When a hardware keyboard is attached, it can take over 100 ms for the keyboard event to generate text input. In that case we want to record that we recently received a keyboard event so we don't synthesize duplicate virtual key press/release events for the input text.
(cherry picked from commit 648de4f9b8)
(cherry picked from commit 38c63afd64)
When a hardware keyboard is attached to an iPad, you can easily trigger a set of on-screen keyboard transitions that will take place over time, and we need to track whether we're currently showing or hiding the keyboard and make sure we don't clobber the existing state during those transitions.
Testing:
* Connected a hardware keyboard to an iPad
* Launched checkkeys
* Noted the keyboard bar was active at the bottom of the screen and text input was active
* Tapped with both fingers to quickly toggle text input off and back on
* Noted the keyboard bar slid down and then back up, and text input was active
* Tapped on the keyboard bar to bring up the full on-screen keyboard and then closed it so the keyboard bar was still active, and text input was still active
* Tapped on the screen to turn text input off, noted the keyboard bar slid down
* Tapped with both fingers to quickly toggle text input on and back off
* Noted that the keyboard bar slid up and then back down, and text input was inactive
* Tapped on the screen to turn text input on, tapped on the keyboard bar to bring up the full on-screen keyboard, and text input was active
* Pressed a key on the physical keyboard, the on-screen keyboard closed, the key press and release was delivered (with no text input) and then the keyboard bar slid up, and text input was active again
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/7979
(cherry picked from commit c3288d113e)
(cherry picked from commit 030bb7282a)
This is another attempt to make sure we don't cause beeps from unhandled key presses while still allowing full text input functionalty.
If this isn't selective enough, we might need to go up the responder chain to see what's going to handle the event before passing it along.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/pull/6962
(cherry picked from commit a8abe612ed)
(cherry picked from commit 335e9c769a)
This can happen if a monitor is in the process of becoming primary because another monitor was disconnected.
(cherry picked from commit 07578fde3d)
(cherry picked from commit 2468fccf7f)
This adds support for the back paddles, and the "..." key
which are not automatically detected.
* "Back" is mapped to the top left "two windows" key.
* "Start" is mapped to the top right "hambuger menu" key.
* "Guide" is mapped to the "Steam" key.
* The "..." key is just a generic button.
When looking at the screen, paddles are number
* P1: Top right
* P2: Top left
* P3: Bottom right
* P4: Botom Left
The new controller mapping was created with the SDL3 gamepadmap tool.
(cherry picked from commit 27b8abb056)
(cherry picked from commit f4561db69a)
- Fixed audio device detection and usage.
- Implemented audio capture support
- Refactored buffer handling to separate pointers to fill and drain buffers.
Based on patches by josch1710 and Lars Erdmann:
https://github.com/bitwiseworks/SDL2-os2/pull/7
(cherry picked from commit 890bee64a4)
This call is actually a left-over when porting from fcitx4 service to the new org.freedesktop.portal.Fcitx supported by both fcitx4/fcitx5. CloseIC is actually never a part of the new interface on org.freedesktop.portal.Fcitx. It cause any issue user visible effect.
In this case we know the controller has been on for a while and the Bluetooth connection LED cycle is complete.
Also fixed the timestamp being zero the first time it is checked
(cherry picked from commit bd4f155bbb)
(cherry picked from commit f7dc8c0eaa)
That will put the PS5 controller into enhanced mode, which breaks DirectInput games
(cherry picked from commit 2fef0be2f6)
(cherry picked from commit 910dad505a)
If, in the case where all displays has been disconnected, and some window state change occurs before an active display is re-added and finalized, the pointer returned by SDL_GetDisplayForWindow() will be null necessitating that the returned pointer be checked for validity before dereferencing it.
(cherry picked from commit a999100858)
If there is only one controller slot available, assume that's the one matching new RAWINPUt devices. This will be right most of the time, and uncorrelation will fix any bad guesses.
(cherry picked from commit 41882a1acb)
(cherry picked from commit 34c5bde355)
The xpad kernel driver doesn't know about these controllers and ends up using BTN_C and BTN_Z and the automatic mapping doesn't work correctly.
It turns out VID 0x045e and PID 0x02e0 is used by the 8BitDo SN30 Pro when connecting via Bluetooth in XInput mode.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/7925
(cherry picked from commit 80e1c75e1c)
(cherry picked from commit 156c7badf5)
This fixes WGI correlation on startup when the WGI gamepad list isn't populated yet
(cherry picked from commit f047e178b6)
(cherry picked from commit f8a0135edf)
That will put the PS4 controller into enhanced mode, which breaks DirectInput games
(cherry picked from commit efed24850a)
(cherry picked from commit 1f7bc08884)
Initializing "Windows.Gaming.Input.Gamepad" will put Bluetooth PS4 controllers into enhanced report mode, which breaks any game using DirectInput. Let's wait to do this until absolutely necessary.
(cherry picked from commit 785f57eb91)
(cherry picked from commit de849d5e6f)
video(wayland): use both --icon and --icon-name for Zenity
Many distros ship an older version of Zenity that supports GTK3, while some distros ship newer version of Zenity which uses libadwaita.
This command tries to use --icon and fall back to --icon-name when it fails.
(cherry picked from commit b90343e512)
This fixes the following errors when a dll attempts to link to a shared SDL2::SDL2:
m.c.obj : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol __imp___acrt_iob_func referenced in function printf
m.c.obj : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol __imp___stdio_common_vfprintf referenced in function _vfprintf_l
MSVCRTD.lib(init.obj) : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol _CrtDbgReport referenced in function _CRT_RTC_INIT
MSVCRTD.lib(init.obj) : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol _CrtDbgReportW referenced in function _CRT_RTC_INITW
MSVCRTD.lib(error.obj) : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol strcpy_s referenced in function "void __cdecl _RTC_StackFailure(void *,char const *)" (?_RTC_StackFailure@@YAXPEAXPEBD@Z)
MSVCRTD.lib(error.obj) : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol strcat_s referenced in function "void __cdecl _RTC_StackFailure(void *,char const *)" (?_RTC_StackFailure@@YAXPEAXPEBD@Z)
MSVCRTD.lib(error.obj) : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol __stdio_common_vsprintf_s referenced in function _vsprintf_s_l
MSVCRTD.lib(error.obj) : error LNK2001: unresolved external symbol __C_specific_handler_noexcept
MSVCRTD.lib(pdblkup.obj) : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol _wmakepath_s referenced in function "int __cdecl GetPdbDllPathFromFilePath(wchar_t const *,wchar_t *,unsigned __int64)" (?GetPdbDllPathFromFilePath@@YAHPEB_WPEA_W_K@Z)
MSVCRTD.lib(pdblkup.obj) : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol _wsplitpath_s referenced in function "int __cdecl GetPdbDllPathFromFilePath(wchar_t const *,wchar_t *,unsigned __int64)" (?GetPdbDllPathFromFilePath@@YAHPEB_WPEA_W_K@Z)
MSVCRTD.lib(pdblkup.obj) : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol wcscpy_s referenced in function "int __cdecl GetPdbDllPathFromFilePath(wchar_t const *,wchar_t *,unsigned __int64)" (?GetPdbDllPathFromFilePath@@YAHPEB_WPEA_W_K@Z)
MSVCRTD.lib(pdblkup.obj) : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol __vcrt_GetModuleFileNameW referenced in function "struct HINSTANCE__ * __cdecl GetPdbDll(void)" (?GetPdbDll@@YAPEAUHINSTANCE__@@XZ)
MSVCRTD.lib(pdblkup.obj) : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol __vcrt_GetModuleHandleW referenced in function "struct HINSTANCE__ * __cdecl GetPdbDll(void)" (?GetPdbDll@@YAPEAUHINSTANCE__@@XZ)
MSVCRTD.lib(pdblkup.obj) : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol __vcrt_LoadLibraryExW referenced in function "struct HINSTANCE__ * __cdecl GetPdbDll(void)" (?GetPdbDll@@YAPEAUHINSTANCE__@@XZ)
Also, for some reason ID3D11DeviceContext_OMGetRenderTargets() was failing in the second read pixels call in the "testautomation --filter render_testViewport" test.
We already know the target view, so just use that.
(cherry picked from commit 619f65af0c)
(cherry picked from commit 61808b03b5)
Don't use the viewport offset when setting the clip rect in the D3D12 renderer.
This fixes "testautomation --filter render_testViewport" on Windows
(cherry picked from commit 304d425f99)
(cherry picked from commit bf277eb808)
This fixes 'testautomation --filter clipboard_testClipboardTextFunctions' on Windows
(cherry picked from commit c24496727cdd40d5c0ffdf7b6a61085ec3a2766d)
(cherry picked from commit 7e8be3f280)
and we're statically linking to the library.
This fixes building SDL with -DSDL_WAYLAND_SHARED=OFF
(cherry picked from commit 5b5b67df20)
(cherry picked from commit e6f635ca17)
It is possible for retrieving the machine ID to fail, either because
dbus was installed incorrectly (machine ID absent or corrupt), or in
32-bit builds, because stat() on the machine ID fails with EOVERFLOW
if it has an out-of-range timestamp or inode number.
dbus has historically treated this as a faulty installation, raising
a warning which by default causes the process to crash. Unfortunately,
dbus_get_local_machine_id() never had a way to report errors, so it has
no alternative for that (bad) error handling.
In dbus >= 1.12.0, we can use dbus_try_get_local_machine_id() to get
the same information, but with the ability to cope gracefully with
errors. ibus won't work in this situation, but that's better than
crashing.
(cherry picked from commit 91198baed4)
Mitigates: https://github.com/ValveSoftware/steam-for-linux/issues/9605
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
The hidraw device may take additional time to get the correct permissions for us to open it. In my tests on Steam Deck hardware, this ranges between 5-8ms.
(cherry picked from commit c6ee9780df)
We can't read device info or IMU calibration from this controller, and it has no gyro or accelerometer, but is otherwise perfectly functional.
(cherry picked from commit f168f9c813)
Fixes DPI awareness of testdrawchessboard (previously, the surface was
being created in points instead of pixels, resulting in the demo app
only drawing in a corner of the screen on High-DPI displays)
*_CreateWindowFramebuffer()/*_UpdateWindowFramebuffer(): are updated
to use SDL_GetWindowSizeInPixels instead of SDL_GetWindowSize() or
window->w/window->h.
Most of the _CreateWindowFramebuffer backends are untested except
for Windows.
Fixes#7047
(cherry picked from commit 67c91353e0)
This is much more robust and able to dynamically create a mapping for Xbox One S, Xbox Series X, and Xbox Elite 2 controllers.
(cherry picked from commit 9567989eb3)
We can't actually tell yet whether a controller has paddles, so this code isn't effective, but I'll file an upstream issue and see if we can get that resolved.
(cherry picked from commit b0677f476f)
This heuristic for gamepads without a more specific mapping already
tried two incompatible conventions for handling triggers: the Linux
Gamepad Specification uses hat switch 2 for the triggers (for whatever
reason), but the de facto standard set by the drivers for older Xbox
and Playstation controllers represents each trigger as the Z-axis of
the nearest analog stick.
Android documentation encourages Bluetooth gamepad manufacturers to use
a third incompatible convention where the left and right triggers are
represented as the brake and gas pedals of a driving simulator
controller. The Android convention also changes the representation of
the right stick: instead of using X and Y rotation as a second pair
of axes, Android uses Z position as a second horizontal axis, and
Z rotation as a second vertical axis.
Try to cope gracefully with all of these. This will hopefully resolve
the issue described in #5406 (when using unpatched kernels).
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
(cherry picked from commit cf1dc66e2c)
The bitfield `mapped` has two different sets of meanings, depending
whether we're setting up the triggers or the d-pad. Represent them
as symbolic constants rather than opaque integers.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
(cherry picked from commit c4d49fadd4)
This prevents the case where the mouse might be at the edge of the
window when enabling relative mode, which confuses macOS, at it
might believe the user is attempting to resize the window.
Fixes#6994.
This fixes the serial number for Nintendo Switch Pro, which is queried from the hardware in device initialization, and was later clobbered by the USB string which isn't correct.
(cherry picked from commit 2042e9c4e3)
This fixes the following warning when configuring with CMake 3.27+:
```
CMake Deprecation Warning at CMakeLists.txt:3190 (cmake_minimum_required):
Compatibility with CMake < 3.5 will be removed from a future version of
CMake.
Update the VERSION argument <min> value or use a ...<max> suffix to tell
CMake that the project does not need compatibility with older versions.
```
Before this, the function could not be used on buffers,
as it would not account for the zero-termination unless
it was included in the input.
(cherry picked from commit 5f5abb6805)
Raw input will not send game controller events while Remote Desktop is active, so dynamically switch between XInput and raw input when Remote Desktop state changes.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/7759
(cherry picked from commit 767507fcf6)
Apparently when using the Xbox One Wireless Adapter, using XInput at the same time as raw input will cause the controller to turn off immediately after connecting. This appears to be a bug in the Windows 11 driver stack, but since WGI provides all the extended functionality we need, this can be turned off for now.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/3468
They can vanish for UP TO EIGHT SECONDS...!
This is for devices that connect to HDMI/DisplayPort/etc, where it
presumably has to wait for a display to get up and running before it
can play audio through it, so one can see the audio device fail when
changing display modes, or the system returning from sleep. Since this
can be triggered by a game changing video resolutions at startup (either
before or after opening the audio device!), it's important to deal with.
In normal conditions, it shouldn't take this long to open or recover an
audio device, but this is better than unexpectedly losing the device
in this situation.
Fixes#7044.
Fixes#5571.
Ensure that incoming touch events originate from valid surfaces owned by SDL and have proper window data before forwarding them to the touch subsystem, or the window focus pointer that is sent with the event may not be a pointer to an SDL window.
In theory this is illegal, but legit wavefiles in the field do it, and
it's easy to bump it to 1 for general purposes.
Formats with more specific alignment requirements already check for them
separately.
Fixes#7714.
(cherry picked from commit 2e646c7141)
sdl12-compat can get into a state where a color-keyed surface is
marked for blending, but wants to blend with full alpha (which
is the same as _not_ blending), so rather than fail to find a
blitter in that case, it just selects the colorkey blitter.
Reference https://github.com/libsdl-org/sdl12-compat/issues/233
An in-place swizzle mutation was erroneously inside of a loop, which
caused each consecutive 4-pixel vector to alternate between correct and
incorrect endianness.
The bug was introduced in 715e070d29.
Thanks to RobbieAB for reporting the bug.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/3428
(cherry picked from commit 9142292f4a)
Destroy any proxy wrappers and callbacks before the associated event queues to silence libwayland warnings about destroying the queues while proxies are still attached.
c1b9d2ad98
Properly handle the close of run loop on macOS
(https://github.com/libusb/hidapi/pull/522)
- as per documentation `kCFRunLoopRunStopped` should be handled once the runloop is closed via `CFRunLoopStop`;
- if it is not handled - a race condition/crash may happen on the latest macOS when a device gets disconnected while being open;
(cherry picked from commit 62d1a2c836)
Xcode 14.3 does not allow targeting 10.9, the minimum recommended version is 10.13 and the minimum possible version is 10.11.
(cherry picked from commit 73b2faea4e)
This should never happen, but we're seeing it in the wild, so make sure that we can never call into a NULL device driver.
(cherry picked from commit e13b74ccf0)
The X11 driver uses scancodes derived from keysyms to map the scancodes for extended keys to the physical keyboard, however, this can be incorrect when using certain XKB options (e.g. caps:swapescape), which changes the keysyms emitted by certain keys, but does not imply that their scancodes or positions should be altered. Mark selected scancodes as being non-remappable so that their scancodes aren't changed by toggling XKB mapping options.
CFLAGS currently takes care of two aspects of the build: optimisation
and debug symbols on one hand, the include path on the other. The
former should be overridable by users, the latter shouldn't.
This patch moves the include path flag to CPPFLAGS, which is
appropriate for pre-processor directives. This leaves CFLAGS with only
overridable flags.
Based on a patch by Roflcopter4:
https://github.com/joncampbell123/dosbox-x/pull/3850
Signed-off-by: Stephen Kitt <steve@sk2.org>
The /Gs argument controls the number of bytes that local variables
can occupy before a stack probe is initiated.
By setting it to a huge value, no calls to __chkstk are inserted.
This change is needed for the classic Intel C compiler to build SDL
with -DSDL_LIBC=OFF.
Event names have grown in length and are occasionally truncated when being logged (e.g. SDL_EVENT_WINDOW_PIXEL_SIZE_CHA). Increase the event name buffer size to handle the longer names.
(cherry picked from commit 203a2a76fc)
Another regression from commit dca3fd8307,
which was a backport of commit de3909a190
from SDL3 to SDL2. This time the regression is much less apparent,
however, due to two reasons:
- It only appears when the SDL project is ran on an actual device
due to magic stringage.
- More importantly, the regression was partially hidden due to
the nature of de3909a190.
The commit which was backported added a single `I` to the JNI method
signature in `SDL_android.c`, representing the added `int axis_mask`
parameter. The parameter was added to both SDL2 and SDL3.
However, notably, that `I` was added *after* commit
fcafe40948, which removed the
`int nballs` parameter from the joystick API, but only from the SDL3
branch.
Therefore, in totality, what should really have been a merge conflict,
was obscured by the fact that the SDL3 branch ended up having
a net-identical JNI signature to the SDL2 branch, due to having
one bool param removed and one added - while, in fact, the SDL2 branch
needed one bool param added and none removed.
The missing type in question is causing compilation failures.
The error was introduced in dca3fd8307,
which was a backport of commit de3909a190
from SDL3 to SDL2.
Because `int nballs` was removed as a parameter from the controller
API in SDL3 in revision fcafe40948,
this change is only applicable to the SDL2 branch.
4b1378f
X11: fix size/position (test video_setWindowCenteredOnDisplay)
this fix x11 backend to correctly pass video_setWindowCenteredOnDisplay()
get border values early (eg status bar)
wait for size/position change to get valid values
d4d26e0
testautomation_video: if SDL_SetWindowSize/Position isn't honored, we should check there is an event
x11: send the events if various occasions
This lets the user to correctly detect current vsync state by reading SDL_RendererInfo.
Also fixes SetVSync's return value check (it may be positive for error too).
- Avoids precision loss caused by large floating point numbers.
- Adds unit test to test the signal-to-noise ratio and maximum error of resampler.
- Code cleanup
(cherry-picked from commit 20e17559e5)
It occasionally takes a few millseconds for the GCController framework to handle the device notification and set up the device
Fixes the duplicate controller issue in https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/6686
(cherry picked from commit 645823fc90)
I've only tested this on windows, but I went ahead and made the same changes for linux and mac because I assumed it's the same there and that we'd want to keep the three platforms in sync.
(cherry picked from commit b8bc4a234b)
If we don't do this, the view will be blanked even if another context is current and rendering from that context won't be visible.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/4986
keymap can change over time, caching the keymap causes wrong keys
returned when user changes keymap during runtime
Signed-off-by: Michal Suchanek <msuchanek@suse.de>
Passing True for owner_events in the XGrabPointer call makes all
XI_RawMotion events appear in the queue twice, with the only difference
between them being the value of XGenericEventCookie::cookie. These have
always been filtered out by a check in the XI_RawMotion handler,
however with a mouse that polls at more than 1 kHz frequency, there
also exist legitimate events that appear indistinguishable from these
duplicated events. These must not be filtered out, otherwise the
pointer may move at an inconsistent speed, appearing like a bad pointer
acceleration implementation.
Change owner_events to False in the XGrabPointer and remove the
duplicate event detection code to fix this.
Signed-off-by: Torge Matthies <openglfreak@googlemail.com>
(cherry picked from commit f18b5656f6)
Setting the cursor clip area to a single pixel prevents the relative mouse motion remote desktop warping from working, so the mouse is never recentered.
(cherry picked from commit daffe02b11)
This adds a means to mass-convert the whole wiki to Markdown as a one-time
operation, and then some fixes to make --copy-to-headers correctly deal with
Markdown-formatted wiki pages.
(cherry picked from commit 936a51d5cc)
We get audio artifacts if we don't work at the higher precision, but
this is painful on CPUs that have to use a software fallback for this,
so for now (that is, until we have a better solution), get better output
on amd64 chips, where the cost is less painful.
(cherry picked from commit 1e5e8e2fda)
On Windows the main thread can be enumerating DirectInput devices while the Windows.Gaming.Input thread is calling back with a new controller available, and in this case HIDAPI_IsDevicePresent() returned false since the controller initialization hadn't completed yet, creating a duplicate controller.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/7304
(cherry picked from commit ece8a7bb8e)
`EM_ASM_` and `EM_ASM_INT_V` are calls that have been deprecated
for a long time.
Since the return value isn't used for the call to `EM_ASM_`, it
can be replaced with `EM_ASM`.
`EM_ASM_INT_V` is now (for the last few years) `EM_ASM_INT`.
(cherry picked from commit a8e89f2567)
Without these mappings, this controller "kinda" works out of the box:
- `SDL_GameControllerMapping()` works because it will notice "Xbox" in
the name and use the default XInput mappings
- `SDL_GameControllerMappingForGUID()` will not find any mapping
lsusb:
```
ID 2dc8:2000 8BitDo 8BitDo Pro 2 Wired Controller for Xbox
```
In Linux this controller is supported by two drivers:
- `xpad` (built-in to the kernel), exposes the controller name from the
USB descriptor and the GUID starts with 03 (0x03 = BUS_USB)
- `xone` (https://github.com/medusalix/xone), exposes a virtual
controller which is always named "Microsoft X-Box One pad" and the
GUID starts with 06 (0x06 = BUS_VIRTUAL)
This commit adds the 2 GUIDs from both drivers so mappings will always
be found and the real controller name will always be reported.
MessageBoxes attached to a window in macOS should use modal APIs and not
use a poll/sleep pattern on the main thread. Sleeping the main thread
makes the NSWindow message loop sluggish and interferes with external
applications that need to send messages to that window, such as
VoiceOver.
libdecor plugins can change the min/max window size values internally to enforce a minimum window size, and errors and crashes can result if the window size is below the internal limit.
On versions of libdecor >= 0.1.1, the minimum width and height can be queried and the minimum required window size will be enforced. The application requested window size is still respected, however, the actual window may be slightly larger than the drawable area to accommodate the required libdecor minimum size.
On version 0.1.0 of libdecor, which lacks the function to retrieve the minimum size, the internal limits are overridden before committing a frame, so that the internal limits always match the window size as a workaround, even if the window is technically smaller than the plugin would normally allow.
(cherry picked from commit 423a82cd4b)
Fixes issue #7118 by adding all Konami Amusement controllers to the
blacklist. Additionally, the blacklist is changed to exclude a whole
vendor when the PID 0x0000 is used.
Perform a round trip when maximizing and restoring windows so the changes have already taken effect when the associated functions return.
(cherry picked from commit 50f2eb7d41)
We are guaranteed that the lock will be held during shutdown, so if we are in InvokeRemoved(), it's because we're shutting down controllers and need to remove them from our internal list.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/7016
(cherry picked from commit ac99db9fc8)
LandscapeLeft has now been set to ActivityInfo.SCREEN_ORIENTATION_LANDSCAPE and LandscapeRight to ActivityInfo.SCREEN_ORIENTATION_REVERSE_LANDSCAPE in order to reflect the docs: https://wiki.libsdl.org/SDL2/SDL_HINT_ORIENTATIONS
A previous cleanup commit inverted a statement that checked the return value of
a KMSDRM_CreateSurfaces call during KMSDRM_CreateWindow, which causes the video
backend to always fail despite success.
This commit restores the intended behavior.
Fixes: 3c501b963d ("Clang-Tidy fixes (#6725)").
(cherry picked from commit 0187209f46)
```
./src/thread/pthread/SDL_syssem.c:140:12: warning: variable 'retval' is used uninitialized whenever 'while' loop exits because its condition is false [-Wsometimes-uninitialized]
while (sem_trywait(&sem->sem) != 0) {
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
./src/thread/pthread/SDL_syssem.c:149:12: note: uninitialized use occurs here
return retval;
^~~~~~
./src/thread/pthread/SDL_syssem.c:140:12: note: remove the condition if it is always true
while (sem_trywait(&sem->sem) != 0) {
```
This was a legitimate bug, thank you clang!
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/6830
(cherry picked from commit b678a98024)
```
./src/joystick/SDL_joystick.c:105:12: warning: no previous extern declaration for non-static variable 'SDL_joystick_lock' [-Wmissing-variable-declarations]
SDL_mutex *SDL_joystick_lock = NULL; /* This needs to support recursive locks */
^
./src/joystick/SDL_joystick.c:105:1: note: declare 'static' if the variable is not intended to be used outside of this translation unit
SDL_mutex *SDL_joystick_lock = NULL; /* This needs to support recursive locks */
^
```
1 warning generated.
The annotations have been added to SDL_mutex.h and have been made public so applications can enable this for their own code.
Clang assumes that locking and unlocking can't fail, but SDL has the concept of a NULL mutex, so the mutex functions have been changed not to report errors if a mutex hasn't been initialized. We do have mutexes that might be accessed when they are NULL, notably in the event system, so this is an important change.
This commit cleans up a bunch of rare race conditions in the joystick and game controller code so now everything should be completely protected by the joystick lock.
To test this, change the compiler to "clang -Wthread-safety -Werror=thread-safety -DSDL_THREAD_SAFETY_ANALYSIS"
It was previously thought that these function calls were unnecessary as the initial bug and reproduction case that necessitated their addition seemed to be fixed, but apparently there are still cases where this needs to be set explicitly. Set the xdg surface geometry at creation time and when the window size changes.
Partially reverts #6361. This is not needed in the libdecor path, as libdecor calls this for the content surface internally.
(cherry picked from commit 90a964f132)
Num Lock and Caps Lock always need to be explicitly handled by the modifier handler function, or they won't be correctly set if active at application startup, or if the lock state is changed while the application lacks focus since a key press for these keys will never be received. In these cases, the internal SDL modifier state can end up the inverse of the actual modifier state.
(cherry picked from commit 653e484da1)
I updated .clang-format and ran clang-format 14 over the src and test directories to standardize the code base.
In general I let clang-format have it's way, and added markup to prevent formatting of code that would break or be completely unreadable if formatted.
The script I ran for the src directory is added as build-scripts/clang-format-src.sh
This fixes:
#6592#6593#6594
(cherry picked from commit 5750bcb174)
The new protocol adds support for more native communication of
fractional scaling.
Everything in the wayland backend already existed only our fractional
scale was calculated implicitly through a combination of output size
guesswork for fullscreen windows.
This new protocol makes that explicit, providing a more robust solution
and a solution for non-fullscreen surfaces. The fallback code is still
left in place for now whilst compositors gain support.
- do not overwrite error message set by SDL_InitFormat (SDL_AllocFormat)
- set proper error message (Cocoa_Metal_CreateView)
- protect against allocation failure (UIKit_Metal_CreateView)
(cherry picked from commit cf0cb44df8)
- SDL_CreateMutex returns NULL when the creation fails (ngage)
- SDL_SemValue returns 0 when the semaphore is NULL (n3ds)
(cherry picked from commit 6875e1c262)
* Add braces after if conditions
* More add braces after if conditions
* Add braces after while() conditions
* Fix compilation because of macro being modified
* Add braces to for loop
* Add braces after if/goto
* Move comments up
* Remove extra () in the 'return ...;' statements
* More remove extra () in the 'return ...;' statements
* More remove extra () in the 'return ...;' statements after merge
* Fix inconsistent patterns are xxx == NULL vs !xxx
* More "{}" for "if() break;" and "if() continue;"
* More "{}" after if() short statement
* More "{}" after "if () return;" statement
* More fix inconsistent patterns are xxx == NULL vs !xxx
* Revert some modificaion on SDL_RLEaccel.c
* SDL_RLEaccel: no short statement
* Cleanup 'if' where the bracket is in a new line
* Cleanup 'while' where the bracket is in a new line
* Cleanup 'for' where the bracket is in a new line
* Cleanup 'else' where the bracket is in a new line
(cherry picked from commit 6a2200823c to reduce conflicts merging between SDL2 and SDL3)
`argv[0]`/`getexexname()` are not always absolute paths by default and can be modified to anything the developer wants them to be.
Consider using `readSymLink("/proc/self/path/a.out")` instead and `getexecname()` as the fallback, since the symlink will always be the correct absolute path (unless /proc is ot mounted, but it is by default on Solaris and Illumos platforms).
(cherry picked from commit 4f5e9fd5bd)
Explicitly include the Wayland protocol headers when statically linking against the Wayland libraries or older system headers might be used instead of the local versions.
(cherry picked from commit 836eb22442)
The typedef seems to be pulled in coincidentally with newer SDKs, but
older ones need to import the header explicitly.
(cherry picked from commit d2910904fb)
This reverts commit 33a68f575f.
We don't want the G29 to show up as a gamepad, Steam will create a virtual Xbox controller for it, which breaks racing games.
When changing the window state from non-floating to floating (e.g. leaving fullscreen), libdecor can send bogus content sizes that are +/- the height of the window title bar and start 'walking' the window height in one direction or the other with every transition.
The floating window size is known, so use the cached value instead of the size reported by libdecor when restoring the floating state.
Some applications (and embarrassingly, testime is one of them) call
SDL_StartTextInput() or SDL_SetTextInputRect() every frame. On KDE/KWin
with fcitx5, this causes there to be several preedit events every frame
(particularly given some of the workarounds in Wayland_StartTextInput),
which slows testime down to an unusable crawl.
Instead, make SDL_StartTextInput() a no-op if text input is already
enabled, and cache the input rect, only changing it when the new rect is
actually different.
With these changes, we only get preedit events (and hence
SDL_TEXTEDITING events) when the preedit string actually changes. This
matches the behaviour under XWayland, and works very smoothly.
This needs to check what our deployment target is, not what SDK
is available, since this is a linker symbol and not an enum
value or whatever.
Also removed a copy/paste error that mentioned CoreAudio in
the haptic subsystem.
Fixes#6534.
The XKB_KEY_* and XK_* macros resolve to the same constant values, so use the raw values and note what keys they correspond to in the comments, as is done for the other keysym values in this file.
This completely eliminates the need for any X or XKB system headers along with the if/else defines.
Most of these are probably harmless, but the changes to SDL_immdevice.c and SDL_pixels.c appear to have fixed genuine bugs.
SDL_audiocvt.c: By separating the calculation of the divisor, I got rid of the suspicion that dividing a double by an integer led to loss of precision.
SDL_immdevice.c: Added a missing test, one that could have otherwise led to dereferencing a null pointer.
SDL_events.c, SDL_gamecontroller.c, SDL_joystick.c, SDL_malloc.c, SDL_video.c: Made it clear the return values weren't used.
SDL_hidapi_shield.c: The size is zero, so nothing bad would have happened, but the SDL_memset() was still being given an address outside of the array's range.
SDL_dinputjoystick.c: Initialize local data, just in case IDirectInputDevice8_GetProperty() isn't guaranteed to write to it.
SDL_render_sw.c: drawstate.viewport could be null (as seen on line 691).
SDL.c: SDL_MostSignificantBitIndex32() could return -1, though I don't know if you want to cope with that (what I did) or SDL_assert() that it can't happen.
SDL_hints.c: Replaced boolean tests on pointer values with comparisons to NULL.
SDL_pixels.c: Looks like the switch is genuinely missing a break!
SDL_rect_impl.h: The MacOS static checker pointed out issues with the X comparisons that were handled by assertions; I added assertions for the Y comparisons.
SDL_yuv.c, SDL_windowskeyboard.c, SDL_windowswindow.c: Checked error-result returns.
This reverts commit 04b50f6c6b.
It turns out OpenGL vsync has broken again in macOS 12, so
we're reintroducing our CVDisplayLink code to deal with it,
again.
Reference Issue #4918.
SDL is built around the concept of keyboards having a fixed layout with scancodes that correspond to physical keys no matter what linguistic layout is used. Virtual keyboards don't have this concept and can present an arbitrary layout of keys with arbitrary scancodes and names, which don't fit the SDL model. When one of these keyboards is encountered, it requires special handling: use the keysym of the pressed keys to derive their ANSI keyboard scancode equivalents for control keys and ASCII characters. All other characters are passed through as text events only.
Add a helper function to get the keycode for a scancode from the default lookup table. Unlike SDL_GetKeyFromScancode(), this is not affected by the set keymap.
It turns out that we can safely create a Metal view on an existing window, and that avoids issues with the window being recreated with the wrong orientation in iOS 16.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/6289
Clamp the wl_seat max version to 5 if being built against a version of libwayland below 1.21.0, or containers that bundle newer versions of SDL with older versions of libwayland can break if the compositor advertises support for a protocol version above 5.
