
| heuristics since not everyone is going to modify their themes for chromium (and |
| the heuristics do a reasonable job). |
| |
| ### Why now? |
| |
| * I (erg@) was putting off major changes to the window frame stuff in |
| anticipation of finally being able to use GTK+'s theme rendering for the |
| window border with client side decorations, but client side decorations |
| either isn't happening or isn't happening anytime soon, so there's no |
| justification for pushing this task off into the future. |
| * Chrome looks pretty bad under Ambiance on Maverick. |
| |
| ### Details about `MetaFrames` and `ChromeGtkFrame` relationship and history? |
| |
| `MetaFrames` is a class that was used in metacity to communicate color |
| information to the window manager. During the Hardy Heron days, we slurped up |
| the data and used it as a key part of our heuristics. At least on my Lucid Lynx |
| machine, none of the GNOME GTK+ themes have `MetaFrames` styling. (As mentioned |
| above, several of the XFCE themes do, though.) |
| |
| Internally to chrome, our `ChromeGtkFrame` class inherits from `MetaFrames` |
| (again, which inherits from `GtkWindow`) so any old themes that style the |
| `MetaFrames` class are backwards compatible. |