- use _Interlocked(Compare)ExchangePointer in case of _M_IX86 as well
- improve assertions:
1. add assertions to SDL_AtomicAdd/SDL_AtomicSet and SDL_AtomicCAS
2. use sizeof(a->value) instead of sizeof(int)
Sending rumble to the Amazon Luna controller on macOS gets there, but IOHIDDeviceSetReport() blocks for a long time and eventually fails.
This appears to be a bug in the macOS Bluetooth stack, ref rdar://99265496
- SDL_EventQ.active is a bool variable -> do not use SDL_AtomicGet/Set, it does not help in any way
- protect SDL_EventQ.active with SDL_EventQ.lock
- set SDL_EventQ.active to FALSE by default
This is a USB adapter for controllers shipped with Nintendo's NES-mini and
SNES-mini consoles.
Tested with both NES and SNES controllers, buttons map as expected on both.
Most of this code is disabled out for now.
- For mouse cursors we have a wl_surface for both system and custom
cursors which needs recreating.
- The other patch is about nullification after deletions
This works around udev event nodes arriving before hidraw nodes and the controller being opened twice - once using the Linux driver and once by the HIDAPI driver.
This also fixes a kernel panic on Steam Link hardware due to trying to open the hidraw device node too early.
A delay of 10 ms seems to be a good value, tested on Steam Link hardware.
When SDL is included as a subproject, the following error might appear:
```
CMake Error: Error required internal CMake variable not set, cmake may not be built correctly.
Missing variable is:
CMAKE_OBJC_COMPILE_OBJECT
```
This is probably because the master project does not see certain OBJC related variables
If relative mouse mode is explicitly enabled, don't modify the capture flag on button events or the window might report having lost mouse focus if a button is pressed while moving the cursor.
AM_PATH_SDL2 doesn't add much beyond PKG_CHECK_MODULES, and having a
special m4 macro for every library that you might depend on scales
poorly.
The macro does add special support for macOS frameworks, but that feature
was broken for around 6 years without anyone noticing (#6141), and is
likely to be only rarely useful according to comments on #6141.
Resolves: #6140
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Library-specific foo-config scripts duplicate very similar logic across
various different projects, and tend to break cross-compiling, multilib
(gcc -m32), Debian/Ubuntu multiarch and so on by only being able to have
one sdl2-config at a time as the first one in the PATH.
The direct replacement is pkg-config(1) or a compatible reimplementation
like pkgconf(1), which relies on each library installing declarative
metadata, like SDL's sdl2.pc (available since at least 2.0.0) and
centralizes the logic into the pkg-config/pkgconf tool.
Most uses of `sdl2-config --foo` can be replaced by something similar
to `${PKG_CONFIG:-pkg-config} --foo sdl2`. Instead of adding a custom
sdl2-config to the PATH or using its --prefix or --exec-prefix options,
users of a custom installation prefix can use any of pkg-config's
non-SDL-specific ways to influence the result, for example setting
PKG_CONFIG_PATH, PKG_CONFIG_SYSROOT_DIR or PKG_CONFIG_LIBDIR environment
variables, or setting the PKG_CONFIG environment variable to point to
a wrapper script.
For Autotools specifically, the replacement for AM_PATH_SDL2 (which
will be officially deprecated in a subsequent commit) is
PKG_CHECK_MODULES.
CMake has its own semi-declarative mechanism for dependency discovery,
"config packages", and the SDL build already installs a config
package. There's a good example of using a config package to discover
SDL in `cmake/test/`.
Meson natively supports pkg-config, and already uses it in preference
to sdl2-config.
Other build systems can run pkg-config instead of sdl2-config,
preferably checking the PKG_CONFIG environment variable first.
https://github.com/ioquake/ioq3 is a good example of a project doing
this correctly.
Helps: #6140, #3516
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
This is a functional state for some window managers (tested using stock Ubuntu 22.04.1), and removing that state, e.g. using SDL_RestoreWindow(), results in a window centered and floating, and not visually covering the rest of the desktop.
This uses a newer browser API to get physical scancodes, but still
uses the (deprecated) event field that we were already using for
scancodes, but for keycodes instead now, which appears to be more
accurate.
Since keyboard layout isn't (generally) available to web apps, this
adds an internal interface to send key events with both scancode
and keycode to SDL's internals, instead of sending just scancodes and
expecting SDL to use its own keymap to generate keycodes.
Future work in this area would be to use the keyboard layout APIs
on browsers that support them, which would allow us to use SDL's
usual keymap code and not rely on a deprecated browser API, but
until we get there, this patch gives significantly more correct
results than we would have before.
Fixes#2098.
Exit the fullscreen sequence sooner if it is requested that a popup window be fullscreen.
The surface commit formerly in this path is irrelevant and can be removed as previous changes made it so that SetFullscreen() is no longer called from anywhere except Wayland_SetWindowFullscreen().
The controller can use either hat or buttons for the D-Pad, depending on what Linux driver is in use. The automatic mapping in LINUX_JoystickGetGamepadMapping() will do the right thing based on the exposed capability bits.
I'm sure this is the case for other controllers as well, so we might be removing more mappings over time.
This ignores 2.x.1 (etc) releases, which prevents it from thinking
the next official non-point-release version is 2.26.1, when it
should be 2.26.0, because it saw the "latest" release is 2.24.1.
This fixes the wiki ending up with imaginary version numbers for
the "this function is available since SDL 2.x.y" sections.
Fixes#6343.
Clear the window to black on the initial window draw, to avoid a really
obnoxious white flash. This doesn't always eliminate it, but it
definitely minimizes it.
This makes the colorspace match across different graphics APIs. By
default, OpenGL was getting a much more saturated colorspace (maybe
Display P3?) and it was looking very different from the rendering done
by Metal or MoltenVK.
Downstream distributors can use this to mark a version with their
preferred version information, like a Linux distribution package version
or the Steam revision it was built to be bundled into, or just to mark
it with the vendor it was built by or the environment it's intended to
be used in.
For instance, in Debian I'd use this by configuring with:
--enable-vendor-info="${DEB_VENDOR} ${DEB_VERSION}"
to get a SDL_REVISION like:
release-2.24.1-0-ga1d1946dc (Debian 2.24.1+dfsg-2)
which gives a Debian user enough information to track down the patches
and build-time configuration that were used for package revision 2.
In Autotools and CMake, this is a configure-time option like any other,
and will go into both SDL_REVISION (via SDL_revision.h) and
SDL_GetRevision().
In other build systems (MSVC, Xcode, etc.), defining the
SDL_VENDOR_INFO macro will get it into the output of SDL_GetRevision(),
although not SDL_REVISION.
Resolves: https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/6418
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Instead of using a URL and git sha1, this uses `git describe` to
describe the version relative to the nearest previous git tag, which
gives a better indication of whether this is a release, a prerelease,
a slightly patched prerelease, or a long way after the last release
during active development.
This serves two purposes: it makes those APIs more informative, and it
also puts this information into the binary in a form that is easy to
screen-scrape using strings(1). For instance, if the bundled version of
SDL in a game has this, we can see at a glance what version it is.
It's also shorter than using the web address of the origin git
repository and the full git commit sha1.
Also write the computed version into a file ./VERSION in `make dist`
tarballs, so that when we build from a tarball on a system that doesn't
have git available, we still get the version details.
For the Perforce code path in showrev.sh, output the version number
followed by the Perforce revision, in a format reminiscent of
`git describe` (with p instead of g to indicate Perforce).
For the code path with no VCS available at all, put a suffix on the
version number to indicate that this is just a guess (we can't know
whether this SDL version is actually a git snapshot or has been
patched locally or similar).
Resolves: https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/6418
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
- SDL_LoadObject: upon failure, strip the .dll extension and retry,
but only if module name has no path.
- SDL_LoadFunction: upon failure, retry with an underscore prepended,
e.g. for gcc-built dlls.
- strlcpy was passed a wrong buffer length parameter. has worked so
far by luck.
- use memcpy instead of strlcpy for simplicity.
- 'append' has been a typo: should be 'prepend'.
Otherwise the thread might block for a long time (more than 10 seconds!).
It's not clear to me why this happens, or why its safe to do this with a
resource that's still in use, but we have, until recently, always
disposed of the AudioQueue first, so changing back is probably okay.
Also changed the disposal to allow in-flight buffers to reach hardware;
otherwise you lose the last little bit of audio that's already been queued
but not played, which you can hear clearly in the loopwave test program.
Fixes#6377.
Disabling RAWINPUT on Windows 10 causes these issues:
* All Xbox controllers are named "XInput Controller".
* Trigger rumble no longer works.
* "XInput Controllers" are now also listed as separate haptic devices
It's only needed to support more than 4 Xbox controllers, and adds significant complexity to the joystick processing, and we regularly get bugs from people who aren't using an SDL window who need to turn on SDL_HINT_JOYSTICK_THREAD.
Replace instances of fprintf(stderr, ...) with SDL_SetError(), replace C++ comments with C style, use a uniform format for multi-line comments, and remove unused headers as poll and select aren't used in this file (the SDL function which calls them is used instead).
libdecor_dispatch() needs to be called, as libdecor plugins might do some required internal processing within, however care must be taken to avoid double-blocking in the case of a timeout, which can occur if libdecor_dispatch() and the SDL event processing both work on the main Wayland queue. Additionally, assumptions that libdecor will always dispatch the main queue or not process zero-length queues (can occur if a wait is interrupted by the application queueing an event) should not be made, as this behavior is outside the control of SDL and can change.
SDL handles polling for Wayland events and then calls libdecor to do its internal processing and dispatch. If libdecor operates on the main queue, it will dispatch the queued events and the additional wl_display_dispatch_pending() call will be a NOP. If a libdecor plugin uses its own, separate queue, then the wl_display_dispatch_pending() call will ensure that the main queue is always dispatched.
Fixes battery level dropping to empty with the Qanba Drone Arcade Stick.
It looks like we might also be able to skip the check for all third party controllers, but I think this is the right thing to do for Sony controllers as well.
In all cases they were using SDL_SCANCODE_TABLE_XFREE86_2 with some keycodes remapped or fewer than expected keycodes. This adds a sanity check that catches all of them and gives them the right scancode table.
If we can't find the X11 keysym, it's likely that either the keysym is NoSymbol, in which case we won't hit it anyway, or it's been mapped to a character, in which case the existing mapping is correct for the scancode and the character will be reflected in the keycode mapping.
* Consolidated scancode mapping tables into a single location for all backends
* Verified that the xfree86_scancode_table2 is largely identical to the Linux scancode table
* Updated the Linux scancode table with the latest kernel keycodes (still unmapped)
* Route X11 keysym -> scancode mapping through the linux scancode table (which a few hand-written exceptions), which will allow mappings to automatically get picked up as they are added in the Linux scancode table
* Disabled verbose reporting of missing keysym mappings, we have enough data for now
The original code mapped incorrectly from [min, max] to [-32768, 32512], the upper bound being SDL_JOYSTICK_AXIS_MAX - 255 instead of SDL_JOYSTICK_AXIS_MAX.
If this assertion fails on some platform (unlikely), we will need a
third implementation for SwapLongLE().
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
The check for whether to use a 32- or 64-bit swap for an array of long
values always took the 64-bit path, because <limits.h> wasn't included
and therefore ULONG_MAX wasn't defined. Turn this into a runtime check,
which a reasonable compiler will optimize into a constant.
This fixes testevdev failures on 32-bit big-endian platforms such as hppa
and older powerpc. Little-endian and/or 64-bit platforms are unaffected.
[smcv: Added commit message]
Bug-Debian: https://bugs.debian.org/1021310
Co-authored-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
This will only log things going through dynapi, which means it won't
do anything if dynapi is disabled for a given build, but also things
that call the `*_REAL` version of an API won't log either (which is
to say, if an internal piece of SDL calls a public API, it won't log
it, but if an application calls that same entry point, it will).
Since this just inserts a different function pointer, unless you
explicitly request this at runtime, it won't add any overhead, and,
of course, the entire thing can be turned off with a single #define
so it doesn't even add extra unused code to the shared library if
the kill switch is flipped.
These were needed to fix some buggy behavior regarding committing old buffer sizes when entering fullscreen that has since been corrected. Remove them.
Emitted by MinGW:
In function 'WatchJoystick',
inlined from 'SDL_main' at D:/a/SDL/SDL/test/controllermap.c:802:9:
D:/a/SDL/SDL/test/controllermap.c:437:9: warning: 'marker' may be used uninitialized [-Wmaybe-uninitialized]
437 | SDL_SetTextureAlphaMod(marker, alpha);
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
D:/a/SDL/SDL/test/controllermap.c: In function 'SDL_main':
D:/a/SDL/SDL/test/controllermap.c:355:71: note: 'marker' was declared here
355 | SDL_Texture *background_front, *background_back, *button, *axis, *marker;
If the compositor is entering fullscreen and hasn't removed any constraints itself, it's already too late at this point. Remove the unnecessary call.
Restoring the limits when exiting fullscreen is still required, though, as they may have been removed when entering fullscreen via an SDL request.
Caches the SDL_HINT_VIDEO_EGL_ALLOW_TRANSPARENCY hint at init time and registers a callback, which is fired when the hint is changed during runtime and toggles the opaque region for existing surfaces.
The preferred method for setting the damage region on compositor protocol versions 4 and above is to use wl_surface.damage_buffer. Use this when available and only fall back to wl_surface.damage on older versions.
Bumps the highest supported version of wl_compositor to version 4.
Adds deduplication logic to ConfigureWindowGeometry() to avoid setting redundant backbuffer, viewport and surface opaque region dimensions. State is now only set when the window and/or backbuffer dimensions change.
This repurposes the viewport rect to always hold the actual size of the window, which can differ from the SDL size if things are being scaled. The SDL_Rect was removed in favor of two ints, as the x/y members of the struct were never used, so they just wasted space.
Since the internal variables always have the true window size, the width/height getter functions are no longer required and can be removed.
Several games (including Source and GoldSrc games, and Bioshock
Infinite) attempt to "fake" relative mouse mode by repeatedly warping
the cursor to the centre of the screen. Since mouse warping is not
supported under Wayland, the viewport ends up "stuck" in a rectangular
area.
Detect this case (mouse warp while the cursor is not visible), and
enable relative mouse mode, which tracks the cursor position
independently, and so can Warp successfully.
This is behind the SDL_HINT_VIDEO_WAYLAND_EMULATE_MOUSE_WARP hint, which
is enabled by default, unless the application enables relative mouse
mode itself using SDL_SetRelativeMouseMode(SDL_TRUE).
Note that there is a behavoural difference, in that relative mouse mode
typically doesn't take mouse accelleration into account, but the
repeated-warping technique does, so mouse movement can seem very slow
with this (unless the game has its own mouse accelleration option, such
as in Portal 2).
Make sure the SDL java and C code match when updating SDL in a game.
Right now we're assuming that we only have to make sure release versions match. We can extend the version string with an interface version if we need more fine grained sanity checking.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/1540
This is the only case where the mapping differs between right and left Joy-Cons in mini-gamepad mode. The left Joy-Con will have the left paddles and the right Joy-Con will have the right paddles. This facilitates co-op gameplay with individual actions while still using the normal mini-gamepad mode.
The paddles are used for this because conceptually they are more awkward to hit than the normal controls and they are in roughly the correct hand position.
* Added support for vertical mode for Joy-Con controllers
* Added the hint SDL_HINT_JOYSTICK_HIDAPI_VERTICAL_JOY_CONS for switching to this mode
* Added support for SL/SR buttons in combined/vertical mode and L/ZL/R/ZR buttons in mini-gamepad mode
Calling SDL_HideWindow() to destroy the window is a NOP if the SDL_WINDOW_SHOWN flag was never set. Bypass it and call the Wayland-specific function directly to ensure that the window is always destroyed before switching from server-side to client-side decorations, even if it hasn't been shown yet.
Likewise, call Wayland_ShowWindow() directly when the window isn't explicitly hidden to ensure that it is always recreated since the SDL_WINDOW_SHOWN flag won't be cleared, which, when set, renders SDL_ShowWindow() a NOP.
Before calling any D-Bus related methods we should first ensure that
they
were correctly loaded.
In the event where `LoadDBUSLibrary()` was not able to load the D-Bus
library, we should just return early, signalling with SDL_FALSE that we
were unable to inhibit the Screensaver.
Helps: https://github.com/ValveSoftware/steam-for-linux/issues/8815
Signed-off-by: Ludovico de Nittis <ludovico.denittis@collabora.com>
ad874536 removed an unnecessary limit as we *can* have a devindex
greater than 99, this error message does not reflect the support for
values greater than 99.
If a Nintendo Switch Pro controller is turned off, it will leave the controller connected in Windows, but not responding to reports. Don't wait a really long time trying to get information from a controller in this state.
On Windows, the Bluetooth device can remain in a connected state if the controller just shut down. It won't return any errors, but it also won't generate any input reports in this state, so wait until we know for sure that the Bluetooth controller is sending data before letting the application know it's available.
Nintendo Switch controllers will automatically turn off Bluetooth when connected over USB, but this takes care of that a little more quickly.
PS4 and PS5 controllers will happily send reports over both Bluetooth and USB, so we'll prefer USB if connected and switch back to Bluetooth if USB is disconnected.
The text component of a repeated keystroke is initially set when a key is first pressed and the cached value remains static until the repeated key is released and another repeatable key is pressed. If the state of a modifier such as shift or capslock is changed while a key is being repeated, the text emitted will not have the modifier applied to it until the repeated key is released and pressed again.
Update the text to be repeated by a key if a modifier is changed while a key is actively being repeated.
The XKB keysym to SDL keycode mappings were missing for the Escape and NumLock keys, which prevented them from being remapped. Add them to the table so that the remapping of these keys will work.
Note that returning SDL_PIXELFORMAT_BGR24 instead of SDL_PIXELFORMAT_RGB24 seems necessary, otherwise when running with SDL_ACCELERATION=0, the red and blue channels of the window appeared swapped.
Note that when running with acceleration enabled, red and blue channel swapping does not happen regardless of whether SDL_PIXEL_FORMAT_RGB24 or SDL_PIXEL_FORMAT_BGR24 is returned.
For good measure, I also tested running with acceleration disabled in both 15 and 16 bit color depths, but red and blue channel swapping did not occur
This prevents a number of issues where devices are enumerated but not actually able to be opened, like https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/5781.
We currently leave the devices open, allowing us to more easily do controller feature detection, protocol negotiation, detect dropped Bluetooth connections, etc. with the expectation that the application is likely to open the controllers shortly.
If multiple keys were simultaneously depressed and one was being repeated, the repeat flag was being cleared when any of the pressed keys were released, even if the released key wasn't the one being repeated.
This tracks the key currently being repeated and only clears the repeat flag when the particular key being repeated is released.
Silences clang -Wpragma warnings:
D:/a/SDL/SDL/src/video/windows/SDL_windowstaskdialog.h:21:10: warning: the current #pragma pack alignment value is modified in the included file [-Wpragma-pack]
#include <pshpack1.h>
^
D:/a/_temp/msys64/clang64/include/pshpack1.h:7:9: note: previous '#pragma pack' directive that modifies alignment is here
#pragma pack(push,1)
^
In file included from D:/a/SDL/SDL/src/video/windows/SDL_windowsmessagebox.c:35:
D:/a/SDL/SDL/src/video/windows/SDL_windowstaskdialog.h:156:10: warning: the current #pragma pack alignment value is modified in the included file [-Wpragma-pack]
#include <poppack.h>
^
note: previous '#pragma pack' directive that modifies alignment is here
2 warnings generated.
Closes: https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/6240
Unfortunately the only way to detect this is to actually try opening a device, so we wait until the application tries, and then stop enumerating afterwards.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/5781
This kicks in if the platform doesn't support vsync directly, or if the present fails for some reason (e.g. minimized on some platforms)
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/5134
X11 has a so-called primary selection, which you can use by marking text and middle-clicking elsewhere to copy the marked text.
There are 3 new API functions in `SDL_clipboard.h`, which work exactly like their clipboard equivalents.
## Test Instructions
* Run the tests (just a copy of the clipboard tests): `$ ./test/testautomation --filter Clipboard`
* Build and run this small application:
<details>
```C
#include <SDL.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdbool.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <time.h>
void print_error(const char *where)
{
const char *errstr = SDL_GetError();
if (errstr == NULL || errstr[0] == '\0')
return;
fprintf(stderr, "SDL Error after '%s': %s\n", where, errstr);
SDL_ClearError();
}
int main()
{
char text_buf[256];
srand(time(NULL));
SDL_Init(SDL_INIT_VIDEO);
print_error("SDL_INIT()");
SDL_Window *window = SDL_CreateWindow("Primary Selection Test", SDL_WINDOWPOS_UNDEFINED,
SDL_WINDOWPOS_UNDEFINED, 400, 400, SDL_WINDOW_SHOWN);
print_error("SDL_CreateWindow()");
SDL_Renderer *renderer = SDL_CreateRenderer(window, -1, SDL_RENDERER_ACCELERATED);
print_error("SDL_CreateRenderer()");
bool quit = false;
unsigned int do_render = 0;
while (!quit) {
SDL_Event event;
while (SDL_PollEvent(&event)) {
print_error("SDL_PollEvent()");
switch (event.type) {
case SDL_QUIT: {
quit = true;
break;
} case SDL_KEYDOWN: {
switch (event.key.keysym.sym) {
case SDLK_ESCAPE:
case SDLK_q:
quit = true;
break;
case SDLK_c:
snprintf(text_buf, sizeof(text_buf), "foo%d", rand());
SDL_SetClipboardText(text_buf);
print_error("SDL_SetClipboardText()");
printf("clipboard: set_to=\"%s\"\n", text_buf);
break;
case SDLK_v: {
printf("clipboard: has=%d, ", SDL_HasClipboardText());
print_error("SDL_HasClipboardText()");
char *text = SDL_GetClipboardText();
print_error("SDL_GetClipboardText()");
printf("text=\"%s\"\n", text);
SDL_free(text);
break;
} case SDLK_d:
snprintf(text_buf, sizeof(text_buf), "bar%d", rand());
SDL_SetPrimarySelectionText(text_buf);
print_error("SDL_SetPrimarySelectionText()");
printf("primselec: set_to=\"%s\"\n", text_buf);
break;
case SDLK_f: {
printf("primselec: has=%d, ", SDL_HasPrimarySelectionText());
print_error("SDL_HasPrimarySelectionText()");
char *text = SDL_GetPrimarySelectionText();
print_error("SDL_GetPrimarySelectionText()");
printf("text=\"%s\"\n", text);
SDL_free(text);
break;
} default:
break;
}
break;
} default: {
break;
}}
}
// create less noise with WAYLAND_DEBUG=1
if (do_render == 0) {
SDL_RenderPresent(renderer);
print_error("SDL_RenderPresent()");
}
do_render += 1;
usleep(12000);
}
SDL_DestroyRenderer(renderer);
SDL_DestroyWindow(window);
SDL_Quit();
print_error("quit");
return 0;
}
```
</details>
* Use c,v,d,f to get and set the clipboard and primary selection.
* Mark text and middle-click also in other applications.
* For wayland under x:
* `$ mutter --wayland --no-x11 --nested`
* `$ XDG_SESSION_TYPE=wayland SDL_VIDEODRIVER=wayland ./<path_to_test_appl_binary>`
Clip rectangle set to int(left+width/2) , int(top+height/2) , int(left+width/2)+1 , int(top+height/2)+1
a 1x1 box
On even-valued resolution, cursor is stable at bottom-right central pixel
On odd-valued resolution, cursor is stable at exact central pixel.
this is the desired behaviour
In some cases, a backbuffer size update may not be accompanied by a resize event if the window size and/or scale were updated before the new backbuffer size was recomputed. Instead of the scale, use the old/new backbuffer sizes to determine if a resize event is required so that a backbuffer size change will always be followed by a resize event.
Clang 15 makes implicit function declarations fatal by default which
leads to some configure tests silently failing/returning
the wrong result.
Signed-off-by: Sam James <sam@gentoo.org>
Instead of wrapping individual calls to SDL_SetDisplayModeForDisplay(), just check the flag in the function itself and make it a NOP that cannot fail if the flag is set. Silences some errant "SDL video driver doesn't support changing display mode" log errors.
When hiding a window, libdecor can report bogus content region sizes that are +/- the height of the title bar. Ignore any size values from libdecor when hiding a window, or the size may be incorrect when restored.
The compositor can arbitrarily move windows between displays, including fullscreen windows. Update the internal state when a fullscreen window is moved so the internal SDL state accurately reflects the window location, and resize the window to fit the new display.
This also fixes an edge case where the compositor can make a window fullscreen on a different display than SDL thinks it will be on (usually when a window is made fullscreen by the compositor while straddling multiple displays), which can result in the window being incorrectly sized.
If additional fullscreen requests are received when the window is already fullscreen, it is typically due to the fullscreen flags or emulated video mode being changed. A commit must be explicitly triggered or the requested changes won't take effect until some other event, such as a resize or focus change, causes the changes to be committed.
The compositor can toggle the fullscreen state (via a hotkey or otherwise), so the internal SDL state must be updated accordingly when it does.
When toggling fullscreen via the compositor, SDL will attempt to use the last fullscreen flag explicitly set. If no flag was previously set, SDL_WINDOW_FULLSCREEN will be used if a window video mode was set, otherwise SDL_WINDOW_FULLSCREEN_DESKTOP will be used. If the previous flag was SDL_WINDOW_FULLSCREEN and the window video mode was cleared, it will revert to SDL_WINDOW_FULLSCREEN_DESKTOP.
SDL_Quit() should be the last SDL API that you call before exiting your application, and is intended to clean up all internal state.
If real-life applications are relying on thread-local storage after SDL_Quit() we could potentially add a hint to control this behavior.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/6200
DS4Windows can create both emulated Xbox and emulated PS4 controllers, and we don't know which the user has it doing, so don't try to second guess it, just let it do it's thing. Users should follow the remapping software recommendations on when to enable/disable it for various situations.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/6167
There is supposedly an OpenGL ES2 target that does not support precision specifiers. However, the existing logic to detect this is currently broken in two ways:
1) There's a typo of the `#ifdef` as `#if`.
2) Checking for `GL_FRAGMENT_PRECISION_HIGH` can not be the correct way to detect this platform. Other targets, including some desktops, will also not have this defined (for various reasons).
Because some of the shader code is missing precision specifiers, and because a default is ONLY provided if `GL_FRAGMENT_PRECISION_HIGH` is set, these other targets break.
Instead of 'hard-coding' the prologue string into shaders in the C source, use our ability to provide a list of strings to `glShaderSource` instead, leaving the determination to run-time.
This commit closes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/pull/6182
build/.libs/SDL_hidapi.o: In function `SDL_EnableGameCubeAdaptors':
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1593: undefined reference to `libusb_init'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1594: undefined reference to `libusb_get_device_list'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1596: undefined reference to `libusb_get_device_descriptor'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1604: undefined reference to `libusb_open'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1608: undefined reference to `libusb_kernel_driver_active'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1614: undefined reference to `libusb_claim_interface'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1623: undefined reference to `libusb_close'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1626: undefined reference to `libusb_free_device_list'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1628: undefined reference to `libusb_exit'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1609: undefined reference to `libusb_detach_kernel_driver'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1620: undefined reference to `libusb_attach_kernel_driver'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1615: undefined reference to `libusb_control_transfer'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1616: undefined reference to `libusb_release_interface'
build/.libs/SDL_hidapi.o: In function `SDL_hid_init_REAL':
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1086: undefined reference to `libusb_init'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1087: undefined reference to `libusb_exit'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1088: undefined reference to `libusb_get_device_list'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1089: undefined reference to `libusb_free_device_list'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1090: undefined reference to `libusb_get_device_descriptor'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1091: undefined reference to `libusb_get_active_config_descriptor'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1092: undefined reference to `libusb_get_config_descriptor'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1093: undefined reference to `libusb_free_config_descriptor'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1094: undefined reference to `libusb_get_bus_number'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1095: undefined reference to `libusb_get_device_address'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1096: undefined reference to `libusb_open'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1097: undefined reference to `libusb_close'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1098: undefined reference to `libusb_claim_interface'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1099: undefined reference to `libusb_release_interface'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1100: undefined reference to `libusb_kernel_driver_active'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1101: undefined reference to `libusb_detach_kernel_driver'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1102: undefined reference to `libusb_attach_kernel_driver'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1103: undefined reference to `libusb_set_interface_alt_setting'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1104: undefined reference to `libusb_alloc_transfer'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1105: undefined reference to `libusb_submit_transfer'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1106: undefined reference to `libusb_cancel_transfer'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1107: undefined reference to `libusb_free_transfer'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1108: undefined reference to `libusb_control_transfer'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1109: undefined reference to `libusb_interrupt_transfer'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1110: undefined reference to `libusb_handle_events'
src/hidapi/SDL_hidapi.c:1111: undefined reference to `libusb_handle_events_completed'
collect2: ld returned 1 exit status
These report their VID/PID as a Nintendo Switch Pro controller, but they are actually left/right Joy-Cons. We'll fix up the joystick GUID so applications can handle them appropriately.
This reverts commit ff233fe306.
This doesn't compile cleanly with Visual Studio and I don't want to introduce any subtle issues because we're passing the wrong types of pointers to WGI functions.
This makes the joystick locking more robust by holding the lock while updating joysticks.
The lock should be held when calling any SDL joystick function on a different thread than the one calling SDL_PumpEvents() and SDL_JoystickUpdate().
It is now possible to hold the lock while reinitializing the joystick subsystem, however any open joysticks will become invalid and potentially cause crashes if used afterwards.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/6063
In order to inhibit the screen saver, SDL currently uses
`org.freedesktop.ScreenSaver.Inhibit()` and, as a fallback, a protocol
specific method for X11 or Wayland.
Accessing `org.freedesktop.ScreenSaver` is usually not allowed when
inside a sandbox like Flatpak, unless the permission has been explicitly
granted to the application.
Another issue is that the Wayland protocol "Idle inhibit" is relatively
new and not yet widely adopted. For example Mutter still doesn't support
it.
For those reasons, when running under Flatpak or Snap, we should try to
inhibit the screen saver by using xdg-desktop-portal instead. This
should give us an higher chance of success.
Fixes: https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/6075
Signed-off-by: Ludovico de Nittis <ludovico.denittis@collabora.com>
Refactor the previous sandbox check in a standalone function that also
includes Snap support.
Signed-off-by: Ludovico de Nittis <ludovico.denittis@collabora.com>
SDL_DBus_CallWithBasicReply() allows us to send a DBus message and get
its result, if it is a basic type, e.g. integer or string.
With this function we avoid duplicating code.
Signed-off-by: Ludovico de Nittis <ludovico.denittis@collabora.com>
This is in the hope that revving the product version doesn't change the mapping, which is the case for some devices. In cases where it does, we just need to provide a mapping for each version of the product.
Adjust candidate count so list is not draw bigger that needed. This also fix potential uninitialised read of variable `candsize[i]` if `vertical` is false.
This is now used as a crc field in the mapping rather than directly in mapping guids, for better mapping compatibility between versions of SDL.
Added SDL_GetJoystickGUIDInfo() to get device information encoded in a joystick GUID, so that mapping programs can clear the CRC from the GUID when generating mappings.
sort_controllers.py has been updated to extract the CRC from mappings created by older mapping programs and convert it into the new crc field. It will also take the CRC into account when checking for duplicate mappings.
Also regenerated the GUIDs for the PS2/PSP/Vita controller mappings, fixing https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/6151
find_lib() uses sort -V, which is a GNU extension. Users of non-GNU
operating systems should either install GNU coreutils (assumed to
provide a gsort executable), or use the CMake build system.
Resolves: https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/6106
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
The Wayland protocol XML files are stored in the root directory of SDL
and not in `src`.
Signed-off-by: Ludovico de Nittis <ludovico.denittis@collabora.com>
This will make it possible to have mappings for different controllers
that have the same VID/PID. This happens frequently with some generic
controller boards that have been reused in many products.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/6004
Update the Wayland core protocol spec file and add support for the new axis_value120 event to handle high resolution scroll wheels.
The axis_value120 replaces the axis_discrete event, which is no longer sent as of version 8 of the protocol. Note that unlike the axis_discrete event, no mention in the spec is made regarding how many axis_value120 events may occur per-axis per-frame, so the values are accumulated and committed when the pointer frame event occurs.
The libdecor header internally includes wayland-client.h, which pulls in the wayland-client-protocol.h file from the system include path and overrides the local one generated from the included Wayland protocol spec files. Move the Wayland protocol header inclusion above the libdecor header inclusion to ensure that the locally generated protocol header is used instead.
This fixes linking to SDL2::SDL2-static on systems where external libraries such as X11 are not in a standard location.
Pthread also needs special care.
When minimizing a window, we get this sequence of events:
WM_WINDOWPOSCHANGING
WM_GETMINMAXINFO
WM_NCCALCSIZE
WM_WINDOWPOSCHANGED - IsIconic() is true
WM_MOVE
WM_SIZE - SDL sees minimized state here
When restoring a window, we get this sequence of events:
WM_WINDOWPOSCHANGING
WM_GETMINMAXINFO
WM_NCCALCSIZE
WM_NCPAINT
WM_ERASEBKGND
WM_WINDOWPOSCHANGED - IsIconic() is false
WM_MOVE
WM_SIZE - SDL sees restored state here
On Windows 10 a minimized window has a non-empty client rect, so we were delivering a minimized size before SDL knows that the window is minimized, and then ignoring the restored size when handling the restore message.
The fix is to use IsIconic() which returns the correct window state when WM_WINDOWPOSCHANGED is actually delivered.
Uses VK_EXT_metal_surface (vkCreateMetalSurfaceEXT)
when possible, otherwise falls back to the obsoleted
VK_MVK_macos_surface and VK_MVK_ios_surface.
Fixes#3906
If libdecor performs a commit with the frame title being undefined, a crash can occur within the library or its plugins. Always ensure that the title is set to a valid string to avoid this.
This prevents crashes when calling SDL joystick API functions from a different thread while disconnection is happening.
See https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/6063 for a more thorough review of joystick locking.
Eliminate excessive calls to SetFullscreen by removing the calls in the libdecor and xdg-toplevel config callbacks.
These calls were being made there in case something explicitly called the window minimization function from within SDL, which unsets fullscreen, and as minimizing a window in Wayland is just a suggestion to the compositor and doesn't actually change the window state or communicate anything back to the application, it was necessary to call SetFullscreen in every call to the config functions just in case something minimized a window via SDL_MinimizeWindow() and later needed to restore it. GNOME in particular had issues when fullscreen set/unset operations were being hammered, leading to overlapping acks and commits when switching to fullscreen.
With the new video system flag to disable unsetting fullscreen when minimizing a window, these calls in the configuration functions are no longer needed and can be removed. This significantly reduces calls to the SetFullscreen() function, reverts #6044 while fixing the issue, and fixes a similar problem when hiding and showing a window initially created with fullscreen flags.
Add quirk flags to the video device struct and add flags to allow video backend drivers to disable mode switching and disable unsetting the fullscreen mode when minimizing a window. As certain platforms can have multiple video backends compiled in at once, #ifdefs, as used by other platforms, aren't suitable as different backends on the same platform may not need the same quirks.
This replaces the formerly dedicated 'disable_display_mode_switching' boolean as additional quirks are needed by the Wayland backend. Helper functions have also been added to simplify reading the flag states.
If the D-Bus subsystem is shutdown and restarted mid-execution, the cached connection will be invalid. Fetch it each time that it is used to ensure that the connection is always from the current context.
Don't call the roundtrip in ShowWindow unless restoring a previously hidden window. This fixes a regression in GNOME when creating a window with the fullscreen flag set, as the fullscreen window will be positioned down the screen by the height of the top bar if the window is made fullscreen on the primary display and the roundtrip is called when initially displaying the window.
SDL_CreateWindow() may call GetWindowDisplayIndex() to compute the position
of a new window that the caller has requested to be placed on a certain
display. Since we haven't fully constructed the window yet, our driverdata
will be nil and we will fail to get the NSScreen (which is fine). However,
we need to return an error (not 0, which is a valid display index) for
SDL_GetWindowDisplayIndex() to know to figure out the display index itself.
Fixes positioning new windows on secondary displays when using
SDL_WINDOWPOS_CENTERED_DISPLAY() and SDL_WINDOWPOS_UNDEFINED_DISPLAY().
OpenGL windows don't actually get the WM_WINDOWPOSCHANGED event in the SetWindowPos() call in WIN_SetWindowFullscreen(), so setting the window size to zero never gets reset and we're stuck with a zero sized window.
Instead, just force the resize event in WM_DPICHANGED handling, where we know we need it. If we end up needing to force it in WIN_SetWindowFullscreen(), just set a flag in the window data and respond to that in WM_WINDOWPOSCHANGED, but that's a fairly risky behavior change as suddenly all applications would start getting SDL_WINDOWEVENT_SIZE_CHANGED when going fullscreen, and they may respond to that in expensive and potentially disruptive ways.
For later we'll probably create a DPI changed event and respond to that in the renderer instead of this window size changed hack.
This fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/6033 @ericwa
The video core assumes that window->w/h will be updated before returning
from SetWindowFullscreen(). This is needed to generate a resize event
with the correct window size when exiting fullscreen.
The roundtrip allows us to receive the configure callback that informs
us of the new window size before returning.
Fixes#6043
We really only care about DPI changes here, so this both reduces work and also avoids weird cases where viewport state can be corrupted by trivial window events. This doesn't _completely_ get rid of the issue but this is somewhat intentional, since apps will definitely want to do a full reset when changing displays anyhow (otherwise DPI/adapter changes will screw things up, and that's out of our control as long as both window size and drawable size are exposed at the same time.
Note that OpenGL still captures window events because of weird platform-specific issues like macOS and viewport stretching!
Fixes#5949
- This allows looking up the display index for an arbitrary location rather than requiring an active window to do so.
- This change also reimplements the fallback display lookup that found the display with center closest to the window's center to instead find the display rect edge
closest to the window center (this was done in the almost identical display lookup used in SDL_windowsmodes.c, which now uses `SDL_GetPointDisplayIndex`). In
practice this should almost never be hit as it requires the window's center to not be enclosed by any display rect.
This reverts commit 59963473ef.
This fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/6015
Starting with Xcode 14, bitcode is no longer required for watchOS and tvOS applications, and the App Store no longer accepts bitcode submissions from Xcode 14.
Xcode no longer builds bitcode by default and generates a warning message if a project explicitly enables bitcode: “Building with bitcode is deprecated. Please update your project and/or target settings to disable bitcode.” The capability to build with bitcode will be removed in a future Xcode release. IPAs that contain bitcode will have the bitcode stripped before being submitted to the App Store. Debug symbols for past bitcode submissions remain available for download. (86118779)
The current method of toggling the libdecor window visibility by destroying and recreating the frame results in a race where a use-after-free bug can manifest itself within libdecor when window visibility is toggled quickly. Instead, use the libdecor function for toggling visibility instead of destroying and recreating the frame every time.
Wayland works like SDL's "auto capture" feature already, tracking the mouse
globally only while a drag is occuring, and this is the only way to get mouse
input outside the window.
Setting this flag ourselves lets SDL_CaptureMouse() work in the most common
use case without actually implementing CaptureMouse for the backend, including
SDL's auto capture feature.
Fixes#6010.
This controller actually comes in at least two flavors: a GameCube controller and an arcade pad, neither of which should have the face buttons remapped.
This controller looks like a GameCube controller, is actually a Nintendo Switch controller, and shows up as an XInput device on Windows with the buttons already in the correct location.
The Nintendo Online Sega Genesis controller reports the SNES VID/PID over Bluetooth. This is a more robust way of handling future controllers as well, so let's go with this instead.
Also use full reports over Bluetooth, and don't report gyro for Nintendo Online classic controllers.
GNOME exposes the cursor size and theme via the org.freedesktop.portal.Settings interface of the xdg-desktop portal, so query these values via D-Bus, if available.
The XCURSOR_SIZE/XCURSOR_THEME envvars will be tried first, so as not to override any user specified sizes or themes, then D-Bus, then, failing that, it will fall back to default values.
The event no longer spams each time a window gets focus if there are windows on monitors with different color profiles.
This also has the side effect that you no longer get a color profile event at window creation, which is consistent with other events that communicate state changes.
Previously, calling SDL_SendWindowEvent for a SIZED_CHANGED event would
filter the queue to remove RESIZED and SIZED_CHANGED events, so you don't
overflow the queue with obsolete data, but any RESIZED events would be
lost in this process.
Now we note if there was a RESIZED pending and replace it with a new
event using the same dimensions as the new SIZED_CHANGED event. This fixes
cases where an app is only listening for RESIZED events and thus might
lose important information in some cases.
Fixes#5925.
This is necessary for consistent position reports with absolute mice
and improves application performance with relative mice by cutting the
number of reported mouse motion events roughly in half.
Use the xdg-desktop-portal interface to RealtimeKit1, when available, to set realtime scheduling and elevated priority for threads. This portal allows for the use of rtkit within containers such as Flatpak. It will fall back to using RealtimeKit1 directly if the xdg-desktop-portal interface is too old or not available.
* Added support for mini-gamepad mode for Joy-Con controllers, matching the mapping for hid-nintendo on Linux and iOS 16
* Added the ability to merge left and right Joy-Con controllers into a single Pro-style controller
* Added the hint SDL_HINT_JOYSTICK_HIDAPI_SWITCH_COMBINE_JOY_CONS to control this merging functionality
* Removed the hint SDL_HINT_JOYSTICK_HIDAPI_JOY_CONS
* Added support for mini-gamepad mode for Joy-Con controllers, matching the mapping for hid-nintendo on Linux and iOS 16
* Added the ability to merge left and right Joy-Con controllers into a single Pro-style controller
* Added the hint SDL_HINT_JOYSTICK_HIDAPI_SWITCH_COMBINE_JOY_CONS to control this merging functionality
* Removed the hint SDL_HINT_JOYSTICK_HIDAPI_JOY_CONS
- Touch events may be translated to mouse movement events without the normal Xinput2 raw motion events
being sent. Not all touch events will necessarily move the mouse but this ensures we update the global
mouse state just in case.
- Fix up some formatting
CR: saml
Cache off NSWindow's windowNumber in SDL_WindowData on setup and use that in `Cocoa_SendWakeupEvent` to prevent accessing windowNumber off the main thread.
Unopened devices, if removed, now send SDL_AUDIODEVICEREMOVED events with
a `which` field set to zero. Apps can use this to decide if they need to
refresh a list of devices being shown in an options menu, etc.
It's safe to call SDL_CloseAudioDevice(0), so even if they try to clean
up this bogus id, it should be safe.
Fixes#5199.
This allows setting the brightness of the home LED on Nintendo Switch Pro controllers, in the range 0.0 - 1.0.
This can be updated at runtime by setting the hint dynamically.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/3787
SDL_events_need_periodic_poll() and SDL_events_need_polling() are intended to allow the event loop to update joysticks and/or sensors if needed, however those systems only update when the SDL_update_joysticks and/or SDL_update_sensors variables are true. This change brings the behavior of these functions in line with if work will actually need to be performed.
This change allows the hints for AUTO_UPDATE to influence the polling behavior of the event loop such that an app can choose to update joysticks/sensors itself and avoid the expense of constantly sleeping and waking the event loop. Additionally in makes these functions marginally faster in some situations by not searching the active events.
Hint callbacks are called before the actual value in the hint is changed, so the functions SDL_AutoUpdateJoysticksChanged and SDL_AutoUpdateSensorsChanged were not actually properly updating their respective variables in repsonse to their auto update hint changing.
Instead, we pull the new hint value out of the value passed into the callback and use that to update the variables. Assume true on a null value as that was the previous behavior and it matches with the default values of SDL_update_joysticks/SDL_update_sensors.
Events to handle controller touchpads and sensors were added to the library but not added in `SDL_GameControllerEventState()`. This change adds the missing events.
- CMD_CHARGE_STATE was checking the seqnum instead of the payload
- Off-by-one error in size validation for command payload
- Unused payload space was left uninitialized in output report
As discussed in PR review, there may be an off-chance that the index
returned doesn't match up with SDL's display indexing.
This change ensures that the indices match and adds a safety check for
off-screen windows.
With the introduction of this function, it is possible that for certain
monitor and window configurations, creating an SDL window will cause a
native crash.
```
Crashed Thread: 0 Dispatch queue: com.apple.main-thread
Exception Type: EXC_BAD_ACCESS (SIGSEGV)
Exception Codes: KERN_INVALID_ADDRESS at 0x0000000000000050
Exception Codes: 0x0000000000000001, 0x0000000000000050
Exception Note: EXC_CORPSE_NOTIFY
Termination Reason: Namespace SIGNAL, Code 11 Segmentation fault: 11
Terminating Process: exc handler [56627]
VM Region Info: 0x50 is not in any region. Bytes before following region: 140737486737328
REGION TYPE START - END [ VSIZE] PRT/MAX SHRMOD REGION DETAIL
UNUSED SPACE AT START
--->
VM_ALLOCATE 7fffffe75000-7fffffe76000 [ 4K] r-x/r-x SM=ALI
Thread 0 Crashed:: Dispatch queue: com.apple.main-thread
0 libSDL2.dylib 0x10247f665 SDL_UpdateFullscreenMode + 357
1 libSDL2.dylib 0x10247ec70 SDL_CreateWindow_REAL + 1504
2 ??? 0x111262de8 ???
3 ??? 0x110c39fff ???
4 libcoreclr.dylib 0x101fdf2a9 CallDescrWorkerInternal + 124
```
Tracking thread from our end: https://github.com/ppy/osu-framework/issues/5190
Regressed with: https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/pull/5573
In testing, the window would not find a valid screen if created
"hanging" off a primary display with a secondary display below it. In
checking why this was the case, the `display_centre` was being
calculated with a negative y origin, causing a final negative value
falling outside all display bounds:
```
SDL error log [debug]: display_centre.y = -1296 + 1296 / 2
SDL error log [debug]: Display rect 0: 0 0 2560 1440
SDL error log [debug]: Display rect 1: 2560 -625 1080 2560
SDL error log [debug]: Display rect 2: 0 1440 1728 1296
```
The method that was being used to find the current window using the frame
origin/size seems unreliable, so I have opted to replace it with with a
tried method (https://stackoverflow.com/a/40891902).
Initial testing shows that this works with non-standard DPI screens, but
further testing would be appreciated (cc @sezero / @misl6 from the
original PR thread).
We actually request CSD mode with xdg-decoration for borderless
windows, so we get what we wanted there and there's no point in going
into fallback paths.
Extend the SDL_WINDOW_ALLOW_HIGHDPI flag documentation to stress the importance of querying the window drawable size after every window event to avoid rendering issues in a mixed-DPI environment.
check_include_path is not meant to be used to check for presence of a
library. This is because a BOOL is cached.
Avoid this caching by using find_file.
`find_file` caches a patch instead of a bool and will always run when
the result failed.
The 5.1 versions didn't use the new algorithm, and making that new
algorithm work took so many permutes that it was significantly slower
than just using the scalar versions.
However, mono-to-stereo is an extremely common conversion, and it's
trivial to accelerate it with plain SSE, so that was added!
Currently, the SDL_WINDOWEVENT_RESIZED event is sent before the actual
window is resized (and various internal state, such as the desired
GL/Vulkan backbuffer size, are updated). This makes sense, as SDL will
discard a no-op resize, which would be the case if we had resized before
sending the event (indeed, there are existing hacks to prevent this).
However, this means that SDL_{GL,Vulkan}_GetDrawableSize() will still
use the old size in the SDL_WINDOWEVENT_RESIZED handler. In the case of
SDL_Renderer, this means the drawable size it uses will be wrong, and
the viewport will get "updated" to the old value.
This then results in bug #5899.
Pipewire 0.3.44 introduced PW_KEY_TARGET_OBJECT, which is to be used to specify target connection nodes for streams. This parameter takes either a node path (PW_KEY_NODE_NAME) or serial number (PW_KEY_OBJECT_SERIAL) to specify a target node. The former is used in this case since the path is already being retrieved and stored for other purposes.
The target_id parameter in pw_stream_connect() is now deprecated and should always be PW_ID_ANY when PW_KEY_TARGET_OBJECT is used.
This reverts commit 8553632827.
An issue with choosing the shortest one, is that it will prefer development libraries: libfoo.so is shorter then libfoo.so.0.6.
Make the default device metadata node persist for the lifetime of the hotplug loop so the default source/sink devices will be updated if they change during runtime.
With Pipewire now requiring a minimum version 0.3.24, the PW_KEY_CONTEXT_PROFILE_MODULES value is no longer required for legacy compatability and can be safely removed.
SDL makes assumption that each dynamically loaded library must have
SONAME matching pattern <libname>.so.<digit>+ hence it discards any file
that has two (or more) digits after ".so". in practice however SONAME
might be in the form of ie <libname>.so.<major>.<minor>.
as a solution keep requirement for dynamically loaded files to be named
<libname>.so.* but consider all the possibilities and prefer the shortest
one.
* Fix assumption that DRI_DEVNAME begins at 0
The existing logic of the code was to count every possible entry in
KMSDRM_DRI_PATH. After this a for loop would start trying to open
filename0, filename1, filename2, etc. In recent Linux kernels (say
5.18) with simpledrm, the lowest KMSDRM_DRI_DEVNAME is often
/dev/dri/card1, rather than /dev/dri/card0, causing the code to fail
once /dev/dri/card0 has failed to open. Running:
modprobe foodrm && modprobe bardrm && rmmod foodrm
before you try to run an application with SDL KMSDRM would have also
made this fail.
* Various changes from review
- Removed newline and period from SDL error
- Explicitely compare memcmp to zero (also changed to SDL_memcmp)
- Changed memcpy to strncpy
- Less aggressive line wrapping
* Various changes from review
- strncpy to SDL_strlcpy
- removed size hardcodings for KMSDRM_DRI_PATHSIZE and
KMSDRM_DRI_DEVNAMESIZE
- made all KMSDRM_DRI defines, run-time variables to reduce bugs caused
by these defines being more build-time on Linux and more run-rime on
OpenBSD
- renamed openbsd69orgreater variable to moderndri
- altered comment from "if on OpenBSD" to add difference in 6.9
* Various changes from review
- Use max size of destination, rather than max size of source
- Less hardcodings
When building on macOS without gcc (e.g. clang) where HAVE_GCC_ATOMICS
is not defined, `SDL_AtomicTryLock` will call
`OSAtomicCompareAndSwap32Barrier` which is not yet declared.
Including OSAtomic.h on OSX resolves this error/warning:
SDL_spinlock.c:125:12: error: implicit declaration of function
'OSAtomicCompareAndSwap32Barrier' is invalid in
C99 [-Werror,-Wimplicit-function-declaration]
return OSAtomicCompareAndSwap32Barrier(0, 1, lock);
This was reported in issue #3885 but marked Invalid and closed - possibly
because the default CMake build uses gcc instead of clang.
The documentation doesn't state that the argument is ever modified,
and no implementation does so currently.
This is a non-breaking change to guarantee as much to callers.
strchr and strrchr return a pointer to the first/last occurrence of a
character in a string, or NULL if the character is not found. According
to the C standard, the final null terminator is part of the string, and
it should thus be possible to get a pointer to the final null with
these functions. The fallback implementations of SDL_strchr and
SDL_strrchr would always return NULL if trying to find '\0', and this
commit fixes that.
* Xbox GDK support (14 squashed commits)
* Added basic keyboard testing
* Update readme
* Code review fixes
* Fixed issue where controller add/removal wasn't working (since the device notification events don't work on Xbox, have to use the joystick thread to poll XInput)
Also added test functions for multi-line debug text display
Currently this only supports ASCII, as the font doesn't have the correct Latin-1 characters
In my testing, this results in text edit events followed by text input events. Any ASCII characters will generate scancode events based on a hypothetical US keyboard layout.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/3377
The HIDAPI joystick driver doesn't properly reset the change counter
it uses to track if re-enumeration is needed when the joystick
subsystem is quit and then reinitialized.
The first SDL_Init(SDL_INIT_JOYSTICK) will result in the expected
HIDAPI joysticks appearing, but subsequent calls will result in no
joysticks being enumerated until another HIDAPI joystick is added
or removed from the system.
* Update install directory to match generated
https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/blob/main/CMakeLists.txt#L3122
Sets `SDL2Config.cmake` to `CMAKE_BINARY_DIR`, whereas the install file tries to find it from a different location.
* cmake: use CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR instead of CMAKE_BINARY_DIR
* ci: test SDL included as a cmake subproject
Co-authored-by: Anonymous Maarten <anonymous.maarten@gmail.com>
Use SDL_lroundf() to round fractional backbuffer sizes halfway away from zero, as this is the rounding method recommended by the forthcoming Wayland fractional scaling protocol.
We might want to use ssize_t as @Guldoman suggested, but that's a larger internal API change, and still requires casting of the SDL_utf8strnlen() result.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/pull/5821
Without using <inttypes.h>, SDL_PRIx64 will expand to llx, but on 64-bit
FreeBSD platforms (u)int64_t is `(usigned) long`:
SDL_test_memory.c:261:77: error: format specifies type 'unsigned long long' but the argument has type 'Uint64' (aka 'unsigned long') [-Werror,-Wformat]
This commit updates config_minimal.h to also assume presence of inttypes.h
for everything except old MSVC.
This allows us to handle controllers that use the Xbox protocol but look like Nintendo Switch or Playstation controllers, like the Qanba Dragon Arcade Stick in PC mode
FreeBSD includes the libunwind APIs in in the base system libgcc_s and
does not install a .pc file for it.
This change fixes the build on FreeBSD for me.
This is done such that we can disable LTO for these 2 functions when
building with MSVC.
This is due to a limitation of Link Time Code Generation (LTCG).
Code generation might generate a new reference to memset after linking
has started. The LTCG must make assumptions about where memset is
defined which is normally the C runtime.
Instead of using `trunc` to check the first ten digits, inexact test now
relies on an epsilon defining an acceptable range for the expected
result to be in.
Many tests were using the same underlying routine, as such three helper
functions were added:
- A wrapper to test double -> double functions.
- A wrapper to test (double, double) -> double functions,
- A wrapper for range tests on double -> double functions.
Split infinity and zero checks in their own functions.
The result of NAN tests is now logged.
The SDL_TestCaseReference structure were renamed to be more explicit.
Some compositors will provide 'nicer' / 'human readable' output descriptions via the xdg-output protocol. Use these description strings, when available, instead of the model name provided by wl-output. On compositors such as GNOME where this is provided, the display names provided to applications by SDL will now match those in the desktop display settings panel. On compositors where this data isn't provided, the old behavior of using the model string provided by wl-output will remain unchanged.
Additionally, per the protocol spec, output data provided by xdg-output should supersede wl-output data, so this is the recommended behavior in general.
If the width is sufficiently ludicrous, then the calculated pitch or
the image size could conceivably be a signed integer overflow, which
is undefined behaviour. Calculate in the unsigned size_t domain, with
overflow checks.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
When SDL is built with Wayland support on Linux, and Wayland libraries
are linked as dependencies instead of being loaded with dlopen(), its
dependencies will include libraries whose names contain a dash, like
`-lwayland-client` and `-ldecor-0`. Don't replace such libraries with
`-lwayland` and `-ldecor`: those don't exist and linking them will fail.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
As mentionned in libsdl-org/SDL_net#48 and libsdl-org/SDL_ttf#213:
- Options needs to use `SHELL:` to avoid aggressive option de-duplication
- Framework path needs to be quoted to support paths with spaces.
Fixes bug with viewport not updating when moving window between monitors with different scale
factors on Windows (this should also fix the same issue on other OS'es, though untested)
Adds hint "SDL_WINDOWS_DPI_SCALING" which can be set to "1" to
change the SDL coordinate system units to be DPI-scaled points, rather
than pixels everywhere.
This means windows will be appropriately sized, even when created on
high-DPI displays with scaling.
e.g. requesting a 640x480 window from SDL, on a display with 125%
scaling in Windows display settings, will create a window with an
800x600 client area (in pixels).
Setting this to "1" implicitly requests process DPI awareness
(setting SDL_WINDOWS_DPI_AWARENESS is unnecessary),
and forces SDL_WINDOW_ALLOW_HIGHDPI on all windows.
If the move results in a DPI change, we need to allow the window to resize (e.g. AdjustWindowRectExForDpi frame sizes are different).
- WM_DPICHANGED: Don't assume WM_GETDPISCALEDSIZE is always called for PMv2 awareness - it's only called during interactive dragging.
- WIN_AdjustWindowRectWithStyle: always calculate final window size including frame based on the destination rect,
not based on the current window DPI.
- Update wmmsg.h to include WM_GETDPISCALEDSIZE (for WMMSG_DEBUG)
- WIN_AdjustWindowRectWithStyle: add optional logging
- WM_GETMINMAXINFO: add optional HIGHDPI_DEBUG logging
- WM_DPICHANGED: fix potentially clobbering data->expected_resize
Together these changes fix the following scenario:
- launch testwm2 with the SDL_WINDOWS_DPI_AWARENESS=permonitorv2 environment variable
- Windows 10 21H2 (OS Build 19044.1706)
- Left (primary) monitor: 3840x2160, 125% scaling
- Right (secondary) monitor: 2560x1440, 100% scaling
- Alt+Enter, Alt+Enter (to enter + leave desktop fullscreen), Alt+Right (to move window to right monitor). Ensure the window client area stays 640x480. Drag the window back to the 125% monitor, ensure client area stays 640x480.
The hint allows setting a specific DPI awareness ("unaware", "system", "permonitor", "permonitorv2").
This is the first part of High-DPI support on Windows ( https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/2119 ).
It doesn't implement a virtualized SDL coordinate system, which will be
addressed in a later commit. (This hint could be useful for SDL apps
that want 1 SDL unit = 1 pixel, though.)
Detecting and behaving correctly under per-monitor V2
(calling AdjustWindowRectExForDpi where needed) should fix the
following issues:
https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/3286https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/4712
I was looking at how errors are handled by SDL and came across this #define SDL_ERRBUFIZE which looks like a typo for SDL_ERRBUFSIZE, but either way, it looks like this isn't being used anywhere anymore because it was getting reported whenever I compile SDL with -Wunused-macros, and the last time it was mentioned in the code was from commit 09ca66b.
XDG-toplevel min/max size values are double-buffered data and must be committed before entering the fullscreen state, or a max window size value smaller than the display dimensions may cause the compositor to incorrectly configure the fullscreen window size. This fixes windowed->fullscreen transitions on GNOME, where, previously, certain combinations of window flags and min/max size values could cause entering fullscreen mode to fail with odd window sizes and/or offsets due to the new max size values not being committed before entering fullscreen, causing the compositor to clamp to the old values.
In the case of libdecor, it has its own layer of buffering on top of the xdg-toplevel surface for the min/max window dimensions, so both a frame commit and surface commit are required to set the state properly.
Previously, the surface damage region was being set in the same callback used for preventing render hangs in the GL backend when the surface was not visible. This was not ideal, as the callback was never fired in the case of using a different render backend or having a swap interval of 0. Use a separate frame callback for setting the surface damage region to ensure that it fires reliably, regardless of the backend being used or swap interval.
Some compositors (GNOME for example) don't set the transform flag when dealing with portrait mode displays, so the video modes won't have the width/height swapped in all cases where they should be. Check for both the 90/270 degree transform flag and if the display is taller than it is wide when determining whether to swap the width and height of the emulated video modes, and adjust the comparison logic when size testing against the native mode to account for this.
Add the hint "SDL_VIDEO_WAYLAND_MODE_EMULATION", which can be used to disable mode emulation under Wayland. When disabled, only the desktop and/or native display resolution is exposed.
Previously, scale values used by the displays and surfaces were always integers, with fractional scale values only being calculated when the backbuffer and viewport sizes were being determined. Now, if xdg-output is available, the fractional scale of output displays is calculated when the displays are enumerated and the true scale values of the output devices are used whenever possible.
This unifies the integer and fractional scaling systems, allows for the use of more accurate scale values that minimize overdraw when windows straddle multiple outputs, and lays the groundwork for the pending Wayland scaling protocols that will report the preferred scale values per-surface instead of per-output.
Compartmentalize the fullscreen mode emulation code blocks, unify the windowed/fullscreen viewport logic, consolidate all window geometry code into a central function to eliminate blocks of duplicate code and rename related variables and functions to more explicitly reflect their purpose.
Because we were sending multiple chunks of preedit strings,
`SDL_SendEditingText` was using the old `SDL_TEXTEDITING` event only.
Now if `SDL_HINT_IME_SUPPORT_EXTENDED_TEXT` is enabled, we send the full
string and correctly set the cursor position and selection size.
- SDL_JoystickGUID -> SDL_GUID (though we retain a type alias)
- Operations for GUID <-> String ops are now in
src/SDL_guid.c and include/SDL_guid.h
- The corresponding Joystick operations delegate to SDL_guid.c
- Added test/testguid.c
On filesystems with large inode numbers, such as overlayfs, attempting
to stat() a file on a 32-bit system using legacy syscalls can fail
with EOVERFLOW. If we opt-in to more modern "large file support"
syscalls, then source code references to functions like stat() are
transparently replaced with ABIs that support large file sizes and
inode numbers, such as stat64().
This cannot safely be done globally by Linux distributions, because
some libraries expose types like `off_t` or `struct stat` in their
ABI, meaning that enabling large file support would be an incompatible
change that would cause crashes. However, SDL appears to be careful to
avoid these types in header files, so it should be OK to enable this.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
As of #5703, we call libdecor_dispatch() in Wayland_WaitEventTimeout(),
but this will crash if we don't load libdecor, as
SDL_VideoData::shell.libdecor will be NULL.
Since we don't load libdecor if we don't intend to use it (i.e., if
should_use_libdecor returns false), this results in a crash under KDE in
almost all circumstances.
We build the SDL framework for macOS, iOS, and tvOS, including 32-bit and 64-bit architectures. Since this file will actually be included in the framework you're linking, it should be fine to use.
The MinGW-64 header defines the parameters as ABI::Windows::Foundation::IReference<INT32 > **, but the Windows header defines the parameters as __FIReference_1_int**
- use 'OPTIONS RESOURCE' linker directive, instead of playing tricks on
the built dll.
- build libm sources as a static library and link the dll to with, like
the os/2 makefile does.
- remove *.res with make clean.
Since #5602, SDL is intended to have the same ABI across the whole
major-version 2 cycle, so we should not check that the minor version
matches the one that was used to compile an application.
There are two checks that could make sense here.
The first check is that the major version matches the expected major
version. This is usually unnecessary and is not usually done (if we're
calling into the wrong library we'll likely crash anyway), but since we
have the information, we might as well continue to use it.
The second check is whether the version provided by the caller is
equal to or greater than a threshold version at which additional fields
were added to the struct. If it is, we should populate those fields;
if it is not, then we cannot. This is only useful on platforms where
additional fields have genuinely been added during the lifetime of
SDL 2, like Windows and DirectFB (but not X11).
This commit changes the first check to be consistent about only looking
at the minor version, while leaving the second check using SDL_VERSIONNUM
(which will be removed or widened in SDL 3, but it's fine for now).
Resolves: https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/5711
Fixes: cd7c2f1 "Switch versioning scheme to be the same as GLib and Flatpak"
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Modern CMake doesn't need "LANGUAGE C" for Objective-C
set_source_files_properties(${COCOA_SOURCES} PROPERTIES LANGUAGE C) should be removed fro video/cocoa/*.m as well otherwise project won't compile
see also d3cc5764c0
I had assumed that only Linux users would be interested in GNOME-style
installed-tests, but in principle there's no reason why they can't be
used on non-Linux.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Otherwise we ignore the Configure/etc events when they come in because
the window is already in an identical state as far as SDL is concerned.
Fixes#5593.
May also fix:
Issue #5572.
Issue #5595.
This reverts commit 3fcc2cb500.
Button4 and Button5 are for the scrollwheel, not the extended buttons.
I don't know of a way to query the state of the extended buttons using X11.
See editorconfig.org for details of the format, which is understood by
multiple text editors, either directly or via plugins.
This is not comprehensive, but should cover most of the SDL codebase.
Please extend as needed.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
These try to pull from the .pdf files that are installed with
macOS, which fit our needs better, and fall back to the most
reasonable defaults available from NSCursor if we can't load
them.
Since these are installed under /System, they should be sandbox
accessible, and if this totally fails, it should still go on,
albeit with a less good cursor.
Reference Issue #2123.
On Gnome (and hopefully others!), this produces something that actually
matches SDL_SYSTEM_CURSOR_SIZENWSE/SDL_SYSTEM_CURSOR_SIZENESW. On
other desktop enviroments, it probably fits the spirit better than
XC_fleur in any case.
Reference Issue #2123.
Added the ability to specify a name and the product VID/PID for a virtual controller
Also added a test case to testgamecontroller, if you pass --virtual as a parameter
Don't be fooled by the diff size - this ended up being a big refactor of the
shell surface management, masked only by some helper macros I wrote for the
popup support.
This change makes it so when xdg_decoration is supported, but CSD is requested,
the system bails on xdg support entirely and resets all the windows to use
libdecor instead. This transition isn't pretty, but once it's done it will be
smooth if decorations are an OS toggle since libdecor will take things from
there.
In hindsight, we really should have designed libdecor to be passed a toplevel,
having it manage that for us keeps causing major refactors for _every_ change.
Move rendering of the assert message into a separate
function so we can remove the ugly loop construction.
Changes the logic such that allocation failure no longer
immediately returns SDL_ASSERTION_ABORT, instead we
fall back to the truncated message.
If an error is indicated from SDL_snprintf, then we do
abort with SDL_ASSERTION_ABORT.
* Add changes from code review by @ccawley2011, #5597, overall cleanup
* Update N-Gage README, minor cleanup and rephrasing
* Call SDL_SetMainReady() before calling SDL_main, return SDL_main instead of main
Change Cocoa SDL_VideoData and SDL_WindowData implementations from C structs to Objective-C objects, since bridging between C and ObjC is easier that way.
If the size to be allocated is very large and untrusted, then adding
the padding etc. might be enough to cause unsigned overflow, after
which a very small amount of memory will be allocated.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
This can be used to check whether untrusted sizes would cause overflow
when used to calculate how much memory is needed.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
The official source code release isn't much use unless it contains
everything that users and downstream distributions need to do a
new build, so check that it does.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
The use of square brackets for a character set collides with the use
of square brackets for m4 quote characters, so use the other quoting
mechanism that Autoconf provides, by escaping `[` as `@<:@` and so on.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
This is currently only done for the Linux Autotools build. The CMake
build does not add a significant amount of extra test coverage, and
Github Workflows run in an environment where `cmake` and `sudo cmake`
point to different executables, which makes it awkward to install into
/usr/local from CMake.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
This makes it more convenient to compile them alongside SDL, install
them in an optional package and use them as smoke-tests or diagnostic
tools. The default installation directory is taken from GNOME's
installed-tests, which seems as good a convention as any other:
https://wiki.gnome.org/Initiatives/GnomeGoals/InstalledTests
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
As well as reducing duplication, this lets the tests load their resources
from the SDL_GetBasePath() on platforms that support it, which is useful
if the tests are compiled along with the rest of SDL and installed below
/usr as manual tests, similar to GNOME's installed-tests convention.
Thanks to Ozkan Sezer for the OS/2 build glue.
Co-authored-by: Ozkan Sezer <sezeroz@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
In Autotools, these are run by `make -C ${builddir}/test check`.
In CMake, they're run by `make -C ${builddir} test` or
`ninja -C ${builddir} test` or `ctest --test-dir ${builddir}`.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Some CI workers don't seem to understand `cmake -v`, and Windows' shell
doesn't understand `VERBOSE=1 cmake`.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
If we're strict about applying something resembling semantic versioning
to the "marketing" version number, then we can mechanically generate
the ABI version from it.
This limits the range of valid micro versions (patchlevels) to 0-99.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
For stable releases, this gives us the ability to make bugfix-only point
releases such as 2.24.1 if we want to, and distinguish between them
programmatically. For example, this ability could have been useful after
2.0.16 to fix Xwayland regressions, and after 2.0.18 to fix event loop
regressions.
For development releases, this gives us the ability to make multiple
prereleases during the same feature cycle, and distinguish between them
programmatically. For example, this would have been useful during 2.0.22
development, which went through three prereleases before reaching the
final release.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Now that we've said this will be removed from SDL 3, we're free to use
any encoding that is compatible with existing SDL versions and will still
compare correctly for all SDL 2 version numbers. This allows the SDL 2
minor version to go beyond 1 digit, limited only by the size of
SDL_version.minor (which is 8 bits), making the largest possible version
number 2.255.99.
The patchlevel (micro version) is still limited to 2 digits.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
The encoding used in SDL_VERSIONNUM (e.g. 2.0.22 -> 2022) cannot
represent 2-digit minor versions without overflowing from the hundreds
digit into the thousands digit, which produces confusing version
numbers that will compare incorrectly when the major version is increased
to 3.
However, we can sidestep this problem by declaring that SDL_VERSIONNUM
will no longer be present in SDL 3, which means it only needs to be able
to represent SDL 2 version numbers losslessly.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
This comparison normally happens at compile-time, not at runtime, so
it doesn't matter if it isn't optimal. This avoids incorrect comparison
if the minor version in SDL_COMPILEDVERSION and SDL_VERSIONNUM has more
than one digit, which would cause it to overflow from the hundreds place
into the thousands place.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
This is usually desirable for batch processing: it lets us see exactly
what is happening in the logs.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
It looks as though something in the test subproject "leaks" into the
main build system, causing us to try to install ${builddir}/test/sdl2.pc
instead of the correct ${builddir}/sdl2.pc. Moving the tests subproject
further down avoids this.
Resolves: https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/5604
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
* Add initial support for the Nokia N-Gage
* N-Gage: disable clipping for the time being, issue needs to be resolved later
* Move va_copy definition to SDL_internal.h
* Move stdlib.h include to SDL_config_ngage.h, much cleaner this way
* Remove redundant include, add HAVE_STDLIB_H
* Revert "N-Gage: disable clipping for the time being, issue needs to be resolved later"
This reverts commit 4f5f0fc36c.
* N-Gage: fix clipping issue by providing proper math functions
Enabling GCController.shouldMonitorBackgroundEvents to read background events
for MFi controllers before receiving the first GCControllerDidConnectNotification
is apparently a no-go on macOS (12.3.1 for me), and would crash on attempt.
Apple's documentation is... not great, and doesn't point this out.
This waits for IOS_AddMFIJoystickDevice() to get called down the chain from GCControllerDidConnectNotification, and enables GCController.shouldMonitorBackgroundEvents
if it hadn't been already.
On iOS and tvOS, GCController.shouldMonitorBackgroundEvents is ignored, so
there's no need to check their versions.
Ensure that we're not trying to call SDL_small_alloc()
with a count of zero.
Transforming the code like this fixes a
-Wmaybe-uninitialized warning from GCC 12.0.1
For short messages, use a stack buffer that is
significantly smaller than SDL_MAX_LOG_MESSAGE.
The rationale for this is that we don't want to risk
blowing the stack, while at the same time we would
like to not put pressure on the memory allocator unless
absolutely necessary.
This is the one that splits the "left wing" into two for loops to
bubble out the conditional that decides if it should read from the
left padding or the input buffer.
I still believe the optimization is good, but the basic logic of it
was incorrect, and needs to be reexamined and fixed before going
back into revision control.
We can get _some_ of the info we need out of standard Xlib and report a
single display (which might actually be multiple physical displays mushed
into a single desktop). This is better than nothing, but you should really
just build with XRandR support and get a better X server. :)
- Calculate `j * RESAMPLER_SAMPLES_PER_ZERO_CROSSING` once per loop
iteration since we use it multiple times.
- Do the left-wing loop in two sections: while `srcframe < 0` and then
the remaining calculations when `srcframe >= 0`. This bubbles a conditional
out of every iteration of a tight loop, giving us a boost. We could
_probably_ do this to the right-wing loop too, but it's less straightforward
there.
- The real win: Use floats instead of doubles. This almost doubles the speed
of the entire function on Intel CPUs, and for embedded things without
hardware-level support for doubles, the speedup is enormous. This in
theory might reduce audio quality, though, and I had to put a check in
place to avoid a division-by-zero that we avoided at higher precision, but
this is likely to be worth keeping for at least the Sony PSP and other
smaller platforms, if not everyone.
Instead of waiting until the entire buffer from the SDL callback is ready
to be accepted by PulseAudio, we use pa_stream_set_write_callback and
feed some portion of the buffer as callbacks come in asking for more.
This lets us remove the halving of the buffer size during device open,
and also (hopefully) solves several strange hangs that happen in unusual
circumstances.
Fixes#4387Fixes#2262
* Read IMU scale data from Switch controllers. Up until now, SDL has used hard-coded scaling which isn't correct with some supported controllers.
* Moved declarations to beginning of code blocks to better fit with SDL style requirements
Every other backend does this, so this should match, now.
It's possible this was harmless, but we can avoid the system call
and the (likely?) debug message when it fails, though!
When mode switching is disabled in a video backend, fullscreen windows are basically just fullscreen desktop windows with different internal scaling. As no mode switching occurs, there's no need to minimize them on focus loss by default. This can still be overridden by explicitly setting the internal hint for minimizing on focus loss.
This has the side effect of fixing a bug on GNOME, where, when a fullscreen Wayland window has it's focus lost and restored via alt+tab followed by switching back to windowed mode, the top portion of the window won't end up being obstructed by GNOME's top bar.
This reverts commit 8ceba27d62.
SDL Wayland support is stable, but there are a number of issues with third-party software (NVIDIA drivers, libwayland event overflow, libdecor not handling plugin load failures, Steam overlay not working with Wayland, etc.) that make it better to default to X11 at this time.
Games which would like to prefer wayland when available can use the following code before SDL_Init():
SDL_SetHint(SDL_HINT_VIDEODRIVER, "wayland,x11");
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/5527
This hint allows libdecor to be used even when xdg-decoration is
available. It's mostly useful for debugging libdecor, but could in
theory be used by applications which want to (for example) bundle their
own libdecor plugins.
At the time I contributed this unit test, SDL had a relatively narrow
definition of what is a keyboard, approximately matching udev
ID_INPUT_KEYBOARD. Now it uses the equivalent of udev ID_INPUT_KEY,
which matches anything with keyboard keys, and not just reasonably
complete alphanumeric keyboards.
Fixes: 040bd7a9 "Fix udev not detecting ID_INPUT_KEY devices when udev is not running"
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
At the time I contributed this unit test, SDL didn't understand Linux
touchpads, but now it does.
Fixes: 373216ae "Added support for touchpads in the Linux evdev code"
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
When using emulated display modes, the output size is often larger than the drawable buffer. As the surface damage region is automatically calculated from the smaller drawable buffer size, the damage region needs to be manually set to cover the entire viewport region or visual repaint artifacts can result.
I kind of thought it'd be nice to have it in the center, but this is an issue
for applications that still assume global mouse and window positions are
accessible. For example, this fixes cursor offset issues in UE5.
It's possible that an external component (probably a GL/VK context) committed, so we need to cover our bases and detach in both HideWindow and ShowWindow.
Fixes a crash in UE5 editor's pop-ups.
Partially fixes the mouse cursor in UE5 editor. Imperfect because UE5 uses window position and global mouse state to get position, but of course we don't have global mouse and this is just to get the right display index so this still fails overall. We really need to make global mouse support a feature query...
So if Gnome/KDE/etc have a keyboard shortcut or titlebar decoration to
make any window go fullscreen (with the _NET_WM_FULLSCREEN flag on the
_NET_WM_STATE property), we update the SDL window flag.
Fixes#5390.
This makes sure the window doesn't have outdated values if you try to access
them (or call something that does, like SDL_SetWindowMinimumSize).
Fixes#5233.
On Wine, when a window is programmatically minimized in response
to losing focus, we receive a WM_ACTIVATE for the deactivation,
but GetForegroundWindow still indicates that our window is focused.
This causes an incorrect SDL_WINDOWEVENT_FOCUS_GAINED.
This is probably a Wine bug, but it may take a while to fix and
then for the fix to make its way to users.
libGL.so may register callbacks that can be invoked upon XCloseDisplay().
If XCloseDisplay() is called after libGL.so is unloaded, the callback pointer
will point at freed memory and invoking it will crash.
The texture framebuffer check optimized out in f37e4a9 was causing libGL.so to
never be unloaded as a side-effect. Skipping it exposed this bug by allowing
libGL.so to actually unload.
We were returning the report size from HIDAPI_DriverPS5_RumbleJoystick() rather
than 0 upon success, causing SDL_JoystickRumble() (and callers) to think that
rumbling failed.
This didn't cause major problems until 1868c5b, when it started preventing
rumble state from being persisted in the joystick core, even though it was
successfully sent to the hardware.
This led to all sorts of strangeness, including broken rumble duration and
attempts to stop rumble being discarded.
The functions can go south if other operations are in progress, like
X11_SetWindowBordered, which might be doing something traumatic behind the
scenes of the window manager.
We can't make these tasks totally synchronous, which would fix the problem,
because not only can the window manager block however long it wants, it might
also decide to deny our requests without any notification, so we'd be waiting
forever for a window change that isn't coming. :(
Fixes#5274.
Use viewports for non-fullscreen windows when the desktop uses fractional scaling and the window is flagged as DPI-aware to provide a backbuffer mapped as close to 1:1 output as possible. In the cases of odd window sizes the backbuffer may be a pixel off of scaling perfectly into the window size due to its scaled size being rounded off, but a minute amount of scaling during output is likely preferable to the large amounts of overdraw needed with integer scaled buffers.
Expose as many emulated display modes as possible. They will currently display stretched to the display's native desktop aspect, but if an application requires a hardcoded resolution, it will work at minimum.
Aside from the change in the emulated display mode list, the Wayland event handling code had to be updated to support separate scaling for the x and y axes, as square pixels are no longer guaranteed.
Wayland doesn't support mode switching, however Wayland compositors can support the wp_viewporter protocol, which allows for the mapping of arbitrarily sized buffer regions to output surfaces. Use this functionality, when available, for fullscreen output when using non-native display modes and/or when dealing with scaled desktops, which can incur significant overdraw without this extension.
This also allows for the exposure of arbitrarily sized, emulated display modes, which can be useful for legacy compatability.
1. Mod index values are (mostly) constant, so can be done with xkb_state_new
2. Mods can change without the group changing, avoid remap events if possible
Lastly, as a bonus, I added braces to the locale check, because I was nearby.
When using shared linking (linking in the normal way with
-lwayland-client) rather than loading Wayland libraries dynamically at
runtime, listing symbols that don't exist in the current version results
in a build failure. We don't actually call wl_proxy_marshal_flags() or
wl_proxy_marshal_array_flags() directly; the reason we need them is
that they're called by the code generated by wayland-scanner >= 1.20.
If we're building against an older Wayland library, then we'll have its
corresponding version of wayland-scanner (mismatched versions are not
supported), so we won't need those two symbols, and can avoid generating
a dependency on them.
Conversely, if we're building against a newer Wayland library, the
generated code will call them unconditionally, so we cannot treat them as
optional and gracefully fall back: that would result in a crash. Instead,
treat them as a mandatory part of the Wayland library, so that if they
are not found at runtime, we can fall back to X11 without crashing.
libwayland 1.18 is in several LTS distributions (Ubuntu 20.04,
Debian 11, RHEL 8) so avoiding a hard dependency on 1.20 is quite
useful.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Resolves: https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/5376
Using wl-output to get the desktop display dimensions and dividing by the integer scale factor will not return the correct result when using a desktop with fractional scaling (e.g. a 3840x2160 display at 150% will incorrectly report the scaled desktop area as 1920x1080 instead of 2560x1440). Use the xdg-output protocol, if available, to retrieve the correct desktop dimensions and offset.
Versions 1 through 3 of the protocol are supported.
- which also enable/disable the orientation lock status.
This is only provided when the window is not SDL_WINDOW_FULLSCREEN (see SDL_video.c).
Final orientation also depends on SDL_HINT_ORIENTATIONS.
The Java code needs the native functions to be implemented, even if
they're not surfaced via the C API, therefore, a stub version of
functions were made only to the purpose of "fill the gaps" when
SDL_HIDAPI_DISABLED set to 1.
Call SDL_RenderPresent after calling SDL_RenderReadPixels.
From "include/SDL_render.h":
"If you're using this on the main rendering target, it should be called after rendering and before SDL_RenderPresent()."
if SDL_EnumUnixAudioDevices() fails to find any devices,
set an error message on the exit path. Without this,
SDL_Init() could fail without any message available
in SDL_GetError().
This isn't obvious, but makes sense when thinking about how games actually use it. This is also in line with how Windows mouse relative mode is implemented.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/5340
Here's an IRC dump that hopefully explains the issue this fixes:
> I'm debugging something odd where, for a libre game,
unvanquished.net (a FPS), relative mouse input in fullscreen is
buggy
> it's like, working mostly ok, but it has a weird
performance/cleanup bug
> after some time in relative mouse input mode, some time as low
as 15s, usually more, the SDL sends A LOT of relative mouse
input per frame
> almost all of which have xrel==0 && yrel==0
> by A LOT, I mean that after ~1min, it's usually in the
thousands per frame
> each frame, a while ( SDL_PollEvent( &e)) loop reads the
inputs, but it seems SDL is not clearing the list.
> one way to clear the list is to open the in-game console or
menu, which switches the input mode to absolute, then close it
which gets a working relative input mode (for some time at least)
> I've shown the issue to be present with SDL2.0.20 but not with
2.0.14 on my system
> some other players on Arch Linux (SDL2.0.20) report a possibly
related issue, where some keys seem to be pressed at random
> I've did some bisection on SDL master, and I've found that
there are actually two commits involved, one breaking it
totally (no input at all), and one fixing it partially (with
the problem described above)
First related commit that breaks it totally:
commit 82793ac279
Author: Sam Lantinga <slouken@libsdl.org>
Date: Thu Oct 14 14:26:21 2021 -0700
Fixed mouse warping while in relative mode
We should get a mouse event with an absolute position and no relative motion and shouldn't change the OS cursor position at all
Second related commit, that halfway fixes it:
commit 31f8c3ef44
Author: Sam Lantinga <slouken@libsdl.org>
Date: Thu Jan 6 11:27:44 2022 -0800
Fixed event pump starvation if the application frequently pushes its own events
Reverting the first commit did fix the issue for me, but would
probably reintroduce the bug it was fixing(?). This patch should
fix it for everyone hopefully.
https://github.com/DaemonEngine/Daemon/issues/600 is the upstream
bug, and contains some early investigation.
According to MSDN, we can also get SIZE_MAXHIDE and SIZE_MAXSHOW,
based on state changes to other windows. It's not clear under
what circumstances this will happen (I saw some docs indicating
it may require multiple application windows), but it doesn't seem
right to treat them as RESTORED.
- no need to keep the error in a static variable
- always print the error code
- reduce the required stack-size
- reduce the number of snprintf calls (and code size)
* Fixes for IME Composition Truncation + Addition of SDL_ClearComposition, SDL_IsTextInputShown
* Fixed: Documentation and code style issues raised during code review.
The name that the Raw Input joystick driver pulls from the HID stack comes
from USB string descriptors contained on the device. For official wireless
receivers, this always contains "Xbox 360 Wireless Receiver for Windows"
which matches the friendly name that WGI provides.
3rd party Xbox 360 wireless receivers may have different strings in their
USB string descriptors (one uses "XBOX 360 For Windows" instead). This
fails to match WGI's name and causes Raw Input and WGI to both report the
same gamepad.
Since wireless Xbox 360 controllers seem to have a consistent VID/PID
regardless of the adapter enumerating them, we can also match on that to
catch these.
The duplicate case reported to me was:
Controller (XBOX 360 For Windows) - 030000005e040000a102000000007200
Xbox 360 Wireless Receiver for Windows - 030000005e0400000000000000007701
src/joystick/*.c wasn't unconditionally added to source list even though
joystick is an SDL subsystem. Also removed the `SDL_JOYSTICK AND NOT APPLE`
condition from src/joystick/dummy/*.c source addition: the OSX unresolved
symbols issue, if it really is there, should be fixed separately.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/5361, i.e. build failures
when SDL_JOYSTICK and SDL_HAPTIC are disabled.
This adds support for all 3 of the gamecube controller's rumble modes
Rumble: 1
Stop: 0
StopHard: 2
This is useful for applications that need the full range of support
This also adds a hint to control rumble behavior, defaults 0 to maintain compatibility
If the app requested a specific renderer, even if it's not the optimal path,
let them have it, because they might want to render with a specific GPU API
on top of the framebuffer pixels.
This fixes DosBox-X crashing on startup, which forces the hint to "opengl".
Now we see if we can create an SDL_Renderer, and if that renderer reports
itself as "accelerated," and added some initial heuristics to the OpenGL
renderer to make better decisions about what qualifies as "accelerated."
This adds some FIXMEs that might be merely hypothetical, and removes the
old OpenGL checks from the video subsystem that probably weren't meaningful
in modern times. This will definitely need to improve the existing list
in the GL renderer, to catch things like llvmpipe, etc.
Reference issue #4624.
The io_list_check_add() and io_list_remove() functions are only ever called from within the Pipewire thread loop, so the locks are redundant. io_list_sort() is called from within a lock in the device detection function, so those additional locks are redundant as well.
Remove the hard upper limit of 8192 samples and instead use the buffer sizes provided by Pipewire to determine the size of the intermediate input buffer and whether double buffering is required for output streams. This allows for higher latency streams to potentially avoid double-buffering in the output case, and we can guarantee that the intermediate input buffer will always be large enough to handle whatever Pipewire may deliver.
As the buffer size calculations occur in a callback in the Pipewire processing thread itself, the stream readiness check has been modified to wait on two distinct flags set when the buffers have been configured and when the stream is ready and running.
- use the result of SDL_ConvertPixels to propagate error
- get rid of the verbose error message of D3D11_RenderReadPixels in case SDL_ConvertPixels failed
- always set error message in SDL_EGL_ChooseConfig / SDL_EGL_CreateContext
- assume SDL_EGL_DeleteContext does not alter the error message
- sync generic error message of SDL_EGL_MakeCurrent with SDL_EGL_Get/SetSwapInterval
- do not overwrite error message of SDL_EGL_ChooseConfig in WINRT_CreateWindow
- add missing error-message in SDL_LoadBMP_RW
- check return value of SDL_RWtell in SDL_LoadBMP_RW
- use standard SDL_EFREAD error instead of custom strings
+ adjust return type of readRlePixels
- allocate ime_candidates on demand
- allow write to the whole allocated memory of ime_candidates
- ensure ime_candcount is set to zero in case the candidates can not be queried for any reason
- move IME_ShowCandidateList, ImmGetContext and ImmReleaseContext to this function
- set ime_candpgsize to MAX_CANDLIST if dwPageSize is zero
- comment out deselection of ime_candsel in case of korean language for the moment (LANG_CHT does not work anyway)
The context and stream creation functions will destroy the passed properties object on failure, so no need to do it manually.
The pw_properties_free() function pointer is no longer needed, so it can be removed.
- drop unnecessary hascapture check
- call SDL_InvalidParamError and return -1 in case the index is out of range
- do not zfill SDL_AudioSpec
- adjust documentation to reflect the behavior
- reorganize the loop which checks for the right wave-format
- use the return value of UpdateAudioStream
- ensure SetError is called in SDL_NewAudioStream
- use assert instead of a check (it is a static function with constant parameter)
- assume it is called with 0 first (simplifies the logic)
- reuse dwLang value instead of a new 'call' to LANG()
- use SDL_bool if possible
- assume NULL/SDL_FALSE filled impl
- skip zfill of current_audio at the beginning of SDL_AudioInit (done before the init() calls)
- atomic subsystem is disabled by default (changed in configure)
- SDL_WAYLAND_LIBDECOR is disabled by default if SDL_WAYLAND is not set (changed in CMakeLists.txt)
- add DUMMY-define in case the subsystem is enabled but not available (filesystem/misc/locale)
- add missing PSP/VITA-filesystem defines
- sync the order of filesystems in SDL_config.h.cmake/in
- add option to disable locale subsystem in configure
If we get a SDL_SetWindowSize() call right after SDL_SetWindowFullscreen() but
before we've gotten a new configure event from the compositor, the attempt to
set our window size will silently fail (when libdecor is enabled).
Fix this by remembering that we need to commit a new size, so we can do that
in decoration_frame_configure().
This prevents SDL from making an OpenGL context and maybe throwing it away
immediately by default. It will now only do it when trying to request a
window framebuffer directly, or creating an SDL_Renderer with the "software"
backend, which makes that request itself.
The way SDL decides if it should use a "texture framebuffer" needs dramatic
updating, but this solves the immediate problem.
Reference Issue #4624.
First window is created and it triggers and 'EnterNotify' event
which calls SDL_SetMouseFocus() and X11_ShowCursor() while the second
windows hasn't finished to be created (eg window->driverdata isn't set)
Just check for a valid 'driverdata'
GLES2 always has them, and they work without hacks on Emscripten, unlike
client-side arrays.
I cleaned it up slightly, but this patch was mostly written by @bing2008.
Fixes#5258.
The issue is that MS Windows synthesizes a mouse-move event in response
to touch-move events, and those mouse-move events are NOT labeled as
coming from a touch (e.g. GetMouseMessageSource() will not return
SDL_MOUSE_EVENT_SOURCE_TOUCH for those synthesized mouse-move events).
In addition, there seems to be no way to prevent this from happening;
https://gist.github.com/vbfox/1339671 claims to demonstrate a technique
to prevent it, but in my experience, it doesn't work.
Because of this, the "fallthrough" case can't test that the synthesized
mouse-move came from a touch-move, and starts erroneously pressing down
the mouse-button, leading to massive confusion in the client
application.
If a touch-down event is received for an existing touch-ID, that
probably means the operating system lost it, and that the missing
touch-up should be synthesized, to keep the client state coherent.
This caused some weird stuff to happen in the libdecor path, probably because
the window hasn't actually been mapped yet. It ends up calling stuff that
should not yet apply, and so fullscreen in particular would have a really
messed up titlebar.
The good news is, libdecor is good about tracking fullscreen state, so we can
let the callback do this for us. Keep this for xdg_shell because we actually
map the window ourselves, so we know this call is valid for that path.
Pipewire, as of 0.3.22, uses client config files to load modules instead of explicitly specifying them (PW_KEY_CONTEXT_PROFILE_MODULES is deprecated). Use the new method to load the realtime module to boost the audio thread priority.
From e6cc4e7f4b8189be55dd3b0e13e54e59f73d7672 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: X512 <danger_mail@list.ru>
Date: Thu, 30 Jan 2020 04:01:58 +0900
Subject: libsdl2: Remove BDirectWindow, fix OpenGL handling.
* BDirectWindow changed to BWindow.
* Implemented fullscreen.
* Introduced view for non-OpenGL drawing.
* Drawing thread removed, window thread is used instead.
* Use BGLView as OpenGL context. Implement proper context switching and OpenGL
locking. Only one context per window is supported. BGLView should be not
deleted when window is closed, it deleted when deleting context.
GitHub Actions is a 64-bit Ubuntu instance. It was only using the 32-bit
binaries because our buildbot put this on the 32-bit Linux host to spread
the CPU load around more evenly.
when using alternate unwind implementations like LLVM libunwind
this library is not provided yet the libunwind features are fully
implemented in main libunwind, making this hard dependency assumes
a particular libunwind implementation, this patch makes it optional
which makes the builds to work with llvm libunwind
Signed-off-by: Khem Raj <raj.khem@gmail.com>
If egl.pc sets at least two macros as the i.MX Vivante driver does, e.g.:
| Cflags: -I${includedir} -DLINUX -DWL_EGL_PLATFORM
then we get the following error during configuration:
| -- Performing Test HAVE_OPENGL_EGL
| CMake Error: Parse error in command line argument: WL_EGL_PLATFORM
| Should be: VAR:type=value
If one changes to add a value to the macro, e.g.
| Cflags: -I${includedir} -DLINUX=1 -DWL_EGL_PLATFORM=1
then cmake does not error out but the macro is not passed to the
C compiler.
CMAKE_REQUIRED_FLAGS is the wrong variable to pass the CFLAGS in,
CMAKE_REQUIRED_DEFINITIONS should be used.
Signed-off-by: Max Krummenacher <max.krummenacher@toradex.com>
Previous to this commit, key repeats events were typically generated when
pumping events, based on the time of when the events are pumped. However,
if an application doesn't call `SDL_PumpEvents` for some seconds, this time
can be multiple seconds in the future compared to the actual key up event time,
and generates key repeats even if a key was pressed only for an instant.
In practice, this can happen when the user presses a key which causes the
application to do something without pumping events (e.g. load a level).
In Crispy Doom & PrBoom+, when the user presses the key bound to "Restart
level/demo", the game doesn't pump events during the "screen melt" effect,
and the level is restarted multiple times due to spurious repeats.
To fix this, if the key up event is among the events to be pumped, we generate
the key repeats there, since in the Wayland callback we receive the time when
the key up event happened. Otherwise, we know no key up event happened and we
can generate as many repeats as necessary after pumping.
Signed-off-by: Joan Bruguera <joanbrugueram@gmail.com>
Refactorization with no functional changes.
Instead of `next_repeat_ms` containing a timestamp based on SDL ticks, we make
it zero-based relative to the key press time, and we store the key press time in
SDL ticks in a new field.
This refactorization is groundwork for future commits which need to use the
key press and release timestamps provided by the Wayland API, which are also
expressed in milliseconds, but whose base does not match the one for SDL ticks.
Signed-off-by: Joan Bruguera <joanbrugueram@gmail.com>
If `repeat_info->next_repeat_ms` overflows, many key presses will be generated.
In the worst case, `now = 0xFFFFFFFFU` and the loop will never terminate.
Rearrange the comparison in order to gracefully handle the overflow case.
Signed-off-by: Joan Bruguera <joanbrugueram@gmail.com>
This makes it so that the generated targets are not interdependent,
which allows Linux distributions to split libraries into the
appropriate subpackages as needed.
src/render/psp/SDL_render_psp.c: In function 'PSP_RunCommandQueue':
src/render/psp/SDL_render_psp.c:1200: warning: passing argument 1 of 'PSP_SetBlendState' from incompatible pointer type
src/filesystem/psp/SDL_sysfilesystem.c: In function 'SDL_GetPrefPath':
src/filesystem/psp/SDL_sysfilesystem.c:71: warning: passing argument 1 of 'free' discards qualifiers from pointer target type
This reverts commit c477768e6f.
We want to add the sentinel anytime we pump inside SDL_WaitEventTimeout() to avoid pumping again the next time through, as a performance optimization.
We don't want to catch explicit SDL_PumpEvents() calls by the application with
our polling check to avoid stale data. If the call to SDL_PumpEvents() produced
no events, there will be a sentinel sitting in the queue that will cause
SDL_PollEvent() to immediately return 0 next time it is called.
Our SDL_WaitEventTimeout() implementation avoids this issue by always popping
an event after calling SDL_PumpEvents(). This will remove the new sentinel if
we didn't get any new events.
WGI calls SDL_DINPUT_JoystickPresent() so we need to be sure DInput remains
initialized for the lifetime of the WGI driver to avoid a crash or duplicated
joysticks between DInput and WGI.
If that condition was reachable, the return value should be negative to indicate that waiting for the timeout failed.
Otherwise, SDL_WaitEventTimeout would incorrectly return early.
- linux_process.c: add an SDLVisualTest_ScreenshotProcess() stub for
linux builds succeed.
- action_configparser.c: fixes -Wswitch warnings.
- testharness.c: fixes 'is used uninitialized' warnings for userevents.
- testharness.c: fixes format string argument to 'Force killing...'
- testquit.c: fix type of options array in main().
- windows_screenshot.c: lowercase windows.h header name.
- ran dos2unix on all sources and add missing newlines at files' ends.
- minor adjustments to autotools build system (which actually seems to
need more surgery for unnecessary stuff...)
Martin Gerhardy wrote:
If there is a variable named test, then cmake does variable-value comparison:
if (test STREQUAL "")
is equivalent to:
if ("${test}" STREQUAL "")
If there is no variable named test, then cmake does string literal comparison:
if (test STREQUAL "")
is equivalent to:
if ("test" STREQUAL "")
That means basically - the current stuff works - but is not how it should be done.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/2100
SDL_Init(SDL_INIT_AUDIO) did not take into account that functions like
SDL_AddAudioDevice do register events, which will need final cleanup
and only gets fired when events were actually initialised.
Sample call stack of a malloc missing its free (Linux + PA):
SDL_malloc_REAL (SDL_malloc.c:5328)
SDL_AddEvent (SDL_events.c:445)
SDL_PeepEvents_REAL (SDL_events.c:531)
SDL_PushEvent_REAL (SDL_events.c:762)
SDL_AddAudioDevice (SDL_audio.c:443)
SourceInfoCallback (SDL_pulseaudio.c:681)
context_get_source_info_callback (introspect.c:534)
run_action (pdispatch.c:288)
pa_pdispatch_run (pdispatch.c:341)
pstream_packet_callback (context.c:349)
do_read (pstream.c:1012)
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/3005
When mouse buttons are swapped, right mouse button down is the same value as raw mouse button up, and conceptually the two systems use different button masks, so never cache state between the two.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/5108
Program received signal SIGILL, Illegal instruction.
X11_InitKeyboard (_this=0x1001f8f0)
at /home/sdl/SDL_git/src/video/x11/SDL_x11keyboard.c:273
273 XKeyboardState values = { .global_auto_repeat = AutoRepeatModeOff };
If the X server's byte order is different from the client, things might
display in the wrong colour.
Apparently we can just set the byte_order field to the client's byte
order, and the X server will adjust everything automatically:
https://xorg.freedesktop.narkive.com/GbSD1aPq/ximage-s-byte-order-field
because:
- GeHint return a value pointer.
- SetHint free internally the pointer
- The -now invalid- pointer is re-read
==9363== Invalid read of size 1
==9363== at 0x4946860: SW_CreateRenderer (SDL_render_sw.c:1044)
==9363== by 0x48F0EC3: SDL_CreateRenderer_REAL (SDL_render.c:938)
==9363== by 0x48C5921: SDL_CreateRenderer (SDL_dynapi_procs.h:332)
==9363== by 0x401584: main (main.c:421)
==9363== Address 0x9c24040 is 0 bytes inside a block of size 1 free'd
==9363== at 0x484621F: free (in /usr/libexec/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==9363== by 0x494E403: SDL_free_REAL (SDL_malloc.c:5432)
==9363== by 0x48A6153: SDL_SetHintWithPriority_REAL (SDL_hints.c:76)
==9363== by 0x48A6254: SDL_SetHint_REAL (SDL_hints.c:101)
Rounding the scroll deltas from trackpads causes jerky scrolling behavior
by artificially amplifying the effects of very small scroll movements.
We should only round events from devices with discrete scroll wheels,
because we know the smallest unit of movement there is a single tick.
- Fix SDL2main on PSP
SDL2main was not working for PSP, because it wasn't being activated and
it wasn't unsetting the main. Besides that a debug screen being started
was causing issues with joystick input and the sceKernelExitGame calli
is no longer needed with the current PSPDEV SDK.
- Clean up imports in PSP main
- Set PSP GPU and user modes in main
- Fix exit callback in PSP main
The xdg_shell spec seems to state[1] that xdg_toplevel_configure events can
always provide a 0×0 width/height to signal that the compositor doesn't
care. SDL previously assumed the provided width/height was always valid
for fullscreen windows, and so applied it as-is.
This broke SDL applications on KDE/KWin 5.23, which now sends 0×0
configure events (and, in 5.23.3, 1×1 events for some reason), breaking
all SDL applications in fullscreen[2].
[1]: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland-protocols/-/issues/6
[2]: https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=444962#c6
Otherwise, if one builds libSDL2_test using a new mingw but builds
the test programs using an older mingw, a link failure happens:
/opt/local/x86_64-w64-mingw32/lib/libSDL2_test.a(SDL_test_common.o): In function `printf':
/opt/local/x86_64-w64-mingw32/include/stdio.h:372: undefined reference to `__imp___acrt_iob_func'
collect2: ld returned 1 exit status
gbm_device_get_fd() in at least some libmali versions duplicates handle.
Other implementations do not do duplication. To prevent handle leak save
drm_fd in SDL_DisplayData.
Otherwise, the API documentation will encode the home directory of the
user or autobuilder that built SDL, instead of telling the user to use
the literal string $(HOME) as intended.
See also <https://github.com/doxygen/doxygen/issues/7073>.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
When our keyboard grab hook is installed, GetKeyState() will return 0 for the
GUI keys even when they are pressed. This leads to spurious key up events when
holding down the GUI keys and the inability to use any key combos involving
those modifier keys.
This fixes a compile warning — and possible invalid memory read —
introduced in 9c03d255 ("Add back X11 legacy WM_NAME encodings"), which
was part of PR #5029, fixing Bug #4924.
The issue is with one of the added warnings in X11_GetWindowTitle().
Basically, the "title" variable passed to SDL_LogError() hasn't been
initialised yet: we could pass propdata in directly, but it's better to
move the SDL_LogError() call until after title is set, IMHO.
This fixes the following warning from gcc (SUSE Linux) 11.2.1:
In file included from /home/david/Development/SDL/src/video/x11/../../SDL_internal.h:45,
from /home/david/Development/SDL/src/video/x11/SDL_x11window.c:21:
/home/david/Development/SDL/src/video/x11/SDL_x11window.c: In function 'X11_GetWindowTitle':
/home/david/Development/SDL/src/video/x11/../../dynapi/SDL_dynapi_overrides.h:33:22: warning: '%s' directive argument is null [-Wformat-overflow=]
33 | #define SDL_LogDebug SDL_LogDebug_REAL
/home/david/Development/SDL/src/video/x11/SDL_x11window.c:720:13: note: in expansion of macro 'SDL_LogDebug'
720 | SDL_LogDebug(SDL_LOG_CATEGORY_VIDEO, "Failed to convert WM_NAME title expecting UTF8! Title: %s", title);
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~
Closes#4924.
Based on patches of the past, such as this work by James Cloos in July
2010:
d7d98751b7,
as well as code comments in the Perl module X11::Protocol::WM
(https://metacpan.org/pod/X11::Protocol::WM) and even the code to Xlib
itself, which taught me that we should never have been using
`XStoreName`, all it does is call `XChangeProperty`, hardcoded to
`XA_STRING`!
What can I say, when the task is old school, the sources are too 😂
On Win32 this list is empty and we always get controller added events. On UWP, this list is populated and we don't get controlle added events for currently connected controllers.
This is to workaround systems where we hang in playback because the buffer
does not report the space for whatever reason. The system will instead block
in PlayDevice, which always immediately follows WaitDevice in modern times
so this works out, and it seems to keep the device moving forward.
For a future revision, we are either going to clean this up more properly,
or attempt to move to PulseAudio's pa_stream_set_write_callback() API, but
this will do for SDL 2.0.18.
Reference #4387 for discussion and further information.
The asm has been reported broken in at least optimized Apple M1 builds;
and besides, the compiler builtins have precedence over the asm anyway.
Closes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/3943
Touching HID devices with keyboard usages will trigger a keyboard capture
permission prompt on macOS 11+. See #4887
Like the IOKit joystick backend, we accept HID devices that have joystick,
gamepad, or multi-axis controller usages. We also allow the Valve VID for
the Steam Controller, just like the Windows HIDAPI implementation does.
We can also ditch the lock in RAWINPUT_JoystickQuit() now that the joystick
subsystem quits drivers in reverse order. There's no chance of a racing call
to RAWINPUT_WindowProc() anymore.
SDL_WINDOWS_JoystickDriver depends on callbacks in SDL_RAWINPUT_JoystickDriver
and SDL_HIDAPI_JoystickDriver being available. It also manages the common
WindowProc used for joystick detection in both WINDOWS and RAWINPUT drivers.
If we don't tear them down backwards, there's a window of time where we could
invoke RAWINPUT_WindowProc() after RAWINPUT_JoystickQuit() was called.
- SDL_CLOCK_GETTIME now defaults to ON to match autotools build
- Add detection of float.h and Xdbe
- Fix detection of pthread_setname_np() (requires _GNU_SOURCE)
- Move SDL_USE_IME definition into SDL_config.h.cmake
Since accessing Bluetooth prompts the user for permission on both Android and iOS, and we only need it for Steam Controller support, we'll leave it off by default. You can enable it by setting the hint SDL_HINT_JOYSTICK_HIDAPI_STEAM to "1" before calling SDL_Init()
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/4952
Direct access to the external storage is no longer allowed as of SDK 30. But on older version of Android you will still need WRITE_EXTERNAL_STORAGE in order to request the Download Manager to download files to your external file folder.
macOS 10.6 has some touch NSEvents which do not have a subtype
(Begin/EndGesture, Magnify, Rotate, Swipe) and cause an uncaught
exception which triggers SIGABRT and the program exits.
As it is, none of the macOS 10.6 touch events are detected as a
trackpad (including Gesture due to using different subtypes).
"If your app targets Android 12, you must specify the mutability of each PendingIntent object that your app creates. This additional requirement improves your app's security."
Thanks @FormularSumo and @cgutman
You can't set the intent to be immutable, otherwise the USB system can't set the device and permission in the response. This works fine on Android 12 without an immutable intent.
Case fallthrough warnings can be suppressed using the __fallthrough__
compiler attribute. Unfortunately, not all compilers have this
attribute, or even have __has_attribute to check if they have the
__fallthrough__ attribute. [[fallthrough]] is also available in C++17
and the next C2x, but not everyone uses C++17 or C2x.
So define the SDL_FALLTHROUGH macro to deal with those problems - if we
are using C++17 or C2x, it expands to [[fallthrough]]; else if the
compiler has __has_attribute and has the __fallthrough__ attribute, then
it expands to __attribute__((__fallthrough__)); else it expands to an
empty statement, with a /* fallthrough */ comment (it's a do {} while
(0) statement, because users of this macro need to use a semicolon,
because [[fallthrough]] and __attribute__((__fallthrough__)) require a
semicolon).
Clang before Clang 10 and GCC before GCC 7 have problems with using
__attribute__ as a sole statement and warn about a "declaration not
declaring anything", so fall back to using the /* fallthrough */ comment
if we are using those older compiler versions.
Applications using SDL are also free to use this macro (because it is
defined in begin_code.h).
All existing /* fallthrough */ comments have been replaced with this
macro. Some of them were unnecessary because they were the last case in
a switch; using SDL_FALLTHROUGH in those cases would result in a compile
error on compilers that support __fallthrough__, for having a
__attribute__((__fallthrough__)) statement that didn't immediately
precede a case label.
Case fallthrough warnings can be suppressed using the __fallthrough__
compiler attribute. Unfortunately, not all compilers have this
attribute, or even have __has_attribute to check if they have the
__fallthrough__ attribute. [[fallthrough]] is also available in C++17
and the next C2x, but not everyone uses C++17 or C2x.
So define the SDL_FALLTHROUGH macro to deal with those problems - if we
are using C++17 or C2x, it expands to [[fallthrough]]; else if the
compiler has __has_attribute and has the __fallthrough__ attribute, then
it expands to __attribute__((__fallthrough__)); else it expands to an
empty statement, with a /* fallthrough */ comment (it's a do {} while
(0) statement, because users of this macro need to use a semicolon,
because [[fallthrough]] and __attribute__((__fallthrough__)) require a
semicolon).
Applications using SDL are also free to use this macro (because it is
defined in begin_code.h).
All existing /* fallthrough */ comments have been replaced with this
macro. Some of them were unnecessary because they were the last case in
a switch; using SDL_FALLTHROUGH in those cases would result in a compile
error on compilers that support __fallthrough__, for having a
__attribute__((__fallthrough__)) statement that didn't immediately
precede a case label.
This keep documentation future-accurate and more importantly: it will
produce correct results before we tag the official release in git, so
they'll be correct in the tag and the release tarball.
This causes lots of spam in test automation and it's not clear it's useful to developers. If we need this level of validation, we should add a log category for it.
Since the haptic subsystem is usually initialized after the joystick subsystem,
the initial calls to HapticMaybeAddDevice() from inside SDL_JoystickInit() will
arrive too early to be handled by the haptic subsystem. We need to add those
haptic devices for those already present joysticks ourselves.
* SDLTest_CommonDrawWindowInfo: log SDL_RenderGetScale, SDL_RenderGetLogicalSize
* testwm2: fix video modes menu hit detection in High DPI cases
- also when logical size is specified, e.g.
`--logical 640x480 --resizable --allow-highdpi`
* add function to determine logical coordinates of renderer point when given window point
* change since to the targeted milestone
* fix typo
* rename for consistency
* Change logical coordinate type to float, since we can render with floating point precision.
* add function to convert logical to window coordinates
* testwm2: use new SDL_RenderWindowToLogical
* SDL_render.c: alternate SDL_RenderWindowToLogical/SDL_RenderLogicalToWindow
Co-authored-by: John Blat <johnblat64@protonmail.com>
Co-authored-by: John Blat <47202511+johnblat64@users.noreply.github.com>
This means it now works with any CMake released since 2014 instead of 2018.
This was mostly just readding some special cases, and requiring 3.11.0 only
for Windows Stores apps, which isn't unreasonable. The biggest concern is
a Linux distribution not having a recent CMake; most other places will be
manually downloading and installing their own CMake.
Fixes#4930.
The joystick subsystem has complex precedence logic to deal multiple competing
backends like XInput, RawInput, and WGI. Let it fire the MaybeAdd callbacks
for joystick devices, since it knows which backend will end up managing them.
This resolves a situation where the RawInput joystick backend would take
control of an XInput device but the XInput haptic backend would still create
a haptic device. Since the XInput joystick backend didn't own the underlying
joystick device, we'd end up with an orphaned haptic device that didn't work
with SDL_HapticOpenFromJoystick() on the associated joystick device.
A racing reader could read from our fd between SDL_IOReady()/X11_Pending()
and our call to XNextEvent() which will cause XNextEvent() to block for
more data. Avoid this by using XCheckIfEvent() which will never block.
This also fixes a bug where we could poll() for data, even when events were
already read and pending in the queue. Unlike the Wayland implementation,
this isn't totally thread-safe because nothing prevents a racing reader
from reading events into the queue between our XCheckIfEvent() and
SDL_IOReady() calls, but I think this is the best we can do with Xlib.
This API and implementation comes from the Unreal Engine branch of SDL, which
originally called this "SDL_ConfineCursor".
Some minor cleanup and changes for consistency with the rest of SDL_video, but
there are two major changes:
1. The coordinate system has been changed so that `rect` is _window_ relative
and not _screen_ relative, making it easier to implement without having
global access to the display.
2. The UE version unset all rects when passing `NULL` as a parameter for
`window`, this has been removed as it was an unused feature anyhow.
Currently this is only implemented for X, but can be supported on Wayland and
Windows at minimum too.
This prevents conflicts with hidapi linked with applications, as well as allowing applications to make use of HIDAPI on Android and other platforms that might not normally have an implementation available.
Enabling the RawInput backend causes SDL_XINPUT_Enabled() to return false.
That causes WGI and DInput backends to take ownership of XInput-compatible
controllers, because they think there's no XInput-specific backend enabled.
In WGI's case, it will actually race with RawInput to open the device. By
properly excluding XInput devices from WGI, we can ensure that the sets of
devices managed by WGI and RawInput don't intersect. This makes the race
harmless, since they'll never both go after the same device.
The Xbox One driver stack doesn't propagate the VID/PID down to the
HID devices that end up in the GetRawInputDeviceList() output. This
means we end up matching against the wrong VID/PID and can't properly
exclude Xbox One controllers from WGI.
Fortunately, it is possible to walk back up the device tree to find
the parent with the matching VID/PID.
"If your app targets Android 12, you must specify the mutability of each PendingIntent object that your app creates. This additional requirement improves your app's security."
FLAG_IMMUTABLE was added in API 23 so that's why I'm using "> API 23". Using API 30 would also fix the Android 12 issue. Alternatively if PendingIntents should be mutable you could change it to "FLAG_MUTABLE".
In this case we'll get WM_KILLFOCUS when the child window is focused, but we'll retain focus on the top level window, but when we Alt-Tab away, we won't get another WM_KILLFOCUS or WM_NCACTIVATE, we get WM_ACTIVATE instead, so we need to check for focus updates in response to that as well.
__has_include() was added in VS 2017 15.3, so this works out to essentially
the same _MSC_VER >= 1911 check we had before for MSVC but works for non-MSVC
compilers also.
The D3D11 renderer requires Direct3D 11.1 (d3d11_1.h), not Direct3D 11.0
(d3d11.h). In terms of SDKs, that's the Windows 8 SDK or later.
We should probably rename HAVE_D3D11_H...
* SDL_OpenURL (macOS): try to open path if the url cannot be opened
* SDL_OpenURL (macOS): use CFURLCreateWithBytes & LSOpenCFURLRef to correctly escape input
* fix type casting + indentation
It's marked as being a public symbol internally, however, it was missing from the header files and not visible in the shared library. This adds it to the necessary headers and to the DynAPI list to expose it for use by applications.
Co-authored-by: Frank Praznik <frank.praznik@oh.rr.com>
Note that this removes the timeGetTime() fallback on Windows; it is a
32-bit counter and SDL2 should never choose to use it, as it only is needed
if QueryPerformanceCounter() isn't available, and QPC is _always_ available
on Windows XP and later.
OS/2 has a similar situation, but since it isn't clear to me that similar
promises can be made about DosTmrQueryTime() even in modern times, I decided
to leave the fallback in, with some heroic measures added to try to provide a
true 64-bit tick counter despite the 49-day wraparound. That approach can
migrate to Windows too, if we discover some truly broken install that doesn't
have QPC and still depends on timeGetTime().
Fixes#4870.
Add a new flag to avoid suppressing EINTR in SDL_IOReady(). Pass the
flag in WaitEventTimeout() to ensure that a SIGINT will wake up
SDL_WaitEvent() without another event coming in.
SDL_config.h *can* define SDL_JOYSTICK_WGI. On builds with the Windows
10 SDK available, this allow implementing trigger rumbling on Xbox One
controllers. The files included in the Visual Studio Solution in
VisualC\SDL.sln *do* have this define set.
fix#4859
Even without the thread, it'll do an initial hardware detection at startup,
but there won't be any further hotplug events after that. But for many cases,
that is likely complete sufficient.
In either case, this cleaned up the code to no longer need a semaphore at
startup.
Fixes#4862.
We can have spurious wakeups in WaitEventTimeout() due to Wayland events
that don't end up causing us to generate an SDL event. Fortunately for us,
SDL_WaitEventTimeout_Device() handles this situation properly by calling
WaitEventTimeout() again with an adjusted timeout.
This will let us automate this so it's managed for us, and as things go
from development to official releases, the documentation will automatically
update!
There are two issues which are stopping the SDL tests from building on
my machine:
- libunwind is not being linked
- Even if it is, it is missing several symbols.
The first is fixed by having the test programs link against libunwind if
available. Technically, SDL2_test should be linking against it, as it's
used in SDL_test_memory.c, but as SDL2_test is a static library, it
can't itself import libunwind. We just assume that if it's present on
the system, we should link it directly to the test programs. This should
strictly be an improvement, as the only case where this'd fail is if
SDL2 was compiled when libunwind was present, but the tests are being
compiled without it, and that'd fail anyway.
The second is fixed by #define-ing UNW_LOCAL_ONLY before including
libunwind.h: this is required to make libunwind link to predicatable
symbols, in what can only be described as a bit of a farce. There are a
few more details in the libunwind man page, but the gist of it is that
it disables support for "remote unwinding": unwinding stack frames in a
different process (and possibly from a different architecture?):
http://www.nongnu.org/libunwind/man/libunwind(3).html
Note that I haven't tried this with CMake: I suspect that it'll work,
though, as the CMakeLists.txt seems to have SDL2 link against libunwind if
it's present. This adds an ugly extra dependency to SDL2, but does mean
that issue 1 isn't present. The UNW_LOCAL_ONLY change shouldn't be
build-system-specific.
Wayland provides the prepare_read()/read_events() family of APIs for
reading from the display fd in a deadlock-free manner across multiple
threads in a multi-threaded application. Let's use those instead of
trying to roll our own solution using a mutex.
This fixes an issue where a call to SDL_GL_SwapWindow() doesn't swap
buffers if it happens to collide with SDL_PumpEvents() in the main
thread. It also allows coexistence with other code or toolkits in
our process that may want read and dispatch events themselves.
- Factorize PrepQueueCmdDraw{,DrawTexture,Solid) into one single function
- Change SDL_Texture/Renderer r,g,b,a Uint8 into an SDL_Color, so that it can be passed directly to RenderGeometry
- Don't automatically queue a SET_DRAW_COLOR cmd for RenderGeometry (and update GLES2 renderer)
Instead of taking a direct copy of the mouse cursor surface, and then
premultiplying on every BO upload (using the custom
legacy_alpha_premultiply_ARGB8888 function), use the new
SDL_PremultiplySurfaceAlphaToARGB8888() function, which converts a whole
surface at a time, once and save the result.
The already-premultiplied data is then copied from that to the BO on
each upload, adjusting for the stride (which the previous implementation
required to be equal to the width), thereby making the extra copy
slightly useful..
This also adds support for non-SDL_PIXELFORMAT_ARGB8888 surfaces.
It turns out that Wayland's WL_SHM_FORMAT_ARGB8888 format (and, indeed,
all wayland RGBA formats) should be treated as premultiplied. SDL
surfaces tend not to be premultiplied, and this is assumed by other
backends when dealing with cursors.
This change premultiplies the cursor surface in Wayland_CreateCursor()
using the new SDL_PremultiplySurfaceAlphaToARGB8888(). In so doing, it
also adds support for a wider range of input surfaces, including those
with non-ARGB8888 pixel formats, and those which don't have
pitch==width.
This should fix#4856
A number of video backends need to get ARGB8888 formatted surfaces with
premultiplied alpha, typically for mouse cursors. Add a new function to
do this, based loosely on legacy_alpha_premultiply_ARGB8888() from the
KMSDRM backend.
The new function, SDL_PremultiplySurfaceAlphaToARGB8888() takes two
arguments:
- src: an SDL_Surface to be converted.
- dst: a buffer which is filled with premultiplied ARGB8888 data of the
same size as the surface (assuming pitch = w).
This is not heavily optimised: it just repeatedly calls SDL_GetRGBA() to
do the conversion, but should do for now.
This fixes a specific issue seen on macOS 10.14.6 where a DELL E248WFP
Display connected to a 2014 Mac Mini with a scaled 1920x1080 resolution
selected and SDL_Init(SDL_INIT_VIDEO) failed with the error: "The video
driver did not add any displays".
The underlying cause was that the current 1080p display mode did not
have the flag kDisplayModeSafeFlag, the check for which was added in
a963e36, with the idea that certain display modes should not be
candidates for switching to in fullscreen exclusive mode. That may well
be the right thing to do for filtering down a list of candidate modes,
but it doesn't pay to be so picky about the current mode. After all,
this current mode was set by System Preferences, the picture does appear
correctly on screen, and other non-SDL based applications launch and run
correctly in this mode.
Therefore the fix is to have GetDisplayMode only filter out a mode based
on flags if it's part of a candidate list, but if it's the current mode
and it can possibly be converted to an SDL_DisplayMode, do so.
* Avoid unnecessary SDL_PumpEvents calls in SDL_WaitEventTimeout
* Add a sentinel event to avoid infinite poll loops
* Move SDL_POLLSENTINEL to new internal event category
* Tweak documentation to indicate SDL_PumpEvents isn't always called
* Avoid shadowing event variable
* Ignore poll sentinel if more (user) events have been added after
Co-authored-by: Sam Lantinga <slouken@libsdl.org>
Instead do an absolute elapsed time check since the start of the wait. If that is exceeded during any iteration the routine exits as the timeout has elapsed.
The observed behavior is that any nonzero timeout value would hang until the device was paused and resumed. And a zero timeout value would always return 0 frames written even when audio fragments could be heard. Making a manual timeout system unworkable.
None of the straightforward systems imply that there's a detectable problem before the call to AAudioStream_write(). And the callback set within AAudioStreamBuilder_setErrorCallback() does not get called as we enter the hang state.
I've found that AAudioStream_getTimestamp() will report an error state from another thread. So this change codifies that behavior a bit until a better fix or more root cause can be found.
Dispatching all events in Wayland_GLES_SwapWindow leads to resizes being
acked before the program has a chance to handle the resize. This change
reduces jumping on fullscreen transition with apps that call
SDL_PollEvent before issuing any render calls.
"get_filename_component(SDL2_LIBDIR ${sdl2implib} PATH)" failed if
sdl2implib was set from sdl2implibdbg instead of ${sdl2implibdbg}
Thanks to seyuup from the SDL Discourse for pointing this out.
This has been better fixed by b28ed02 or another related relative mouse mode change of @slouken in SDL 2.0.17 and as such can be reverted to reduce unneeded processing in WM_MOUSEMOVE
wl_display_dispatch() will block if there are no events available, and
while we try to avoid this by using SDL_IOReady() to verify there are
events before calling it, there is a race condition between
SDL_IOReady() and wl_display_dispatch() if multiple threads are
involved.
This is made more likely by the fact that SDL_GL_SwapWindow() calls
wl_display_dispatch() if vsync is enabled, in order to wait for frame
events. Therefore any program which pumps events on a different thread
from SDL_GL_SwapWindow() could end up blocking in one or other of them
until another event arrives.
This change fixes this by wrapping wl_display_dispatch() in a new mutex,
which ensures only one thread can compete for wayland events at a time,
and hence the SDL_IOReady() check should successfully prevent either
from blocking.
Otherwise a formula like `x = y * 2;` would treat that '*' as the start of
an italicized section when converting to MediaWiki format, and match any
other '*' in the content as the end marker.
This cmake is 3 years old, but it removes confusion about the CFLAGS
environment variable (as of CMake 3.10.0, reference PR #4681) and also
consolidates resolves the need to have a separate requirement for Windows
Store apps (which requires CMake 3.11.0).
CMake has standard means of setting compiler flags, such as the
-DCMAKE_C_FLAGS command line for general-purpose flags, and
-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE for letting it choose reasonable release/debug/etc
defaults. Trying to emulate the configure script is incorrect and confusing
here.
Fixes#1819.
Direct3D 9 dictates that caps.NumSimultaneousRTs must always be at least 1,
which is to say that Direct3D 9 level hardware must always support render
targets.
(caps.NumSimultaneousRTs is meant to show if you can draw to multiple render
targets in a single draw call.)
We had already hardcoded SDL_RENDERER_TARGETTEXTURE as available earlier in
the function anyhow.
Fixes#4781.
Some wayland compositors report the refresh rate as 0. Since we want to
force a minimum refresh rate of 10 frames worth, we were dividing by the
reported refresh rate, causing a divide-by-zero.
If the refresh rate is 0, instead force a frame every second if no frame
callbacks are received.
This fixes bug #4785
This will still happen occasionally as the mouse is whipped around, if there is a window overlapping the game window, but it should happen less often now. This could even happen with the original code that warped the mouse every frame, so this should be a good compromise where we don't warp the mouse continously and we still keep the mouse in the safe area of the game window.
Note that notifications can be any size, so the safe area may need to be adjusted or even dynamically defined via a hint.
(This probably isn't right on truly ancient versions of Borland C, but it
should cover things from the last decade or so, I hope.)
(possibly) Fixes#1673.
We don't use it, it was a leftover from 1.2, I think, and it doesn't exist
on Solaris, so this should hopefully fix the build there.
This also means we don't need the configure/cmake checks for
SDL_VIDEO_DRIVER_X11_CONST_PARAM_XEXTADDDISPLAY, so that was removed also.
Fixes#1666.
One place known to differ in a significant way is a single line segment that
starts and ends on the same point; the GL renderers will light up a single
pixel here, whereas the software renderer will not. My current belief is this
is a bug in the software renderer, based on the wording of the docs:
"SDL_RenderDrawLine() draws the line to include both end points."
You can see an example program that triggers that difference in Bug #2006.
As it stands, the GL renderers might _also_ render diagonal lines differently,
as the the Bresenham step might vary between implementations (one does three
pixels and then two, the other does two and then three, etc). But this patch
causes those lines to start and end on the correct pixel, and that's the best
we can do, and all anyone really needs here.
Not closing any bugs with this patch (yet!), but here are several that it
appears to fix. If no other corner cases pop up, we'll call this done.
Reference Bug #2006.
Reference Bug #1626.
Reference Bug #4001.
...and probably others...
Vista and later provide the SleepConditionVariableCS() function for this.
Since SDL_syscond_srw.c doesn't require SRW locks anymore, rename it to
SDL_syscond_cv.c which better reflects the implementation of condition
variables rather than the implementation of mutexes.
Fixes#4051.
* Fixed: Whitespace being striped from the end of IME strings incorrectly
* Fixed: Google IME Candidate Window not placing correctly
* Why are PostBuild events stored in the vcxproj and not a user file?
* Revert SDL.vcxproj properly...
* Remove whitespace as per code review
* Fix Werror=declaration-after-statement error in code
In the future, we might want to support special swap intervals. To
prevent applications from expecting nonzero values of vsync to be the
same as "on", fail with SDL_Unsupported() if the value passed is neither
0 nor 1.
Currently, if an application wants to toggle VSync, they'd have to tear
down the renderer and recreate it. This patch fixes that by letting
applications call SDL_RenderSetVSync().
This is the same as the patch in #3673, except it applies to all
renderers (including PSP, even thought it seems that the VSync flag is
disabled for that renderer). Furthermore, the renderer flags also change
as well, which #3673 didn't do. It is also an API instead of using hint
callbacks (which could be potentially dangerous).
Closes#3673.
The version with an implicit pattern rule tended to fail if test/
was built in an "out-of-tree" build directory not below test/, for
example:
cd SDL
mkdir _build-test
( cd _build-test; ../test/configure )
make -C _build-test
as a result of the pattern rule first checking for axis.bmp, then for
../test/axis.bmp, then ../test/../test/axis.bmp, and so on until the
maximum path length was reached.
Note that this requires GNU make. The FreeBSD ports file for SDL seems
to use GNU make (gmake) already, so presumably SDL's build system is
already relying on GNU make extensions.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
AC_CONFIG_AUX_DIRS is an undocumented, internal version of
AC_CONFIG_AUX_DIR that takes a whitespace-separated list, instead of a
single path to add to the list. It also does not automatically treat
the given path as being relative to the $srcdir, unlike the documented
AC_CONFIG_AUX_DIR.
Newer versions of autoconf treat the argument to AC_CONFIG_AUX_DIRS
as being literal (they do not expand the shell variable), causing
autoreconf to fail if $srcdir is explicitly specified. The argument to
AC_CONFIG_AUX_DIR is checked relative to $srcdir anyway, so there is no
need to specify $srcdir a second time.
Resolves: https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/4719
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@debian.org>
See SDL bug #4703. This implements two new hints:
- SDL_APP_NAME
- SDL_SCREENSAVER_INHIBIT_ACTIVITY_NAME
The former is the successor to SDL_HINT_AUDIO_DEVICE_APP_NAME, and acts
as a generic "application name" used both by audio drivers and DBUS
screensaver inhibition. If SDL_AUDIO_DEVICE_APP_NAME is set, it will
still take priority over SDL_APP_NAME.
The second allows the "activity name" used by
org.freedesktop.ScreenSavver's Inhibit method, which are often shown in
the UI as the reason the screensaver (and/or suspend/other
power-managment features) are disabled.
The recent change to make SDL_AUDIODRIVER support comma-separated lists
broke the previous behavior where an SDL_AUDIODRIVER that was empty
behaved the same as if it was not set at all. This old behavior was
necessary to paper over differences in platforms where SDL_setenv may
or may not actually delete the env var if an empty string is specified.
This patch just adds a simple check to ensure SDL_AUDIODRIVER is not
empty before using it, restoring the old interpretation of the empty
var.
Originally, SDL 1.2 used "pulse" as the name for its PulseAudio driver.
While it now supports "pulseaudio" as well for compatibility with SDL
2.0 [1], there are still scripts and distro packages which set
SDL_AUDIODRIVER=pulse [2]. While it's possible to remove this in most
circumstances or replace it with "pulseaudio" or a comma-separated list,
this may still conflict if the environment variable is set globally and
old binary builds of SDL 1.2 (e.g. packaged with older games) are being
used.
To fix this on SDL 2.0, add a hardcoded check for "pulse" as an audio
driver name, and replace it with "pulseaudio". This mimics what SDL 1.2
does (but in reverse). Note that setting driver_attempt{,_len} is safe
here as they're reset correctly based on driver_attempt_end on the next
loop.
[1] d951409784
[2] https://bugzilla.opensuse.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1189778
This change corrects the mappings for the Atari gamecontroller and
adds support for the Atari Xbox 360 compatible gamecontroller. The Atari
game controller can switch between Atari and Xbox 360 mappings.
Although GCC and Clang automatically generate color diagnostics on
terminal output, they do not do so when the compiler output is piped
through another process, like in the case for ninja-build and ccache.
Similarly, it would also be nice to be able to see the color diagnostics
on the CI build log in the web interface provided by the CI providers.
The wrong logic, copy/pasted to a bunch of places, would correctly disable
the dynamic loading but fail to specify the libraries that SDL would now need
to explicitly link against.
This might have changed at some point in the Pulse API, or this might have
always been wrong, but we didn't notice because the dynamic loading code
hides it by casting things to void *. The static path, where it
assigns the function pointer directly, puts out a clear compiler warning,
though.
[--use-rendergeometry mode1|mode2]
mode1: Draw sprite2 as triangles that can be recombined as rect by software renderer
mode2: Draw sprite2 as triangles that can *not* be recombined as rect by software renderer
Use an 'indices' array
With Dear ImGui + software renderer, it draws:
- by default at 250 fps
- drops to 70 fps if you show the color picker
- drops to 10 fps if put the color picker fullscreen
There were a few places throughout the SDL code where values were
clamped using SDL_min() and SDL_max(). Now that we have an SDL_clamp()
macro, use this instead.
Add a function to clamp a value to a range.
SDL_clamp(x, a, b) is equivalent to SDL_min(a, SDL_max(x, b)): it
ensures that x is not smaller than a, nor larger than b.
While, as best I can tell, this isn't actually standardised anywhere,
it's a very useful function/macro to have.
This was the original intent (note SDL_UpdateWindowGrab() in SDL_OnWindowFocusGained() and SDL_OnWindowFocusLost()) and fixes a bug where relative motion unexpectedly stops if the task bar is covering the bottom of the game window and the mouse happens to move over it while relative mode is enabled.
Another alternative would be to confine the mouse when relative mode is enabled, but that generates mouse motion which would need to be ignored, and it's possible for the user moving the mouse to combine with the mouse moving into the confined area so you can't easily tell whether to ignore the mouse motion. See https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/4165 for a case where this is problematic.
This is the mouse focus except in the case where relative motion is enabled and the mouse is over a window floating on top of the application window (e.g. the taskbar)
This fixes restoring the cursor clip rectangle after the mouse has moved off of the window.
Also try to better synchronize cursor visibility with mouse position changes when changing relative mode. This doesn't work perfectly, but it seems to improve things on Windows.
On Wayland -- or at least on some Wayland implementations -- windows
aren't shown until something has been rendered into them. For the
'checkkeys' test program, this means that keyboard input isn't
registered, making the program rather useless.
By creating a renderer and presenting once, the window is properly
displayed, and the test behaves as it does under X11 (including
XWayland).
The exact same thing was done with testmessge in 1cd97e2695 (PR #4252)
Don't rely on checking __clang_major__ since it is not comparable
between different vendors. Don't use "#pragma clang attribute" since it
is only available in relatively recent versions, there's no obvious way
to check if it's supported, and just using __attribute__ directly (for
gcc as well) results in simpler code anyway.
The __clang_major__ and __clang_minor__ macros provide a marketing
version, which is not necessarily comparable for clang distributions
from different vendors[1]. In practice, the versioning scheme for
Apple's clang is indeed completely different to that of the llvm.org
releases. It is thus preferable to check for features directly rather
than comparing versions.
In this specific case, __builtin_bswap16 was being used with older
Apple clang versions that don't support it.
[1] https://clang.llvm.org/docs/LanguageExtensions.html#builtin-macros
If we are already in the desired mode, changing it is a no-op at best,
and harmful at worst: on Xwayland, it sometimes happens that we disable
the crtc and cannot re-enable it.
Resolves: https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/4630
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
- cmake, configure (CheckDLOPEN): --enable-sdl-dlopen is now history..
detach the dl api discovery from SDL_LOADSO_DLOPEN functionality.
define HAVE_DLOPEN. also define DYNAPI_NEEDS_DLOPEN (CheckDLOPEN is
called only for relevant platforms.)
- update SDL_config.in and SDL_config.cmake accordingly.
- SDL_dynapi.h: set SDL_DYNAMIC_API to 0 if DYNAPI_NEEDS_DLOPEN is
defined, but HAVE_DLOPEN is not.
- pthread/SDL_systhread.c: conditionalize dl api use to HAVE_DLOPEN
- SDL_x11opengl.c, SDL_DirectFB_opengl.c, SDL_naclopengles.c: rely
on HAVE_DLOPEN, not SDL_LOADSO_DLOPEN.
- SDL_config_android.h, SDL_config_iphoneos.h, SDL_config_macosx.h,
SDL_config_pandora.h, and SDL_config_wiz.h: define HAVE_DLOPEN.
Closes: https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/pull/4351
According to https://cmake.org/cmake/help/v3.0/module/GNUInstallDirs.html
`${CMAKE_INSTALL_LIBDIR} ` is only variable which should be used as base
directory. Without that patch on 64 bit archs libraries, cmake modules and
pkgconfig file are installed for example in /usr/lib6464 base directory.
This patch fixes#4621.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Kłoczko <koczek@github.com>
Without this change, driver names don't get matched correctly;
for example "a" can get matched with "alsa" since it only checks
whether the string matches up to the length of the requested
driver name.
Without this change, driver names don't get matched correctly;
for example "x" can get matched with "x11" since it only checks
whether the string matches up to the length of the requested
driver name.
b08b1bde introduced a subtle bug. Despite not using D-Bus types directly,
the code used the SDL_USE_LIBDBUS definition set by SDL_dbus.h to conditionally
compile calls SDL_DBus_ScreensaverTickle() and SDL_DBus_ScreensaverInhibit().
As a result, it still compiled without SDL_dbus.h included, but screensaver
suspension silently failed to work.
The D-Bus stuff could probably use some tweaks to be harder to accidentally
break, but for now just restore the header includes.
SDL_Vulkan_GetDrawableSize() doesn't always return a size which is
within the Vulkan swapchain's allowed image extent range.
(This happens on X11 a lot when resizing, which is bug #3287)
Clamp the value we get back from SDL_Vulkan_GetDrawableSize() to this
range. Given the range usually is just a single value, this is almost
always equivalent to just using the min or max image extent, but this
seems logically most correct.
Configure events from compositors have an extremely annoying habit of giving us
completely bogus sizes, from all sorts of places. Thankfully, the protocol
gives us the ability to completely ignore the width/height and just stick with
what we know, so for all windows that are not meant to be resized, pretend we
never even got the width/height at all, the compositor is required to respect
our dimensions whether they match configure's suggestion or not.
Otherwise only the display resolution is changed, but the SDL window size
(and for example the window-surface size) aren't adjusted accordingly
and thus don't fill the whole screen.
See #3313
.. and maybe other platforms as well (though X11 was not affected)?
The issue was that passing a higher resolution than the current desktop
resolution to SDL_CreateWindow() with SDL_WINDOW_FULLSCREEN didn't switch
to that resolution (even though it did switch to lower resolutions).
When creating a fullscreen window, window->fullscreen wasn't even set
at all (only zeroed out), setting it only happened if the user explicitly
called SDL_SetWindowDisplayMode(). So without that, SDL_CreateWindow()
-> SDL_UpdateFullscreenMode() -> SDL_GetWindowDisplayMode() used the
resolution from window->windowed.w/h which were limited to the desktop size
due to some weird combination of WIN_AdjustWindowRectWithStyle() and
WIN_WindowProc() being called after a call to SetWindowPos().
fixes#3313
This prevents a race if two threads that need d-bus try to init it at the
same time. Note that SDL_Init will likely handle this from a single thread
at startup, but there are places outside of init where one might trigger
D-Bus init, like setting thread priority (a common first thing for a new
thread to do) resulting in SDL trying to use RTKit.
Fixes#4587.
This reintroduces the fix from 0e16ee8330, but just marks
the viewport state as dirty after a clear that needs to expand the
viewport to fill the render target, as we'll need to also reset
the orthographic projection state elsewhere, and that won't
happen if we clear the dirty flag here.
Fixes#4210.
(again.)
(...sorry...!)
- Fixed the markdown.
- Code can now be exited by pressing ESC.
- Cleans up and returns from main()
- Mushed all the `if (x) { return 0; }` blocks into else ifs.
The LINKER variable is set in configure.ac as either 'CC' or 'CXX'
where it is then passed to the created Makefile. This fails with
slibtool which can't find the 'CC' file and can be fixed by correctly
setting the LINKER variable to an actual Makefile variable like '$(CC)'
or '$(CXX)' instead. Presumably GNU libtool does some magic here to
hide the issue.
The Renderer logical scaling code scales mouse coordinates, and needs to
take the window DPI into account on HIGHDPI windows. However, the
variable which tracks this, renderer->dpi_scale, is set once when the
renderer is created, and then not updated. In the event that the window
is moved to another screen, or the screen DPI otherwise changes, this
will be outdates, and potentially the coordinates will be all wrong.
So let's update the dpi_scale on the SIZE_CHANGED event: it's at least a
possibility that this will be issued on some OSes when DPI changes, and
it's otherwise already handled by SDL_Renderer's event filter.
The $(objects) directory (usually build/) may not have been created by
the time the wayland-scanner protocol files are being compiled. The
$(gen) directory is explicitly made with mkinstalldir, but the final
object file (and gcc dependency files) need to go into $(objects).
For whatever reason, this only ever seemed to occur if --disable-shared
was set.
Note that this commit doesn't regenerate ./configure, as there were a
few unexplained, unrelated differences my version of autoconf created,
as as an autotools novice, I didn't want to poke that bear just yet.
This hopefully should fix#3689
Otherwise you might have set the viewport to the full size of
the render target in SDL's API but this change hasn't been
transmitted to Direct3D yet by the time we attempt to clear.
Fixes#4210.
SDL_AddHintCallback() uses SDL_malloc(), which means this would
run before main(), so the app wouldn't be able to supply its own
replacement SDL_malloc() implementation in time.
This code was moved to under SDL_Init. Since the hint callback
already makes efforts to not override the app manifest's
orientation settings, this is safe to move until after pre-main()
startup.
Fixes#4449.
This removes the CM_Register_Notification code on WinRT. Note
that this API _is_ available to UWP apps as of Windows 10.0.17763
(version 1809, released October 2018), according to:
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/uwp/win32-and-com/win32-apis#apis-from-api-ms-win-devices-config-l1-1-1dll
So it might be worth readding with some sort of preprocessor check
for minimum targeted version, or whatever is appropriate for WinRT
development.
This was causing configure events to not inform SDL of window size
changes, even when they were based on resizes that we fully expected. The
result was fullscreen->windowed not working at all, because it would
retain the desktop resolution instead of reverting to the floating size
that it had before moving to fullscreen mode.
Fixes Super Hexagon fullscreen toggling.
The flush has been removed in e5f9fae034.
Unfortunately, even though ideally the flush shouldn't be necessary,
our resize sequence isn't... well, perfect, and removing that flush causes
tons of troubles.
We're also still flushing in other paths where the window size can be
changed by the compositor and where we may potentially have to obey that
change, like in Wayland_MaximizeWindow.
This also removes the hack introduced in 7f261d3b76,
which introduces problems with protocol violations and seems to not be
necessary when flushing.
We have issues with correct resize sequence and happen to commit old-sized
buffers even after configure event for the new size has been already
acknowledged. While the reason for that stays unknown, let's at least
workaround the problem by faking window geometry into expected size.
This does not fix visual glitch on e.g. fullscreen toggling, but having
a split-second glitch is still a much better outcome than being
terminated by the compositor for protocol violation.
This was causing window changes to completely break, resulting in broken
decorations and bizarre frame timing, I don't know what exactly it's doing
but it's not good. Kept the libdecor_frame_is_floating logic, at least.
Commit 871c11191b removed delayed
resize handling, but it left the whole structure untouched that
now became unnecessary. To help with code clarity, get rid
of the structure where pending resize state used to be stored
and pass all the data directly to Wayland_HandlePendingResize
(now renamed to Wayland_HandleResize, since it's not "pending"
anymore but applied immediately)
Otherwise our windows have no window decoration on compositors that
support xdg-decoration-unstable-v1, but default to client-side mode.
Contrary to what the comment was stating, there is nothing in the protocol
that would make redundant calls to zxdg_toplevel_decoration_v1::set_mode
problematic.
Some Wayland compositors send (0,0) as "suggested" configure event sizes to
indicate that the client has to decide on its own which sizes to used. This
is commonly done when restoring from maximised, fullscreen or tiles states
to fullscreen.
We now store the last known floating states in a new set of variables and
restore them when we receive such a (0,0) configure event.
From the vfork manpage:
> The vfork() function has the same effect as fork(2), except that
> the behavior is undefined if the process created by vfork() either
> modifies any data other than a variable of type pid_t used to store
> the return value from vfork(), or returns from the function in which
> vfork() was called, or calls any other function before successfully
> calling _exit(2) or one of the exec(3) family of functions.
unsetenv is still called inside a child process, so it does not
influence the rest of the application.
This fixes a crash on pressing keyboard button when compositor sends
zero as repeat rate, indicating that key repeat should be disabled.
From Wayland protocol spec:
> Negative values for either rate or delay are illegal. A rate of zero
> will disable any repeating (regardless of the value of delay).
This is a workaround and not a proper fix, but this is possibly complicated,
and possibly a corner case, so this will do for 2.0.16, if not the
foreseeable future.
Reference issue #4561
When we removed the OpenGL resize workaround it introduced a problem for
fullscreen windows in particular: When leaving fullscreen we tried to send a
resize event, but UpdateFullscreenMode would send a SIZE_CHANGED immediately
after, deleting our resize event and causing the following configure event's
resize to be ignored. This timing issue resulted in fullscreen windows not
being resized at all when becoming a floating window.
By always forcing resize events from configure events, we ensure that RESIZED
always makes it through. SetWindowSize-type changes should be unaffected as
they do not fire configure events.
The RenderDrawLinesWithRects and RenderDrawLinesWithRectsF functions can
sometimes call QueueCmdFillRects() with the data pointed to by frects
uninitialised. This can occur if none of the lines can be replaced with
rects, in which case the frects array is empty, and nrects is 0.
gcc 10.3.0 will detect this possibility, and print a warning like:
/home/david/Development/SDL/src/render/SDL_render.c: In function 'RenderDrawLinesWithRectsF':
/home/david/Development/SDL/src/render/SDL_render.c:2725:15: warning: '<unknown>' may be used uninitialized [-Wmaybe-uninitialized]
2725 | retval += QueueCmdFillRects(renderer, frects, nrects);
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/home/david/Development/SDL/src/render/SDL_render.c:499:1: note: by argument 2 of type 'const SDL_FRect *' to 'QueueCmdFillRects' declared here
499 | QueueCmdFillRects(SDL_Renderer *renderer, const SDL_FRect * rects, const int count)
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This is harmless, because when this is uninitialised, nrects is always
0, so QueueCmdFillRects() does nothing anyway. We therefore can work
around this by only calling QueueCmdFillRects() when nrects is nonzero.
Somewhat impressively, gcc recognises that this is now safe.
Visual Studio will still use Multi-threaded DLL by default, but since we don't link with a C runtime we won't end up with any Visual Studio runtime dependency.
This fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/4328
This is needed to support CHERI, and thus Arm's experimental Morello
prototype, where pointers are implemented using unforgeable capabilities
that include bounds and permissions metadata to provide fine-grained
spatial and referential memory safety, as well as revocation by sweeping
memory to provide heap temporal memory safety.
The referential safety is enforced through the use of tagged memory, and
there is only a single tag bit per capability-sized word, meaning it is
impossible to store capabilities at unaligned locations, either getting
a trap on load/store or the validity tag being stripped when
round-tripepd through memory.
Since this is a new ABI for which SDL has never been compiled before, we
do not need to be concerned with this compatibility measure, so just
don't pack the struct for CHERI architectures.
This code is inherently rather dubious anyway; if MSVC and GCC disagree
on struct layout when targeting Windows then that is a bug in GCC, but
likely extends from the bogus #pragma pack directives for MSVC in
begin_code.h, which will force types to be *underaligned* (and is
attempting to work around something that is fundamentally a broken idea
to be doing). In particular 8-byte-aligned types will be underaligned to
4 bytes, but only on MSVC. Since that code is not used for GCC that is
probably the cause of the struct layout discrepancy, and there are
likely other instances of that throughout SDL. Moreover, the supposed
fix here is not in fact a fix, as now GCC will think SDL_AudioCVT is
only 1-byte-aligned but MSVC will think it's 4-byte or 8-byte-aligned,
meaning ABI incomatibility is introduced by this change. However,
removing it would break ABI compatibility for purely-GCC-compiled code
(as old binaries would see the struct as 1-byte-aligned and new binaries
would see the struct as 8-byte-aligned) so SDL is stuck with this until
it bumps its ABI.
This is needed to support CHERI, and thus Arm's experimental Morello
prototype, where pointers are implemented using unforgeable capabilities
that include bounds and permissions metadata to provide fine-grained
spatial and referential memory safety, as well as revocation by sweeping
memory to provide heap temporal memory safety.
The C standard does not guarantee that if two pointers compare equal
they are the same pointer, as C pointers have a notion of provenance,
and compilers have been known to exploit this during optimisation. For
CHERI, this becomes even more important, as in-place expansion can
result in realloc returning a capability to the same address but with
increased capability bounds, and so reusing the old capability will trap
trying to access outside the bounds of the original allocation.
In the case that ptr == mem, memdiff and ptrdiff should still be equal,
so the only overhead is a small amount of pointer arithmetic and a store
of the new pointer (which is required per the C standard in order to not
be undefined behaviour when next loaded).
This also fixes the calculation of oldmem to use uintptr_t rather than
size_t as casting the pointer to size_t on CHERI will strip the
capability metadata, including the validity tag, with the subsequent
cast back to void * resulting in a null-derived capability whose
validity tag is clear and thus cannot be dereferenced without trapping.
This is needed to support CHERI, and thus Arm's experimental Morello
prototype, where pointers are implemented using unforgeable capabilities
that include bounds and permissions metadata to provide fine-grained
spatial and referential memory safety, as well as revocation by sweeping
memory to provide heap temporal memory safety.
On most systems (anything with a flat memory hierarchy rather than using
segment-based addressing), size_t and uintptr_t are the same type.
However, on CHERI, size_t is just an integer offset, whereas uintptr_t
is still a capability as described above. Casting a pointer to size_t
will strip the metadata and validity tag, and casting from size_t to a
pointer will result in a null-derived capability whose validity tag is
not set, and thus cannot be dereferenced without faulting.
The audio and cursor casts were harmless as they intend to stuff an
integer into a pointer, but using uintptr_t is the idiomatic way to do
that and silences our compiler warnings (which our build tool makes
fatal by default as they often indicate real problems). The iconv and
egl casts were true positives as SDL_iconv_t and iconv_t are pointer
types, as is NativeDisplayType on most OSes, so this would have trapped
at run time when using the round-tripped pointers. The gles2 casts were
also harmless; the OpenGL API defines this argument to be a pointer type
(and uses the argument name "pointer"), but it in fact represents an
integer offset, so like audio and cursor the additional idiomatic cast
is needed to silence the warning.
This is needed to support CHERI, and thus Arm's experimental Morello
prototype, where pointers are implemented using unforgeable capabilities
that include bounds and permissions metadata to provide fine-grained
spatial and referential memory safety, as well as revocation by sweeping
memory to provide heap temporal memory safety.
If you continually poll for events it's possible that new events can come in while you're still processing the last one, delaying rendering. This is more likely with high update rate sensors.
When choosing an X11 Visual for a window based on its GLX capabilities, first
try glXChooseFBConfig (if available) before falling back to glXChooseVisual.
This normally does not make a difference because most GLX drivers create a
Visual for every GLXFBConfig, exposing all of the same capabilities.
For GLX render offload configurations (also know as "PRIME") where one GPU is
providing GLX rendering support for windows on an X screen running on a
different GPU, the GPU doing the offloading needs to use the Visuals that were
created by the host GPU's driver rather than being able to add its own. This
means that there may be fewer Visuals available for all of the GLXFBConfigs the
guest driver wants to expose. In order to handle that situation, the NVIDIA GLX
driver creates many GLXFBConfigs that map to the same Visual when running in a
render offload configuration.
This can result in a glXChooseVisual request failing to find a supported Visual
when there is a GLXFBConfig for that configuration that would have worked. For
example, when the game "Unnamed SDVX Clone" [1] tries to create a configuration
with multisample, glXChooseVisual fails because the Visual assigned to the
multisample GLXFBConfigs is shared with the GLXFBConfigs without multisample.
Avoid this problem by using glXChooseFBConfig, when available, to find a
GLXFBConfig with the requested capabilities and then using
glXGetVisualFromFBConfig to find the corresponding X11 Visual. This allows the
game to run, although it doesn't make me any better at actually playing it...
Signed-off-by: Aaron Plattner <aplattner@nvidia.com>
Fixes: https://forums.developer.nvidia.com/t/prime-run-cannot-create-window-x-glxcreatecontext/180214
[1] https://github.com/Drewol/unnamed-sdvx-clone
As of [1], SDL now compiles with a warning in SDL_waylandevents.c on
32-bit systems under gcc 10.3.0:
/tmp/SDL/src/video/wayland/SDL_waylandevents.c: In function 'seat_handle_capabilities':
/tmp/SDL/src/video/wayland/SDL_waylandevents.c:958:22: warning: cast from pointer to integer of different size [-Wpointer-to-int-cast]
958 | SDL_AddTouch((SDL_TouchID)seat, SDL_TOUCH_DEVICE_DIRECT, "wayland_touch");
| ^
/tmp/SDL/src/video/wayland/SDL_waylandevents.c:964:22: warning: cast from pointer to integer of different size [-Wpointer-to-int-cast]
964 | SDL_DelTouch((SDL_TouchID)seat);
| ^
This is due to SDL_TouchID always being 32-bit, but seat being a pointer
which is (obviously) only 32-bit on 32-bit systems. The conversion is
therefore harmless, so silence it with an extra cast via intptr_t.
This is what the cocoa backend does (and is similar to what the Win32
backend does, except with size_t).
Fixes: 03c19efbd1 ("Added support for multiple seats with touch input on Wayland")
[1]: 03c19efbd1
When wayland is not dynamically loaded (--enable-wayland-shared=no)
libdecor.h is not included unless SDL_VIDEO_DRIVER_WAYLAND_DYNAMIC
is set, so it fails to build. We can't simply move the libdecor.h
include above the #ifdef SDL_VIDEO_DRIVER_WAYLAND_DYNAMIC block, as
libdecor.h itself #includes wayland headers we need to replace with
#defines. Instead, duplicate the #include.
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/4543
Note that this doesn't fix any of the underlying issues of libdecor
being treated as part of wayland, it just fixes the build. A better
solution would probably be to decouple the wayland dynamic loading
from the libdecor dynamic loading completely, though that is a lot
more work...
Each window can have at most one zxdg toplevel decoration, but as of
[1], we accidentally create two. (If libdecor is not in use). This
causes wayland windows with server-side decorations (e.g. on KDE/KWin)
to crash with the message:
zxdg_decoration_manager_v1@7: error 1: decoration has been already constructed
This extra zxdg_decoration_manager_v1.get_toplevel_decoration() call was
introduced while deprecating wl-shell and xdg-shell-stable[1] support,
and possibly was a bad interaction with [2], which moved the decoration
creation around.
Fixes: 6aae5b44f8 ("Remove wl-shell and xdg-shell-unstable-v6 support (#4323)")
[1]: https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/pull/4323
[2]: https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/pull/4374
WASAPI_WaitDevice is used for audio playback and capture, but needs to
behave slighty different.
For playback `GetCurrentPadding` returns the padding which is already
queued, so WaitDevice should return when buffer length falls below the
buffer threshold (`maxpadding`).
For capture `GetCurrentPadding` returns the available data which can be
read, so WaitDevice can return as soon as any data is available.
In the old implementation WaitDevice could suddenly hang. This is
because on many capture devices the buffer (`padding`) wasn't filled
fast enough to surpass `maxpadding`. But if at one point (due to unlucky
timing) more than maxpadding frames were available, WaitDevice would not
return anymore.
Issue #3234 is probably related to this.
On modern CPUs, there's no penalty for using the unaligned instruction on
aligned memory, but now it can vectorize unaligned data too, which even if
it's not optimal, is still going to be faster than the scalar fallback.
Fixes#4532.
The Game Controller Kit doesn't show the controllers at startup, so the HIDAPI driver sees them first and therefore gets preference when a controller is supported by both drivers.
This fixes bug https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/4209
This prevents an assertion whem LINUX_JoystickGetGamepadMapping tried to
open the stick temporarily and messed with global state by doing so. Now
the global state is only set in LINUX_JoystickOpen, but the common code
is shared by both interfaces.
Fixes#4198.
These came from HaikuPorts, specifically this patchset:
462947dd4f/media-libs/libsdl2/patches/libsdl2-2.0.14.patchset
This is just the part that is _not_ Haiku-specific. I wanted this in a
separate commit though, since I'm not really a CMake expert; if this causes
problems and we need to bisect to it, we won't be confused about it being a
Haiku issue when we get here.
Fixes#4092.
(and probably others.)
These came from HaikuPorts, specifically this patchset:
462947dd4f/media-libs/libsdl2/patches/libsdl2-2.0.14.patchset
This is just the Haiku-specific bits; the more general parts about install
dirs will be split into a different commit here.
Reference issue #4092.
Wayland video subsystem uses a mix of libc and SDL function.
This patch switches libc functions to SDL ones and fixes a mismatch in memory
allocation/dealoccation of SDL_Cursor in SDL_waylandmouse.c (calloc on line 201
and SDL_free on line 313) which caused memory corruption if custom memory
allocator where provided to SDL.
As written, these contain undefined stack contents, which in practice
causes crashes/hangs and/or triggers the validation layers (they
complain about `pNext` and `flags` not being NULL).
When building SDL2 from git with CMake, you got libSDL2-2.0.so.1
instead of .0 (as it's the case when building with autotools).
This was caused by using LT_REVISION instead of LT_MAJOR for SOVERSION.
fixes#4310
The GCC-style SDL2_LIBRARIES were lacking the rpath on Linux, which
seems to be implicitly set when linking path/to/libSDL2-2.0.so.0.*
and is explicitly set in the SDL2_LIBRARIES in sdl2-config.cmake
(from some autotools variable), so I removed that hack and the format
remains sth like "path/to/libSDL2main.a;path/to/libSDL2-2.0.so.0.14.1".
It's still in the revision history in case it turns out that some
platform really needs the "-L/path/to/bla/lib -lSDL2main -lSDL2" format
It didn't work at all because shared libs defined in CMake with
add_library() need something like IMPORTED_IMPLIB (pointing to a .dll.a
or .lib for th DLLs) set to link on Windows.
But even with that it didn't work because the order of the libs is very
important: it must be -lmingw32 -lSDL2main -lSDL -mwindows - but
with normal add_library(SDL2::SDL2 SHARED IMPORTED) libs, SDL2 itself
is always linked first.
So I use an "INTERFACE" library (usually used for header-only libs), which
doesn't implicitly/automatically link anything so I can specify the whole
order of the linked libs.
(SDL2::SDL2-static is completely untested)
this makes it easier to create a portable sdl2-config.cmake that doesn't
hardcode its path (by replacing the hardcoded prefix with something
like "${CMAKE_CURRENT_LIST_DIR}/../../..")
When hint SDL_HINT_OPENGL_ES_DRIVER is set to "1" (e.g. for ANGLE support), assertion due to !_this->gl_config.driver_loaded can be causes while EGL is available.
When relative mode is enabled and not using warp mode, the cursor is
being clipped to the window. Therefore there is no reason to restore the
cursor position to the center.
Avoiding the warp to center simplifies mouse position event flow, as we
are no longer potentially receiving mouse events for the automated
movement of the cursor and can be (mostly) assured that an incoming
event from the windowing system is that of external means.
The implementation of clip logic for relative mode seemed to
unnecessarily limit the usable area to the middle of the window, in a
2x2 pixel region. This has the adverse side effect of moving the
operating system cursor to that location, even if it is in a valid
location in the window.
While in most scenarios this is handled correctly (by storing the
original position of the cursor in the window and restoring when leaving
relative mode), there are edge cases where this clip operation can cause
WM_MOUSEMOVE to fire at a point in time where it counts as a relative
delta from SDL's perspective.
-Wundef errors from clang-11.1 when targeting macOS
Targeting i386 against 10.8 SDK:
In file included from src/SDL_assert.c:21:
In file included from src/./SDL_internal.h:52:
In file included from include/SDL_config.h:33:
include/SDL_platform.h:73:5: error: 'TARGET_OS_TV' is not defined, evaluates to 0 [-Werror,-Wundef-prefix=TARGET_OS_]
^
1 error generated.
src/joystick/iphoneos/SDL_mfijoystick.m:38:5: error: 'TARGET_OS_IOS' is not defined, evaluates to 0 [-Werror,-Wundef-prefix=TARGET_OS_]
^
src/joystick/iphoneos/SDL_mfijoystick.m:460:5: error: 'TARGET_OS_TV' is not defined, evaluates to 0 [-Werror,-Wundef-prefix=TARGET_OS_]
^
2 errors generated.
src/filesystem/cocoa/SDL_sysfilesystem.m:83:6: error: 'TARGET_OS_TV' is not defined, evaluates to 0 [-Werror,-Wundef-prefix=TARGET_OS_]
^
1 error generated.
Targeting x86_64 against 10.12 SDK:
src/video/SDL_video.c:1492:25: error: 'TARGET_OS_MACCATALYST' is not defined, evaluates to 0 [-Werror,-Wundef-prefix=TARGET_OS_]
^
1 error generated.
X11_SetDisplayMode currently calls X11_XRRSetCrtcConfig alone. This results
in the monitor's viewport getting changed, but the underlying screen dimensions
stay the same.
The spec indicates that RRSetCrtcConfig only changes the crtc mode and has no effect
on the screen dimensions, only mentioning that the new crtc must fit entirely within the
screen size. For the size to change, RRSetScreenSize also needs to be called.
This affects Metro Exodus on Linux, when changing the resolution in the in-game settings
Metro gets stuck in a loop waiting for the size of its vulkan surface to change. Because
XRRSetScreenSize is not called the screen size is never changed, the vulkan surface dimensions
do not change, and Metro hangs forever watching for a surface size update that will
never come.
This change disables the CRTC, calls XRRSetScreenSize, and then updates the
CRTC configuration. This fixes changing the resolution from the Metro settings.
Tested with:
Metro Exodus, Portal 2
To enter Bluetooth pairing mode hold B and Action (button with circle) buttons for 3 seconds.
It works via usual HIDAPI if special filter driver is not installed:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/help/customer/display.html?nodeId=GZCT4CTFHXLHEB9T
With that driver installed it mimics Xbox One controller and works via XInput under Windows.
Under DInput this controller is not usable at all.
AC_CHECK_HEADER() emits warnings when configuring for non-x86, because
the preprocessor check is OK but the compile check is not:
configure: WARNING: immintrin.h: present but cannot be compiled
configure: WARNING: immintrin.h: check for missing prerequisite headers?
configure: WARNING: immintrin.h: see the Autoconf documentation
configure: WARNING: immintrin.h: section "Present But Cannot Be Compiled"
configure: WARNING: immintrin.h: proceeding with the compiler's result
It is called from WGI before the normal joystick detection has been run, so it needs to actually enumerate currently connected devices.
We can skip the logic checking for other drivers also supporting this device, because that logic is duplicated from the call site.
Not only is it more efficient to batch process pending events, it is
necessary for correctness with the Win32 backend. WIN_PumpEvents() runs
periodic updates of the cursor clip region and disambiguation of
left and right shift keys in addition to standard event processing.
SDL_GetBasePath grows its path buffer for long paths, but GetModuleFileNameExW always truncates and succeeds,
so `len` was always equal to (buflen - 1) which is 127. This is easily fixed by checking for (buflen - 1) instead of buflen.
For paths longer than MAX_PATH, this problem sometimes got hidden by Windows path shortening ("C:\PROGRA~1\" etc.).
Tested on Windows 10 x64 19041 and 10586.
SDL_JoystickSetVirtualAxisInner() and SDL_JoystickSetVirtualHatInner()
did not properly sanitize the 'axis' and 'hat' parameters.
Signed-off-by: Paul Cercueil <paul@crapouillou.net>
Based on a patch by Jochen Schäfer <josch1710@live.de> :
The problem is, that in the initialization code uses the same structure for
desktop_mode and current_mode. See SDL_os2video.c:OS2_VideoInit():
stSDLDisplay.desktop_mode = stSDLDisplayMode;
stSDLDisplay.current_mode = stSDLDisplayMode;
...
stSDLDisplayMode.driverdata = pDisplayData;
Then, if you call GetDisplayModes, current_mode will added to the modes
list, with the same driverdata pointer to desktop_mode.
SDL_AddDisplayMode( display, &display->current_mode );
When VideoQuit gets called, first the modes list gets freed including the
driverdata, the desktop_mode gets freed. See SDL_video.c:SDL_VideoQuit():
for (j = display->num_display_modes; j--;) {
SDL_free(display->display_modes[j].driverdata);
display->display_modes[j].driverdata = NULL;
}
SDL_free(display->display_modes);
display->display_modes = NULL;
SDL_free(display->desktop_mode.driverdata);
display->desktop_mode.driverdata = NULL;
So, the display_modes[j].driverdata gets freed, but desktop_mode->driverdata
points to the same memory, but is not NULL'ed. When desktop_mode->driverdata
gets freed the memory is already freed, and libcx crashes the application on
SDL_Quit.
Based on a patch by Jochen Schäfer <josch1710@live.de> :
On a T420 pressing the ACPI button for volume control, big scancodes
were emitted. This was causing an overflow, because missing guards.
- Do not call IDirectInputDevice8_QueryInterface(device, &IID_IDirectInputDevice8,...) on DIRECTINPUTDEVICE8 device
- Get joystick VendorID and ProductID via IDirectInputDevice8_GetProperty(.., DIPROP_VIDPID, ..) call instead of messing with DIDEVICEINSTANCE.guidProduct
- Normalize HID device interface path to upper case for stable operation of XInput check
- Remove useless RawInput calls in SDL_IsXInputDevice() - just check for "IG_" string in HID device interface path that we already have
There shouldn't be any observable behavior changes.
In a more ideal world, we'd use the appropriate `__attribute__` here, but
it's one thing in a public header that probably shouldn't be there at all, so
this is good enough for now.
Fixes#4307.
We can be in a situation where we receive a win32 hook callback on the same
thread that is currently waiting. In that case, we do still need to trigger
a wakeup when an event is pushed because the hook itself won't necessarily
do that (depending on what we return from the hook).
When possible use native os functions to make a blocking call waiting for
an incoming event. Previous behavior was to continuously poll the event
queue with a small delay between each poll.
The blocking call uses a new optional video driver event,
WaitEventTimeout, if available. It is called only if an window
already shown is available. If present the window is designated
using the variable wakeup_window to receive a wakeup event if
needed.
The WaitEventTimeout function accept a timeout parameter. If
positive the call will wait for an event or return if the timeout
expired without any event. If the timeout is zero it will
implement a polling behavior. If the timeout is negative the
function will block indefinetely waiting for an event.
To let the main thread sees events sent form a different thread
a "wake-up" signal is sent to the main thread if the main thread
is in a blocking state. The wake-up event is sent to the designated
wakeup_window if present.
The wake-up event is sent only if the PushEvent call is coming
from a different thread. Before sending the wake-up event
the ID of the thread making the blocking call is saved using the
variable blocking_thread_id and it is compared to the current
thread's id to decide if the wake-up event should be sent.
Two new optional video device methods are introduced:
WaitEventTimeout
SendWakeupEvent
in addition the mutex
wakeup_lock
which is defined and initialized but only for the drivers supporting the
methods above.
If the methods are not present the system behaves as previously
performing a periodic polling of the events queue.
The blocking call is disabled if a joystick or sensor is detected
and falls back to previous behavior.
This add controller mappings for the Atari vcs (modern) controller as
well as the classic controller, for both bluetooth and USB connectivity.
Signed-off-by: Sjoerd Simons <sjoerd@collabora.com>
At least on bluetooth the guid user the version reported by the
bluetooth device. Which for Atari vcs controllers is the firmware
version. However the mapping will stay the same regardless of firmware
version, so ignore the version entirely to avoid needing a new mapping
entry for each firmware version.
Signed-off-by: Sjoerd Simons <sjoerd@collabora.com>
this variable was added in commit 2067a7db8e and
ultimately tracks if this is a surface's first present. checking if the current
bo is NULL provides the same functionality and cuts down on a redundant piece
of state potentially getting out of sync in the future
SetDisplayMode needs to recreate the EGL surfaces, which then need to be
bound along with the correct context in each rendering thread
commit 3a1d7d9c9a removed this behavior which
has broken using SetDisplayMode when rendering with multiple contexts
the commit message was rather vague, but if the surfaces do need to be
created immediately, this process probably needs to be split such that
surface is created immediately, but the binding is deferred
and remove duplicate SDL_WINDOWEVENT_RESIZED event
commit 2067a7db8e made SDL_SetWindowSize and
SDL_SetWindowFullscreen modify the display mode previously set by a call to
SDL_SetWindowDisplayMode
as far as I understand the SDL API, calling SDL_SetWindowDisplayMode followed
by calling SDL_SetWindowFullscreen(..., SDL_WINDOW_FULLSCREEN) is the correct
way to mode set / switch to fullscreen
this change restores that functionaliy when switching to SDL_WINDOW_FULLSCREEN,
but other cases are still modifying the display mode set by the user. rather
than modifying the display mode set by the user, it seems this logic inside of
KMSDRM_ReconfigureWindow should be pushed further down into KMSDRM_CreateSurfaces
(as it was originally) to only modify the final mode that's set (based on the
fullscreen flags), but not override the mode requested by the user
commit 2067a7db8e introduced new surface_w and surface_h
variables which were passed to gbm_surface_create rather than the dimensions from the
drmModeModeInfo structure. commit 5105ecf8b1 further
refactored this code and no longer synchronized these variables inside
KMSDRM_SetDisplayMode, breaking it
this change removes the variables since they're seemingly redundant to begin with
When Xbox One/Series Controllers are connected via USB on Windows they all are using `XBOXGIP` driver and produce a special ProductID `0x02FF` (GIP software PID) for any connected controller.
On the other hand `Xbox 360 Wireless Controller Reciever` (PID 0x0719) is using `XUSB` driver and produces special ProductID `0x02A1` (XUSB software PID) for each connected Xbox 360 Wireless Controller.
Also fixed Xbox One Series X Controller comment.
Only adjust the biClrUsed field if it is set to zero in the bitmap, and make
some effort to make sure we don't overflow a buffer in any case.
This was triggering an issue with the sailboat bmp used for testpalette.c in
SDL 1.2, which is an 8-bit paletted image with 66 palette entries instead of
256. See discussion at https://github.com/libsdl-org/sdl12-compat/issues/63
This change might be a problem, but there's no indication this code, which
originally landed in SDL_image 17 years ago with a large rewrite, is actually
fixing a specific issue. I'm also not sure we should actually make an effort
to accept a bmp that has a biClrUsed field that is both non-zero and _also_
incorrect.
Details:
Currently doing 4 system calls per WM_INPUT message, which can cause the thread handling the message loop to be swapped out several times:
* GetProp - to get window data from the window handle
* GetRawInputData - to retrieve the raw input data
* 2 calls to GetMessageExtraInfo - to ignore synthetic mouse events generated for touchscreens
In this change:
* Replaced GetProp by iterating the list of windows maintained by SDL (with a fallback to GetProp). Note that this will affect all messages and not just WM_INPUT
* only calling GetMessageExtraInfo if a touchscreen has been detected
Fix for https://jira.valve.org/browse/CSGO-4855
@saml
- especially because we can be promoted to true color 888
make sure we don't select a potentially software implementation
- hopefully fix bug #1482 (EGL ChooseConfig selects software renderer on Android)
If you hide a window on Mutter, for example, the compositor never requests
new frames, which will cause Mesa to block forever in eglSwapBuffers to
satisfy the swap interval.
We now always set the swap interval to 0 and manage this ourselves, handing
the frame to Wayland when it requests a new one, and timing out at 10fps just
to keep apps moving if the compositor wants no frames at all.
My understanding is that other protocols are coming that might improve upon
this solution, but for now it solves the total hang.
Fixes#4335.
These would accidentally get a titlebar because the "borderless" style mask
is zero but the resizable attribute adds a bit. I assume this happens because
you used to need window decoration to resize a window in macOS, but this
changed in later releases.
This only caused problems when recreating a window (you had an
SDL_WINDOW_OPENGL window and tried to create a Metal SDL_Renderer on it, etc).
Fixes#4324.
It doesn't appear to work anymore, and was disabled by default anyhow, since
the needed APIs are forbidden on the Mac App Store.
A better solution to lock the mouse to the window on macOS would still be
welcome. CGAssociateMouseAndMouseCursorPosition() works fine for relative
mouse mode, this was just a question of SDL_SetWindowGrab(). As it stands
now, a grabbed mouse can briefly break out of the window, causing varying
degrees of chaos.
This can give some performance boost, and save some resources, as there's no
reason to keep a copy of an SDL window's contents on the server: most SDL
apps are redrawing completely every frame, and the API allows for expose
events to tell an app a redraw is needed anyhow.
(And compositors are free to ignore this setting if it makes sense to do so,
according to the Xlib docs.)
Reference Issue #3776.
If a developer uses SDL_SetMemoryFunctions, we can't rely on SDL_free()
working when SDL_main() returns.
Signed-off-by: Steven Noonan <steven@valvesoftware.com>
Signed-off-by: Sam Lantinga <slouken@libsdl.org>
The get_usb_string call is rather expensive on some USB devices, so we
cache the vendor/product strings for future lookups (e.g. when
hid_enumerate is invoked again later).
This way, we only need to ask libusb for strings for devices we haven't
seen since before we started.
Signed-off-by: Steven Noonan <steven@valvesoftware.com>
Signed-off-by: Sam Lantinga <slouken@libsdl.org>
I have a buggy system which reports a udev "change" event for an empty
USB-C port every 0.14 seconds, which causes annoying frame hitches
because SDL decides that means it needs to do a libusb hid_enumerate,
which is slow (~25ms!) because of the get_usb_string() calls in there.
We only need to re-enumerate if we've seen a device added or removed, so
let's filter out the change event first.
Signed-off-by: Steven Noonan <steven@valvesoftware.com>
Signed-off-by: Sam Lantinga <slouken@libsdl.org>
It's already set with ANativeWindow_setGeometry, and eventually set/changed also by eglCreateWindowSurface.
- avoid issues with older device where SurfaceView cycle create/changed/destroy appears broken:
calling create/changed/changed, and leading to "deuqueBuffer failed at server side, error: -19", with black screen.
- re-read the format after egl window surface is created, to report the correct one (sometimes, changed from RGBA8888 to RGB24)
Previous version used 'popen' which required to sanitize user provided text. Not
sanitizing text could cause failure if user provided text included a " or command
injection with `cmd`.
There is an error "E libEGL : validate_display:91 error 3008 (EGL_BAD_DISPLAY)"
that occurs when calling "eglQueryString(display, EGL_VERSION)", with EGL_NO_DISPLAY.
Khronos says "EGL_BAD_DISPLAY is generated if display is not an EGL display connection, unless display is EGL_NO_DISPLAY and name is EGL_EXTENSIONS."
but this was added in SDL with "EGL 1.5 allows querying for client version"
( 56363ebf61 )
In fact:
- it actually doesn't work on Android that has 1.5 egl client
- it works on desktop X11 (using SDL_VIDEO_X11_FORCE_EGL=1)
The commit moves the version call where it's used, eg inside the "if (platform) {"
and checks that "eglGetPlatformDisplay" has been correctly loaded.
This unearthed an unspeakably large amount of bugs in the wl_output enumerator,
notably the fact that the wl_output user pointer was to temporary memory!
This was "fixed" in e862856, and was then pointed out as a leak in 4183211,
which was undone in d9ba204. The busted fix was correct that the malloc was an
issue, but wrong about _why_; SDL_AddVideoDisplay copies by value and does not
reuse the pointer, so generally you want your VideoDisplay to be on the stack,
but of course the callbacks don't allow that, so a malloc was a workaround. But
we can do better and just host our temporary display inside WaylandOutputData
because that will be persistent while also not leaking.
Wait, wasn't I talking about move events? Right, that: wl_surface_listener does
at least give us the ability to know what monitor we're on, even though we have
no idea where we are on the monitor. All we need to do is check the wl_output
against the display list and then push a move event that both indicates the
correct display while also not being _too_ much of a lie (but enough of a lie
to where our event doesn't get discarded as "undefined" or whatever). The index
check for the video display is what spawned the great nightmare you see before
you; aside from the bugfix this is actually a really basic patch.
The information whether a specific joystick can be used as a gamepad is
not going to change every frame, so we can cache the result into a
variable.
This dramatically reduces the performance impact of SDL2 on small
embedded devices, since the code path that is now avoided was quite
heavy.
Fixes#4229.
Signed-off-by: Paul Cercueil <paul@crapouillou.net>
- Only focus a new window when one closes if the window that was closed was an SDL window
- If the application already has a key window set that is not an SDL window, don't replace it when the application is activated
- Only register the URL event handler when SDLAppDelegate is going to be set as the applications app delegate. This is to
be consistent with previous behavior that would only register the handler in -[SDLAppDelegate applicationDidFinishLaunching:]
and allows the running app to opt out of the behavior by setting its own app delegate.
- The URL event handler is now removed if it was set on SDLAppDelegate dealloc
There is no guarantee on what order the Wayland interfaces will come in, but the
callbacks were assuming that wl_data_device_manager would could before wl_seat.
This would cause certain desktops to not have any data_device to work with,
meaning certain features like the clipboard would silently no-op.
On windows, when toggling the state of RelativeMode rapidly, there is a
high chance that SDL_WINDOWEVENT_ENTER / SDL_WINDOWEVENT_LEAVE events
will stop firing indefinitely.
This aims to resolve that shortcoming by ensuring mouse focus state is
correctly updated via WM_MOUSELEAVE events arriving via the windows
event hook.
KWin has supported the shared and formalised zxdg_decoration since
Plasma 5.16 which came out mid 2019.
Whilst it made sense to support them both for a while, it should not be
needed for future SDL releases.
Because Wayland only supports FULLSCREEN_DESKTOP, fullscreen_mode never gets
assigned at all, meaning driverdata is always NULL! Depending on what the
compositor does this can lead to dramatically different results. GNOME was fine
without this, but Plasma would trip an event that unintentionally unset the
fullscreen mode and caused the game to fire a configure event _every frame_,
and of course the configure would send the fullscreen_mode output which was
still empty. The fix is to just use the SDL_VideoDisplay directly, which will
always have a valid wl_output.
This will enable more flexibility in configuration
I am using this for snapshot built with GLES1 enabled
Relate-to: https://github.com/adoptware/pinball/issues/22
Signed-off-by: Philippe Coval <rzr@users.sf.net>
Change-Id: I4387663605475ddd669694a7828f101881e424b8
Rename locally-defined Interface ID symbols to avoid conflict with
locally linked dxgi library. Prefixed with `SDL_` to match with
other references in render_d3d11 or wasapi.
If app requested <= 16 color depth and there is a 24-bit config available,
favor that. This fixes things that quietly expect to get truecolor output
but don't request it (...like SDL's render api...) and things that are
probably requesting 16-bit color as a fallback but expecting reasonable
systems to give them full depth.
Specifically, this fixes Life is Strange on Wayland, which uses the latter
approach, and anything using SDL_Render on Wayland, which uses the former.
Fixes#4056.
Fixes#4132.
- Move an immutable condition out of a for loop.
- Add a break statement to that loop when we find what we're looking for.
- Add an assert to make sure we don't overflow a buffer.
- Wrap a single-statement if block in braces.
- Adjust some whitespace.
Note that this is purely to make it possible to enter text that requires
composition - for example, before this commit Kanji input didn't work at all.
The big problem this still has is that we need the window position, and this is
still not implemented. Once we have this information we can do the equivalent
of XTranslateCoordinates to put the rectangle where we want it.
While we should normally expect _something_ from the stream based on the
AudioStreamAvailable check, it's possible for a device change to flush the
stream at an inconvenient time, causing this function to return 0.
Thing is, this is harmless. Either data will be NULL and the result won't matter
anyway, or the data buffer will be zeroed out and the output will just be
silence for the brief moment that the device change is occurring. Both scenarios
work themselves out, and testing on Windows shows that this behavior is safe.
commit 6b8f933589aa3925978a23e77a305a7e89c6ae4a
Author: Xing Ji <jixingcn@gmail.com>
Date: Wed Mar 24 22:31:29 2021 +0800
update the dynapi by `gendynapi.pl`
commit ebd1790c19983b652713f40ab1e139e485e1a2b7
Author: Xing Ji <jixingcn@gmail.com>
Date: Wed Mar 24 22:17:48 2021 +0800
revert the change in src/dynapi
commit 734b5f85c1613070081e39238e84198128971b53
Merge: 5a56e5a8 5ac6bd54
Author: Xing Ji <jixingcn@gmail.com>
Date: Wed Mar 24 22:14:40 2021 +0800
Merge remote-tracking branch 'libsdl/main' into jixingcn
commit 5a56e5a8227d9cff6b497b681c618a76bec1cae1
Author: Xing Ji <jixingcn@gmail.com>
Date: Mon Mar 22 23:55:10 2021 +0800
Fix#3596, can call the `SDL_TLSCleanup` to cleanup the TLS data when closing the application
On Wayland -- or at least on some Wayland implementations -- windows
aren't shown until something has been rendered into them. For the
'testmessage' test program, this means that the final messagebox (a
modal one) is blocking an "invisible window", which can then be
difficult to close.
By creating a renderer and presenting once, the window is properly
displayed, and the test behaves as it does under X11 (including
XWayland).
Some of the SDL_AudioDevice struct members aren't initialized until after returning from the OpenDevice function. Since Pipewire uses it's own processing threads, the callbacks can be entered before all members of SDL_AudioDevice are initialized, such as work_buffer, callbackspec and the processing stream, which creates a race condition. Don't use these members when in the paused state to avoid potentially using uninitialized values and memory.
There seems to be a bug where it can wrap the text based on the minimum possible
window size, which can be worked around with --no-wrap. This technically uncaps
the width entirely, but this isn't wildly different from what other backends do.
Drop include of SDL_platform.h as SDL_plaform.h is already included by
SDL_internal.h -> SDL_config.h -> SDL_platform.h
Signed-off-by: Fabrice Fontaine <fontaine.fabrice@gmail.com>
This prevents the dsp target from stealing the audio subsystem but not
being able to produce sound, so other audio targets further down the list
can make an attempt instead.
Thanks to Frank Praznik who did a lot of the research on this problem!
This is a work-in-progress, but the idea is it can convert between our
wiki and the SDL header's doxygen comments, so we can attempt to keep them
in sync.
This might be a fool's errand, but I'm optimistic it'll work enough that we
can clean up little issues as we go, as long as we have some discipline
about how we write documentation. If nothing else, it's going to result in
a solid spring-cleaning of both the wiki and the headers!
The llvm-mingw project includes cross-compilers targeting ARM: https://github.com/mstorsjo/llvm-mingw/releases
Currently, compilation fails with this configuration, because neon features are used as long as __ARM_NEON is defined, but arm_neon.h was not included.
A user reported that the mpv video player hangs after attempting to
set an unsupported number of channels with the SDL audio output,
because it thinks it's successfully opened the device. This makes
the failure graceful.
Removes the node nickname from sink/source nodes as it doesn't provide any useful information and names now match those used in Pulseaudio, so any stored configuration data will be compatible between the two audio backends.
There was an (innocently intended, I assume!) "make X great again" joke in a previous commit message, and I'd like this not to be the first thing people see on our GitHub project page, so I added some whitespace to the end of this file.
Apologies to any that were bothered by that, it was an accident!
This should not change anything at all within the compiled library, but it does make the header file easier to read for non-C programmers who don't expect an octal value.
The current CI doesn't work and can be fixed. To steps, use a matrix to build on various OS + allow platform specific flags.
The linux build should cover a wider case of video backends.
The clang-cl compiler defines `__llvm__` but not `__GNUC__`. The `__cpuid` intrinsic doesn't seem to exist with clang-cl, so the code won't link properly. The `__GNUC__` versions of these functions will work properly on Windows with clang-cl.
Constify the min/max period variables, use a #define for the base clock rate used in the calculations and note that changing the upper limit can have dire side effects as it's a hard limit in Pipewire.
Replace "magic numbers" with #defines, explain the requirements when using the userdata pointer in the node_object struct and a few other minor code and comment cleanups.
Use the 'R' (rear) prefixed designations for the rear audio channels instead of 'S' (surround). Surround designated channels are only used in the 8 channel configuration.
Further refactor the device enumeration code to retrieve the default sink/source node IDs from the metadata node. Use the retrieved IDs to sort the device list so that the default devices are at the beginning and thus are the first reported to SDL.
The latency of source nodes can change depending on the overall latency of the processing graph. Incoming audio must therefore always be buffered to ensure uninterrupted delivery.
The SDL_AudioStream path was removed in the input callback as the only thing it was used for was buffering audio outside of Pipewire's min/max period sizes, and that case is now handled by the omnipresent buffer.
Extend device enumeration to retrieve the channel count and default sample rate for sink and source nodes. This required a fairly significant rework of the enumeration procedure as multiple callbacks are involved now. Sink/source nodes are tracked in a separate list during the enumeration process so they can be cleaned up if a device is removed before completion. These changes also simplify any future efforts that may be needed to retrieve additional configuration information from the nodes.
In some cases, it can be useful to have the KMSDRM backend even if it cannot
be used for rendering. An app may want to use SDL for input processing while
using another rendering API (such as an MMAL overlay on Raspberry Pi) or
using its own code to render to DRM overlays that SDL doesn't support.
This also moves the check for DRM master to an earlier point where we can fail
initialization of the backend, rather than allowing the backend to initialize
then failing the creation of a window later.
Unlike Mutter and Sway, KWin actually checks the serial passed in
wl_pointer_set_cursor(). The serial provided is supposed to be the
serial of the pointer enter event, but We were always passing 0.
This caused KWin to drop our requests to hide the cursor.
Thanks to the KDE folks for spotting this in my debug logs.
Fixes#3576
In the extremely unlikely event that inotify is not available (and,
therefore, HAVE_INOTIFY is not #defined), SDL will no-longer build.
This is because <unistd.h> is only included when HAVE_INOTIFY is
defined, and PR #4098 adds a call to access(…, F_OK), which requires
<unistd.h>.
(Note that the F_OK symbol is the only one which actually prevented
SDL from compiling, but both access() and close() fell back to implicit
definitions, which is a bit concerning.)
Fixes: 8d43f45a7b ("Don't use udev for joystick enumeration if running in a container")
This improves SDL's ability to detect HIDAPI joystick hotplug in a
container environment because we cannot reliably receive events from
udev in a container.
For a more detailed explanation of why this issue happens with
containers, please check the previous commit
"joystick: Use inotify to detect joystick unplug if not using udev"
(b0eba1c5).
Signed-off-by: Ludovico de Nittis <ludovico.denittis@collabora.com>
As already explained in the previous commit "joystick: Allow libudev to
be disabled at runtime" (13e7d1a9), libudev can fail in a container.
To make it easier to experiment with, we add a new environment variable
"SDL_HIDAPI_JOYSTICK_DISABLE_UDEV" that disables udev and let it
fallback to the device enumeration using polling.
Signed-off-by: Ludovico de Nittis <ludovico.denittis@collabora.com>
This fixes problems with controllers not being re-detected when a computer goes to sleep and a controller is removed and plugged back in while it's asleep.
Renamed COPYING.txt to LICENSE.txt, and ensured the copyright year
is the first line in the license file. This causes GitHub to correctly
identify the zlib license and report it on SDL's project page.
Fixes SDL_CreateWindowAndRenderer (and similar situations) not choosing a Metal backend. See #3991.
Passing an explicit backend into CreateWindow, eg SDL_WINDOW_OPENGL or SDL_WINDOW_METAL, will still prevent the window from being used with other backend types.
SDL_isxdigit() should only accept A-Fa-f, not A-Za-z (it shouldn't use
SDL_isalpha()).
SDL_ispunct() shouldn't accept spaces (it should use SDL_isgraph()
instead).
This provides a linking interface that matches the one available when `find_package()` is used, by aliasing all of SDL's public targets into the SDL2:: namespace. Thus, dependees link to the same-named targets regardless of how SDL was acquired.
This approach permits the use of wrappers around CMake's FetchContent API such as https://github.com/cpm-cmake/CPM.cmake
SDL has been missing a bunch of these 'isX' functions for some time,
where X is some characteristic of a given character.
This commit adds the rest of them to the SDL stdlib, so now we have:
- SDL_isalpha()
- SDL_isalnum()
- SDL_isblank()
- SDL_iscntrl()
- SDL_isxdigit()
- SDL_ispunct()
- SDL_isprint()
- SDL_isgraph()
This uses the mechanism added in emscripten-core/emscripten#10843
which was applied to SDL1 and OpenAL. This adds the same for SDL2.
This also reverts commit 865eaddffed50dbd13e6564c3f73902472cf74e8
which did something similar, but the new mechanism is more effective.
The DJGPP compiler emits many warnings for conflicts between print
format specifiers and argument types. To fix the warnings, I added
`SDL_PRIx32` macros for use with `Sint32` and `Uint32` types. The macros
alias those found in <inttypes.h> or fallback to a reasonable default.
As an alternative, print arguments could be cast to plain old integers.
I opted slightly for the current solution as it felt more technically correct,
despite making the format strings more verbose.
vladius
In SDL_cpuinfo.h it seems like <intrin.h> is not included when __clang__ is defined, as the comment in the file explicitly reads:
"Many of the intrinsics SDL uses are not implemented by clang with Visual Studio"
However, the SDL_endian.h header does include <intrin.h> without any precautions like:
>#ifdef _MSC_VER
>#include <intrin.h>
>#endif
Maybe it should be changed to something like:
>#ifdef _MSC_VER
>#ifndef __clang__
>#include <intrin.h>
>#endif
>#endif
wahil1976
This patch fixes the warnings seen when compiling the Wayland backend. This will also be required in the future to avoid issues with compilation.
When SleepConditionVariableSRW() releases the SRW lock internally, it causes
our SDL_mutex_srw state to become inconsistent. The lock is unowned yet inside,
the owner is still the sleeping thread and more importantly the owner count is
still 1.
The next time someone acquires the lock, they will bump the owner count from 1
to 2. At that point, the lock is hosed. From the internal lock state, it looks
to us like that owner has acquired the lock recursively, even though they have
not. When they call SDL_UnlockMutex(), it will see the owner count > 0 and not
call ReleaseSRWLockExclusive().
Now when someone calls SDL_CondSignal(), SleepConditionVariableSRW() will start
the wakeup process by attempting to re-acquire the SRW lock. This will deadlock
because the lock was never released after the other thread had used it. The
thread waiting on the condition variable will never be able to wake up, even if
the SDL_CondWaitTimeout() function is used and the timeout expires.
There were two different implementations of IsBluetoothXboxOneController(), one
in SDL_hidapi_xbox360.c and one in SDL_hidapi_xboxone.c. The latter had been
updated to include USB_PRODUCT_XBOX_ONE_SERIES_X_BLUETOOTH while the former had
not.
This mismatch led to the Xbox Series X failing on macOS only. We have special
code for handling the 360Controller driver for macOS which requires us to use
the Xbox 360 driver for wired Xbox One controllers, and the SDL_hidapi_xbox360
version of IsBluetoothXboxOneController() was used to determine which devices
were wired.
In addition to adding the missing USB_PRODUCT_XBOX_ONE_SERIES_X_BLUETOOTH, this
change moves IsBluetoothXboxOneController() into a single shared function which
will ensure this bug won't happen again.
This is caused by the Metal renderer recreating the window because by default we create an OpenGL window on macOS.
It turns out that at least on macOS 10.15, a window that has been initialized for OpenGL can also be used with Metal. So we'll skip recreating the window in that case.
Hiroyuki Iwatsuki
If you pass the C string directly to NSLog(), it will be garbled with Japanese and probably other language strings, or no log will be output at all.
NSLog("Hello, World!"); // => "Hello, World!"
NSLog("こんにちは、世界!"); // => No output...
Therefore, you need to convert the string to an NSString before passing it to NSLog().
NSString *str = [NSString stringWithUTF8String:"こんにちは、世界!"];
NSLog(@"%@", str); // => "こんにちは、世界!"
Thank you.
By default, we will minimize the window when we receive Alt+Tab with a
full-screen keyboard grabbed window to allow the user to escape the
full-screen application.
Some applications like remote desktop clients may want to handle Alt+Tab
themselves, so provide an opt-out via SDL_HINT_ALLOW_ALT_TAB_WHILE_GRABBED=0.
For keys that are already down when we install the keyboard hook, we need to
allow the WM_KEYUP/WM_SYSKEYUP message to be processed normally. This ensures
that other applications see the key up, which prevents the key from being stuck
down from the perspective of other apps when our grab is released.
GNOME Mutter requires keyboard grab for certain important functionality like
window resizing, interaction with the application context menu, and opening the
Activites view. To allow Mutter to grab the keyboard as needed, we'll ungrab
when the mouse leaves our window.
To be safe, we'll do this for all WMs since forks of Mutter and Matacity (and
possibly others) may have the same behavior, and we don't want to have to keep
track of those.
Sylvain
I propose this new version for SDL_stretch.c that drops mprotect and asm
Code is similar to the StretchLinear, but the steps computation are kept similar to the nearest.
so that:
- it's pixel perfect with nearest
- as fast as asm I think
- no asm, nor mprotect
- benefit for all archicture
Ozkan Sezer
- adds MSVC __declspec(align(x)) support,
- disables asm if PAGE_ALIGNED no macro is defined,
- still disables asm for gcc < 4.6, need more info,
- drops Watcom support.
This adds SDL_SetWindowKeyboardGrab(), SDL_GetWindowKeyboardGrab(),
SDL_SetWindowMouseGrab(), SDL_GetWindowMouseGrab(), and new
SDL_WINDOW_KEYBOARD_GRABBED flag. It also updates the test harness to exercise
this functionality and makes a minor fix to X11 that I missed in
https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/02a2d609369b
To fit in with this new support, SDL_WINDOW_INPUT_CAPTURE has been renamed to
SDL_WINDOW_MOUSE_CAPTURE with the old name remaining as an alias for backwards
compatibility with older code.
The grabbed_window field is superfluous now since SDL added the
SDL_GetGrabbedWindow() function, so it can be removed.
DirectFB_SetWindowMouseGrab() is also simplified because SDL handles ungrabbing
any previously grabbed window prior to calling SetWindowMouseGrab() now.
Compile-tested only.
UMU
#define SDL_COMPOSE_ERROR(str) SDL_STRINGIFY_ARG(__FUNCTION__) ", " str
I think SDL_STRINGIFY_ARG should be removed.
#define SDL_COMPOSE_ERROR(str) __FUNCTION__ ", " str
(verified with Visual Studio 2019)
Aaron Barany
The CMake build for SDL doesn't set SDLMAIN_SOURCES on iOS to the sources in src/main/ios. As a result, SDL fails to initialize since it falls back to the dummy main. Adding the line file(GLOB SDLMAIN_SOURCES ${SDL2_SOURCE_DIR}/src/main/uikit/*.c) fixes the issue.
jibb
New hint to let the user opt out of having Switch controllers' Home button lit when opened.
This is more consistent with the Switch itself (which doesn't light the button normally) and may be preferred by users who may disconnect their controller without letting the application close it.
I think this warrants a Switch-specific hint because the default behaviour is unusual (inconsistent with using a Switch controller on a Switch itself or with some other programs on PC), and because of that it's distinct from other lights (the player number on Switch controllers and the player colour on PlayStation controllers).
SDL_SetKeyboardFocus(NULL) will lift any keys still pressed when keyboard focus
leaves the window, but then key repeat comes behind our backs and presses the
key down again. This results in an infinite stream of SDL_KEYDOWN events when
focus leaves the window with a key down (particularly noticeable with Alt+Tab).
This gives us flexibility to add others hints to control keyboard grab behavior
without having to touch all of the backends. It also allows us to possibly
expose keyboard grab separately from mouse grab for applications that want to
manage those independently.
These are explicitly written in C code rather than generated at build
time, so they weren't affected by changing how we invoke
wayland-scanner.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
We support both the org.freedesktop.ScreenSaver D-Bus API (same as the X11
backend) and the Wayland idle_inhibit_unstable_v1 protocol.
Some Wayland compositors only support one or the other, so we need both to
for broad compatibility.
Wayland compositors seem to have standardized on 10 units per "wheel tick" for
continuous scroll events, so we need to convert these axis values to ticks by
dividing by 10 before reporting them in SDL_MOUSEWHEEL events.
This is implemented via a low-level keyboard hook. Unfortunately, this is
rather invasive, but it's how Microsoft recommends that it be done [0].
We want to do as little as possible in the hook, so we only intercept a few
crucial modifier keys there, while leaving other keys to the normal event
processing flow.
We will only install this hook if SDL_HINT_GRAB_KEYBOARD=1, which is not
the default. This will reduce any compatibility concerns to just the SDL
applications that explicitly ask for this behavior.
We also remove the hook when the grab is terminated to ensure that we're
not unnecessarily staying involved in key event processing when it's not
required anymore.
[0]: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/dxtecharts/disabling-shortcut-keys-in-games
Hiding the cursor doesn't appear to work reliably on GNOME when another window
steals mouse focus right as we call SDL_ShowCursor(SDL_DISABLE). This can happen
when the keyboard shortcut inhibition permission prompt appears in response to a
call to SDL_SetRelativeMouseMode() with SDL_HINT_GRAB_KEYBOARD=1. The result is
that the default cursor is stuck locked in position and visible on screen
indefinitely.
By redrawing the cursor on pointer focus enter, the cursor now disappears upon
the first mouse motion event. It's not perfect but it's way better than the
current behavior.
Use zwp_keyboard_shortcuts_inhibit_manager_v1 to allow SDL applications
to capture system keyboard shortcuts like Alt+Tab when keyboard grab is
enabled via SDL_HINT_GRAB_KEYBOARD.
Existing SDL applications may not know about the need to set a specific
hint to enable rumble on PS5 controllers, even though they may already
set the equivalent SDL_HINT_JOYSTICK_HIDAPI_PS4_RUMBLE hint for PS4
controller rumble support.
Rather than requiring those developers update their apps, let's use the
SDL_HINT_JOYSTICK_HIDAPI_PS4_RUMBLE value as an indication of the behavior
they are expected for all PlayStation controllers.
From hidapi mainstream git: https://github.com/libusb/hidapi/issues/142d2c3a9862e
Read callback may fire itself on its own even after its been requested
to stop and exactly before the calling code waits for its completion in
indefinite loop. Explicitly preventing re-fireing the submission loop
fixes the issue.
jibb
I'm testing with DualShock 4, DualSense, Switch Pro Controller, and PowerA Switch Controller.
I'm using the standard mapping file from here:
https://raw.github.com/gabomdq/SDL_GameControllerDB/master/gamecontrollerdb.txt
With SDL_HINT_GAMECONTROLLER_USE_BUTTON_LABELS turned off (set to "0") I expect the button positions to be the same on all devices, based on Xbox controller button naming (eg SDL_GameControllerGetButton(g, SDL_CONTROLLER_BUTTON_Y) gives me whether the North face button is pressed).
However, the Switch Pro Controller layout is wrong (matching labels rather than positions, so X and Y are swapped and A and B are swapped). And with the PowerA controller the East and West buttons are correct, but the North and South buttons are swapped instead.
Mathias Kaerlev
Also seeing this on 2.0.14. This is most likely a regression, since we weren't seeing this on an earlier SDL version.
I suspect it might be caused by this commit:
a569b21188 (diff-da9344d94c66b8c702a45e7649f412039f08bba83bd82de33f5c80ea9c8c39d5)
It seems like both the HIDAPI driver and SDL_gamecontroller.c will try to swap the buttons if the hint is set to 0, causing the button remap to cancel out.
RustyM
This is related to Bug 5034, but crashes under a somewhat different condition.
In the latest tip (changeset 13914) or with the SDL 2.0.12 source + David?s 5034 patch, unplugging and then replugging in certain controller types on macOS will crash. A mix of new controllers like Switch Pro, PS4 and Xbox One all work without issue. But if a controller without a rumble function, like many SNES retro USB gamepads, is mixed with a PS4 or Switch Pro controller it will crash.
File: joystick/darwin/SDL_sysjoystick.c
Function: static recDevice *FreeDevice(recDevice *removeDevice)
On line 159: while (device->pNext != removeDevice) {
Causes: Thread 1: EXC_BAD_ACCESS (code=1, address=0x188)
This can be reproduced in testgamecontroller" by starting the test program with both a ?retro? controller plugged in and a ?modern rumble? controller (Switch Pro/PS4). This may crash on launch, but it depends on which controller ends up as device 0. If it doesn?t crash, unplug the ?modern rumble? controller and plug it back in.
Some of the "retro" controllers I?ve seen this crash with:
- iBuffalo SNES Controller
- 8Bitdo SN30 Gamepad (in MacOS mode)
- Retrolink NES Controller
- HuiJia SNES Controller Adaptor
The issue appears macOS specific. Seen on 10.12.6 and 10.14.6. Not seen on Windows 10.
The while loop in FreeDevice() assumes that every device is not NULL.
recDevice *device = gpDeviceList;
while (device->pNext != removeDevice) {
device = device->pNext;
}
device->pNext = pDeviceNext;
So maybe we should check for NULL here? Or instead prevent adding NULL devices to the list in the first place? Checking device for NULL before entering the loop appears to work.
recDevice *device = gpDeviceList;
if (!device) {
while (device->pNext != removeDevice) {
device = device->pNext;
}
}
device->pNext = pDeviceNext;
sashikknox
In some cases, need create EGLWindow with SDLWindow. In X11 i can get pointer to NativeWindow from **struct SDL_SysWMinfo wmInfo**
```C++
struct SDL_SysWMinfo wmInfo;
SDL_GetWindowWMInfo(ptSDLWindow, &wmInfo)
#if defined(__unix__) && defined(SDL_VIDEO_DRIVER_X11)
nativeWindow=(EGLNativeWindowType)wmInfo.info.x11.window;
nativeDisplay=(EGLNativeDisplayType)wmInfo.info.x11.display;
#endif
```
than i can create EGLSurface
```
eglCreateWindowSurface(nativeDisplay, EGL_CONFIG, nativeWindow, SURFACE_ATTRIBUTES);
```
in Wayland i can do it with same way, just need pointer to **EGLWindow**, we already have pointer to **wl_display** from **SDL_sysWMInfo**, need add to **wl** struct in SDL_SysWMInfo another pointer to **struct wl_egl_window *egl_window;**. And in wayland backend, in function **Wayland_GetWindowWMInfo** return pointer to **egl_window** from **SDL_WindowData**
Now i use patched statically built SDL2 in port of Quake 2 GLES2 for SailfishOS (it use QtWayland):
link to SDL2 commit and changed string for patch:
- 6858a618cd
- b1e29e87b9/SDL2/src/video/wayland/SDL_waylandwindow.c (L463)
link to use in Quake2 port:
1. here i get pointer to EGLNativeWindowType: 6d94fedb1b/Engine/Sources/Compatibility/OpenGLES/EGLWrapper.c (L319)
2. then use it for create EGLSurface: 6d94fedb1b/Engine/Sources/Compatibility/OpenGLES/EGLWrapper.c (L391)
wahil1976
This patch adds a written-from-scratch WSCONS driver for OpenBSD. It does not have hardcoded keymaps, and it features mouse support when wsmux is available.
For this to work, it needs access to the /dev/wskbd* devices which are not available to non-root users by default. Access to those can be granted by changing /etc/fbtab to give the logging user the ownership of those devices.
Note that axes are changed to match the axes we're using with PlayStation controllers, since users will appreciate consistent behaviour across devices.
Nia Alarie
The NetBSD kernel's audio resampling code is much simpler and lower quality than libsamplerate.
Presumably, if SDL always performs I/O on the audio device in its native frequency, we can avoid resampling audio in the kernel and let SDL do it with libsamplerate instead.
__builtin_bswap32/64 were introduced in GCC 4.3. __builtin_bswap16 was
not available on x86 until GCC 4.8 due to a bug.
__builtin_bswap32/64 were introduced in Clang 2.6. __builtin_bswap16
was introduced in Clang 3.2.
Dominik Reichardt
Exult (http://exult.info) has an editor app that uses GTK+2. Up to now we were using X's drag'n'drop to allow dropping of assets from the editor onto Exult.
There is now an experimental branch that makes use of SDL_DROPFILE. That works under X, dropping in Exult's SDL2 window puts the asset right at the spot you dropped at.
On macOS with native Exult and Quartz GTK+2 this doesn't work, the location of the drop is where the mouse was last tracked before you left the window (usually one of the edges, unless you tabbed out).
All we tried out pointed to the fact that the location update needs to be done by the dropfile event in SDL2, not by our own (which always only worked after the Exult window getting focus).
This patch adds this to SDL_cocoawindow.m and it works perfectly, passing the correct coordinates to our code (SDL_GetMouseState()).
- explicitly use UNICODE versions of DrawText, EnumDisplaySettings,
EnumDisplayDevices, and CreateDC: the underlying structures have
WCHAR strings.
- change WIN_UpdateDisplayMode and WIN_GetDisplayMode() to accept
LPCWSTR instead of LPCTSTR for the same reason.
- change WIN_StringToUTF8 and WIN_UTF8ToString to the explicit 'W'
versions where appropriate.
i.e. where the string is known guaranteed to be WCHAR*, in:
- SDL_dinputjoystick.c (WIN_IsXInputDevice): VARIANT->var is BSTR (WCHAR*)
- SDL_rawinputjoystick.c (RAWINPUT_AddDevice): string is WCHAR*
- SDL_windows_gaming_input.c (IEventHandler_CRawGameControllerVtbl_InvokeAdded):
string is WCHAR*
There should be more of these..
_InterlockedExchange_rel() is required for correctness on ARM because
the _ReadWriteBarrier() macro is only a compiler memory barrier, not a
hardware memory barrier. Due to ARM's relaxed memory model, this means
the '*lock = 0' write may be observed before the operations inside the
lock, causing possible corruption of data protected by the lock.
_InterlockedExchange_acq() is more efficient on ARM because it avoids an
expensive full memory barrier that _InterlockedExchange() does.
C.W. Betts
I tested building commit http://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/7adf3fdc19f3 on Mac Catalyst and found some issues:
* MTLFeatureSet_iOS_* enums aren't available under Mac Catalyst.
* OpenGL ES is unavailable under Mac Catalyst.
* Some Metal features are available under Catalyst but not iOS, such as displaySyncEnabled.
* Set Metal as the default renderer on Mac Catalyst
Attaching a patch that will make SDL2 build for Mac Catalyst.
This is unsafe because the event is auto-reset, therefore the call to
WaitForSingleObject() resets the event which GetOverlappedResult() will
try to wait on.
Even though the overlapped operation is guaranteed to be completed at
the point we call GetOverlappedResult(), it will still wait on the event
handle for a short time to trigger the reset for auto-reset events. This
amounts to roughly a 100 ms sleep each time GetOverlappedResult() is called
for a completed I/O with a non-signalled event.
In the context of HIDAPI, this extra sleep means that callers that loop
on hid_read_timeout() with timeout=0 will loop forever, since the 100 ms
sleep each iteration ensures ReadFile() will always have new data.
Caleb Cornett
For a window created with SDL_WINDOW_ALLOW_HIGHDPI, SDL_GL_GetDrawableSize will return the high-dpi drawable size even before any GL context creation happens. But SDL_Metal_GetDrawableSize will return the size of the window if the Metal view has not been created. This is confusing and inconsistent behavior.
An easy way to test this is to build testgl2 and testvulkan on macOS with the SDL_WINDOW_ALLOW_HIGHDPI flag enabled during window creation. The GL2 program will report a drawable size of 2x window width and 2x window height, while the Vulkan program will report the window size.
This patch addresses the issue by falling back to using the content view dimensions if no Metal view exists in the window. (The code for this was taken directly from Cocoa_GL_GetDrawableSize.) With this change, the testvulkan behavior matches that of testgl2.
Note that I haven't tested for this issue on UIKit. It's possible a similar change will need to be made there too.
David Carlier
This form of 'or' provides a hint that performance
will probably be improved if shared resources dedicated
to the executing processor are released for use by other
processors
- hidapi already called CancelIo on hid_close but that only cancels pending IO for the current thread. Controller read/writes originate from multiple
threads (serialized, but on a different thread nonetheless) but device destruction was always done on the main device thread which left any
pending overlapped reads still running after hidapi's internal read buffer is deallocated leading to intermittent free list corruption.
.. by adding DBUS_CFLAGS and IBUS_CFLAGS to CPPFLAGS:
configure: WARNING: dbus/dbus.h: accepted by the compiler, rejected by the preprocessor!
configure: WARNING: dbus/dbus.h: proceeding with the compiler's result
configure: WARNING: ibus-1.0/ibus.h: accepted by the compiler, rejected by the preprocessor!
configure: WARNING: ibus-1.0/ibus.h: proceeding with the compiler's result
Ivan Kuzmenko
MCST Elbrus 2000 (E2K, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elbrus_2000) is a russian processor architecture based on VLIW/EPIC instruction set (like Intel Itanium (IA-64) architecture). Architecture has half native / half software support of most Intel/AMD SIMD (e.g. MMX/SSE/SSE2/SSE3/SSSE3/SSE4.1/SSE4.2/AES/AVX/AVX2 & 3DNow!/SSE4a/XOP/FMA4).
It also has built-in x86/x86_64 <-> e2k binary translators (RTC, http://www.mcst.ru/rtc and Lintel, http://www.mcst.ru/lintel) that can run code for x86/x86_64 architecture (Transmeta did something similiar with their Crusoe series) with SIMD extensions support.
Attached patch allows SDL2 to detect extensions supported by E2K like MMX, 3dNOW!, AVX etc. (test/testplatform log: https://termbin.com/7qs3).
wahil1976
This patch adds support for OpenBSD to KMSDRM_LEGACY. Note that the patch won't be ported to the atomic KMSDRM backend because OpenBSD does not support atomic KMS properly yet.
Is automatically used when the SRW SDL_mutex implementation is active.
Otherwise falls back to the generic implementation.
v2: - Rebase onto master fa3ea1051a4b
https://bugzilla.libsdl.org/show_bug.cgi?id=5308
The udev code labels devices that are found by this code with
ID_INPUT_KEY which in turn gets used by SDL to label the devices as
SDL_UDEV_DEVICE_KEYBOARD.
This was missing for the code path when udev is not running and as such
devices such as the power button of a phone was not detected as keyboard
input and no devices were emitted.
Patch from Matt Whitlock:
There are actually two distinct classes of problems at play here.
On the one hand, libsdl2's configure.ac has some POSIX conformance
issues - namely, the use of 'echo -n' and the passage of arguments
containing embedded backslashes to 'echo', neither of which is
defined by POSIX. The attached patch takes care of these issues.
Ozkan Sezer
Our config.guess and config.sub are rather outdated.
Attached new versions of them here.
However, build-scripts/config.sub.patch do not apply
to these new versions: I don't know if and where that
patch is still needed.
Cameron Cawley
stdlib: Added SDL_round, SDL_roundf, SDL_lround and SDL_lroundf
The default implementation is based on the one used in the Windows RT video driver.
Keep Semaphore Kernel Object impl for Windows 7 and older - choose at runtime
v2: - Fix mixed int/LONG types
- Reorder definitions
- Add missing include
v3: - Use `GetModuleHandle()` to load the API Set
SDL_SemPost() was called by the FIFO threads after the semaphore was
freed because the main thread actually synchronized on the
`writerRunning`/`readersRunning` count and not the semaphores itself.
v2: - Add SRW definitions as suggested by Ozkan Sezer
Allows building against older platform headers.
- Rename "hidden" function parameter `mutex_` to `_mutex`
v3: - Use GetModuleHandle instead of LoadLibrary
- Fix typo in comment
SDL_systhread.c and SDL_syslocale.c used to call LoadLibrary() without
calling FreeLibrary() later. GetModuleHandleW() should always succeed
because GetModuleHandleW() itself is imported from kernel32.dll and we
don't need to bother releasing it.
- acinclude/alsa.m4, esd.m4: Ran through autoupdate to replace several
AC_TRY_[COMPILE|LINK|RUN] with corresponding AC_???_IFELSE , so that
autoconf-2.70 doesn't warn.
- sdl2.m4: Ditto.
- test/acinclude.m4 (sdl2): Ditto.
- remove HP/UX 9 (%@#!) support
- change fopen() mode from "a" to "w" in test code.
- bump its serial num to 2.
- test/acinclude.m4: same sdl2.m4 updates.
- revise for better compatibility with new autoconf,
- remove HP/UX 9 (%@#!) support from it,
- replace system("touch conf.esdtest") with fopen/fclose in the
test code (see, e.g. glib-2.0.m4 -- sdl.m4 does the same.)
.. so that KMSDRM_CreateDevice() can fail and SDL_VideoInit() would
move on to next bootstrap member which is kmsdrm_legacy. hopefully
fixes bug #5393.
Specifically this patch which does not invoke _AC_PATH_X_XMKMF and
_AC_PATH_X_DIRECT internal autoconf routines when cross-compiling:
http://git.savannah.gnu.org/gitweb/?p=autoconf.git;a=commitdiff;h=33c3a47c04ab70a4dd54963fe433a171bc03747f
Without this, CFLAGS would brokenly have system include paths like
-I/usr/include/X11 when cross-compiling e.g. for windows. (And it
also resulted in annoying imake crashes for my setup...)
Substring
I was trying the KMSDRM video backend with some very simple programs that were working ok on 2.0.12. The same code won?t work on the current dev branch and I get:
DEBUG: check_modesetting: probing ?/dev/dri/card0?
DEBUG: /dev/dri/card0 connector, encoder and CRTC counts are: 4 5 6
DEBUG: check_modesetting: probing ?/dev/dri/card0?
DEBUG: /dev/dri/card0 connector, encoder and CRTC counts are: 4 5 6
DEBUG: KMSDRM_VideoInit()
DEBUG: Opening device /dev/dri/card0
DEBUG: Opened DRM FD (3)
DEBUG: no atomic modesetting support.
DEBUG: Video subsystem has not been initialized
INFO: Using SDL video driver: (null)
DEBUG: Video subsystem has not been initialized
After carefully checking, the radeon driver doesn?t support atomic modesetting. That?s not the only problem : the same happens with the amdgpu driver if we disable Display Core (kernel parameter amdgpu.dc=0, which is required to get analogue outputs working).
This is a major regression in the KMSDRM driver.
Using atomic mode setting is great, but having no fallback to the "standard KMS" is bad.
Stephen Broadfoot
I've tracked this down to the following changeset bb65ba8e039b
https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/diff/bb65ba8e039b/Makefile.in
this changeset renames the rule `build` to `build/.created` but the rule `install-lib` still depends on the rule `build`
This affects users who are trying to install via homebrew who are installing via source and not by the bottle as this invokes `make install`
To be clear, the error I was hitting when running make install is
make: *** No rule to make target `build', needed by `install-lib'. Stop.
pj5085
I added some printf to verify the math being done. Of the three joysticks I have, it works correctly for at least two, and seems to work correctly for the third. I say "seems to" because, for the third joystick, the values never go through the AxisCorrect function, and thus never hit my printf statements, even though they did in the version I wrote my patch against. I'm not sure what's going on there, but it at least seems to be working correctly in as much as I can tell.
I note this result in particular, for an SNES Gamepad (min=0, max=255):
Joystick value 0 becomes -32768
Joystick value 127 becomes 0
Joystick value 255 becomes 32767
Without the code that forces a zero point, the 127 input value would become -129, so I think you see why I added that code to turn it into zero. However, I think Kai Krakow has a point about how SDL shouldn't assume that there should be a center.
Obviously in the majority of cases there actually should be a center, and the code that turns that 127 into an actual 0 is creating only a 0.2% error over 0.4% of this joystick's range. However, what if there is an axis that is some kind of special control, like a 4-position switch, and, for whatever reason, the joystick reports it as an axis with 4 possible values, 0 to 3? In that case, mutilating the two center values to the same value is much more of an error and and turns that 4-position switch into a 3-position switch. If any joystick does this with a 2-position switch, then this code would render that control entirely useless as it would report the same value with the switch in either position. Obviously the code could require that there be at least N possible values, to guess whether something is a proper axis or just some kind of switch, but the choice of N would be arbitrary and that's ugly.
I guess the real problem here is that my gamepad is just kind of broken. It should be reporting a range of -1 to +1 since that's what it actually does. Also, as Kai Krakow points out, it's probably not SDL's place to fix broken hardware. I'll add that, if SDL does fix broken hardware, it should probably actually know that it's broken rather than be merely guessing that it is.
So, to the extent that SDL is able to do stuff like this, perhaps it's something better left for the user to configure in some kind of config file.
configure output is practically unchanged. there are still lots of
AC_TRY_COMPILE/AC_TRY_LINK replacements needed to really eliminate
the warnings, but that's for another time.
pj5085
It occurred to me that my simple patch that comments out a few lines of code does not correctly remove the dead zone since the calculation presumably assumes the dead zone has been cut out of the range. Then, while looking into how to make it output the correct range of values, I realized SDL wasn't returning the correct range of values to begin with.
This line of code was already present:
printf("Values = { %d, %d, %d, %d, %d }\n", absinfo.value, absinfo.minimum, absinfo.maximum, absinfo.fuzz, absinfo.flat);
For my joystick this yeilds:
Values = { 0, -127, 127, 0, 15 }
Then this code calculates the coefficients:
In SDL1:
joystick->hwdata->abs_correct[i].coef[0] = (absinfo.maximum + absinfo.minimum) / 2 - absinfo.flat;
joystick->hwdata->abs_correct[i].coef[1] = (absinfo.maximum + absinfo.minimum) / 2 + absinfo.flat;
t = ((absinfo.maximum - absinfo.minimum) / 2 - 2 * absinfo.flat);
if ( t != 0 ) {
joystick->hwdata->abs_correct[i].coef[2] = (1 << 29) / t;
} else {
joystick->hwdata->abs_correct[i].coef[2] = 0;
}
In SDL2:
joystick->hwdata->abs_correct[i].coef[0] = (absinfo.maximum + absinfo.minimum) - 2 * absinfo.flat;
joystick->hwdata->abs_correct[i].coef[1] = (absinfo.maximum + absinfo.minimum) + 2 * absinfo.flat;
t = ((absinfo.maximum - absinfo.minimum) - 4 * absinfo.flat);
if (t != 0) {
joystick->hwdata->abs_correct[i].coef[2] = (1 << 28) / t;
} else {
joystick->hwdata->abs_correct[i].coef[2] = 0;
}
Neither calculates the correct coefficients for the code in the AxisCorrect function.
In SDL1:
if ( value > correct->coef[0] ) {
if ( value < correct->coef[1] ) {
return 0;
}
value -= correct->coef[1];
} else {
value -= correct->coef[0];
}
value *= correct->coef[2];
value >>= 14;
In SDL2:
value *= 2;
if (value > correct->coef[0]) {
if (value < correct->coef[1]) {
return 0;
}
value -= correct->coef[1];
} else {
value -= correct->coef[0];
}
In SDL1, the calculated coefficients are coef[0]=15, coef[1]=-15 and coef[2]=5534751. So with a full-scale input of 127, it calculates an output value of 37835, which is considerably out of range.
In SDL2, the calculated coefficients are coef[0]=30, coef[1]=-30, and coef[2]=1383687. So with a full-scale input of 127, it calculates the same output value of 37835.
I tested it with the 3 joysticks I have, and it produces out-of-range values for all of them.
Anyway, since dead zones are garbage, I just deleted all of that junk and wrote some code that takes the absinfo.minimum and absinfo.maximum values and uses them to scale the axis range to -32767 through +32767.
I also made it detect when a range doesn't have an integer center point, e.g. the center of -128 to + 127 is -0.5. In such cases, if either value to the side of the center is provided, it zeros it, but it otherwise doesn't implement any kind of dead zone. This seemed important with my gamepad which provides only the values of 0, 127, and 255, since without this hack it would never be centered.
Also, the previous minimum output value was -32768, but as that creates an output range that has no true center, I changed the minimum value to -32767.
I tested it with the 3 joystick devices I have and it seems to create correct values for all of them.
Added a hint to control whether a separate thread should be used for joystick events.
This is off by default because dispatching messages in other threads appears to cause problems on some versions of Windows.
- SDL_video.c (SDL_ShowMessageBox): replace messageboxdata, set title
or message field to "" if either of them is NULL.
- SDL_video.c (SDL_ShowSimpleMessageBox): set title or message to ""
if either of them is NULL for EMSCRIPTEN builds.
- SDL_bmessagebox.cc: add empty string check along with NULL check for
title and message fields.
- SDL_windowsmessagebox.c (AddDialogString): remove NULL string check
- SDL_windowsmessagebox.c (AddDialogControl): add empty string check
along with the NULL check.
- SDL_x11messagebox.c: revert commit 677c4cd68069
- SDL_os2messagebox.c: revert commit 2c2a489d76e7
- test/testmessage.c: Add NULL title and NULL message tests.
Joel Linn
TLDR; https://godbolt.org/z/43fd8G
Let's deduce this from C++ reference code:
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/cppcx/wrl/how-to-activate-and-use-a-windows-runtime-component-using-wrl?view=msvc-160
At the bottom of the page there is this snippet:
```
int wmain()
{
/* ... more code ... */
// Get the domain part of the URI.
HString domainName;
hr = uri->get_Domain(domainName.GetAddressOf());
if (FAILED(hr))
{
return PrintError(__LINE__, hr);
}
// Print the domain name and return.
wprintf_s(L"Domain name: %s\n", domainName.GetRawBuffer(nullptr));
// All smart pointers and RAII objects go out of scope here.
}
```
`HString` is defined in `corewrappers.h` and the call chain for the destructor is:
`~HString() -> Release() -> ::WindowsDeleteString()`
QED
Sven-Hendrik Haase
In CMake I currently have trouble activating hidapi support as libusb-1.0 isn't ever correctly detected as it's searched for by the wrong name.
configure.ac correctly does this:
PKG_CHECK_MODULES([LIBUSB], [libusb-1.0], have_libusb=yes, have_libusb=no)
However, sdlchecks.cmake does this:
pkg_check_modules(LIBUSB libusb)
but it needs to be:
pkg_check_modules(LIBUSB libusb-1.0)
Vincent Hamm
Xcode11 and ios13 added support for metal simulator.
Here is a quick and dirty patch to enable it. Pretty early and only tested on a few samples for now. Required mostly to enable metal support on correct version of ios, generate simulator compatible shaders and enforce buffer alignments on simulator (same as osx).
Sebastian Vargas Vargas
Running CMake configure from a Windows Subsystem for Linux using Visual Studio Code Remote doesn't generate the header file with the current source revision, it throws "/home/sebva/SDL/build-scripts/updaterev.sh: 13: cannot create /mnt/c/Users/sebva/.vscode/extensions/ms-vscode-remote.remote-wsl-0.44.4/include/SDL_revision.h.new: Directory nonexistent".
If we fail to connect to the the pa server, we have an assigned context
and mainloop that isn't connected. So, when PULSEAUDIO_pa_context_disconnect
is called, pa asserts and crashes the application.
Assertion 'pa_atomic_load(&(c)->_ref) >= 1' failed at pulse/context.c:1055, function pa_context_disconnect(). Aborting.
Joel Linn
Eliminate additional heap allocation for short-lived HSTRINGs.
Uses `WindowsCreateStringReference()` to disable reference counting and memory management by the Window Runtime.
Tom Seddon
2nd time lucky, perhaps. patch 2 applies to current HEAD at time of writing - 4eb049c9bb1ca94efe3c40b57beda3169984d0cb from https://github.com/SDL-mirror/SDL.
This basically goes back to what was there originally, but now manually adding "-x objective-c" to the clang command line rather than "-ObjC". clang is then invoked without the "-x c" that was causing the problem, the snippet builds, and Metal is detected. (I had a quick trawl through the cmake code, but I couldn't see where this is handled.)
I was moved to try this after finding SDL's own CHECK_OBJC_SOURCE_COMPILES macro, and noting what it does: 4eb049c9bb/cmake/macros.cmake (L67)
An alternative fix of course would be to use CHECK_OBJC_SOURCE_COMPILES instead of cmake's check_objc_source_compiles - but that had the same problem of getting confused by "return 0;". (Maybe that's because it's a macro? I'll defer to a cmake expert on this one.)
I decided in the end to err on the side of leaving things looking basically the same as they were before my first patch.
Ivan Mogilko
With SDL 2.0.12 under MS Windows, if the window is partially offscreen calling SDL_SetWindowGrab(w, SDL_TRUE) works, but subsequent call to SDL_SetWindowGrab(w, SDL_FALSE) does not work.
I tested this in both real program, and a small test app, where unlocking cursor worked perfectly while window is fully in desktop bounds, but did not work if it was at least few pixels outside.
For the reference, following code is enough to reproduce the issue:
#include <windows.h>
#include <SDL.h>
int WinMain(
HINSTANCE hInstance,
HINSTANCE hPrevInstance,
LPSTR lpCmdLine,
int nShowCmd)
{
SDL_Init(SDL_INIT_VIDEO);
SDL_Window* w = SDL_CreateWindow("", SDL_WINDOWPOS_CENTERED, SDL_WINDOWPOS_CENTERED, 640, 400, 0);
bool grabbed = false;
bool want_quit = false;
while (!want_quit)
{
SDL_Event event;
while (SDL_PollEvent(&event))
{
switch (event.type)
{
case SDL_QUIT: want_quit = true; break;
case SDL_KEYDOWN:
if (event.key.keysym.scancode == SDL_SCANCODE_SPACE)
{
SDL_SetWindowGrab(w, static_cast<SDL_bool>(!grabbed));
grabbed = !grabbed;
}
}
}
}
SDL_DestroyWindow(w);
SDL_Quit();
return 0;
}
Mathieu Eyraud
SDL dynamically loads libusb but does not check the return value of 'SDL_LoadFunction'.
Also libusb is loaded and initialized several time because 'SDL_hidapi_wasinit' is never set to true.
I made a patch if you want to test:
- check that 'hid_init' is called once and only once,
- check return value of 'hid_init',
- check return value of 'SDL_LoadFunction',
- check return value of 'SDL_malloc',
- add some debug logging.
On older mac, where METAL Renderer METAL fails to create, it allows to switch back to OpenGL SDL_Renderer
by re-creating the window (METAL flags was previously persistent).
This can happen if the application has not yet processed SDL_JOYDEVICEADD when
the same joystick is removed. It may also happen if two joysticks are added
and the second joystick is removed before the first joystick's SDL_JOYDEVICEADD
has been processed by the application.
Dominik Reichardt
Trying to integrate the latest SDL2 changes into our iOS project of Exult I've stumbled over the fact that when I added the static iOS library the public header files were copied to the archive of our project when you let Xcode build the archive.
This makes the archive invalid for upload to the AppStore Connect.
To fix this you need to delete the public headers from the build phase:
Open the xcode project, select the target "Static Library-ios", got to build phases, and in "headers" delete all the headers in the "public" group. This is safe to do as this actually just copies the public headers for some odd counterintuitive reason.
I think this needs to be done for all the library build targets but likely not for the framework targets.
Tom Seddon
This is as of commit 50d804ea729accf9e3a9ce83238d0a2976a17545 from https://github.com/SDL-mirror/SDL, which is HEAD as I write (apologies, not confident with Mercurial)
# Config
macOS: 10.14.6 (18G6042)
cmake --version: cmake version 3.16.20200101-g23e782c
clang --version: Apple clang version 11.0.0 (clang-1100.0.33.17)
Xcode version: Version 11.3.1 (11C504)
# Repro steps
Run the following commands in the shell.
cd /tmp/
git clone https://github.com/SDL-mirror/SDL
mkdir build.SDL
cd build.SDL
cmake -G ../SDL/
Examine cmake output.
# Expected result
Metal is detected.
# Actual result
It appears that Metal is not detected! Note this line in the summary:
-- RENDER_METAL (Wanted: 0): OFF
# Fix
Change check_c_source_compiles to check_objc_source_compiles. The cmake script tries to add -ObjC to the clang command line, but, for whatever reason, this doesn't seem to work.
Change the test source to have an empty main. The "return 0;" line seems to confuse cmake somehow, causing it to crap out with an error about HAVE_FRAMEWORK_METAL being an unknown argument. (Maybe I'm just dense, but it's not obvious to me what the problem is here.)
With these two changes:
-- RENDER_METAL (Wanted: ON): ON
Patch attached.
Dominik Reichardt
When you unified the Xcode project file you forgot to add the iOS file (/src/misc/ios/SDL_sysurl.m) to the project file, so the dummy in that folder takes over and the call does not work.
Relevant commits:
http://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/c86bbf75f55e (SDL_OpenUrl enabled for macOS/iOS)
http://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/282c3dc1cf65 (and following: unified Xcode project files)
Adding an ios group in the misc group of the project file and then adding /src/misc/ios/SDL_sysurl.m to it fixes the problem.
Joel Linn
Currently the rawinput driver always reports a device as "wired". This changes that to "unknown" and updates it once the device is correlated with xinput.
Most of the raw input events are dispatched in the main windows message loop. We only dispatch device change messages separately when we need them to be completely up to date.
It's legitimate to have a surface with 0 width or height (null 'pixels' pointer).
But calling SDL_FillRects would wrongly set the error "You must lock the surface".
src/joystick/windows/SDL_rawinputjoystick.c: In function 'RAWINPUT_HandleStatePacket':
src/joystick/windows/SDL_rawinputjoystick.c:1343:9: warning: suggest explicit braces to avoid ambiguous 'else'
multiply gyro values by sensitivity
When the hardware calibration fails, values read from sensors need to be multiplied by default sensitivity (16 for gyro, 1 for accelerometer).
Simon McVittie
When watching for hotplug events we can poll the inotify fd, but we
still need to scan /dev/input once per process, otherwise we'll fail
to detect devices that were already connected.
Alex S
Evdev headers aren't actually included in the base system (well, it has a private copy), they are available through the devel/evdev-proto port instead. We also have devel/libinotify and devel/libudev-devd shims, I didn't verify whether they work with SDL.
C.W. Betts
As it is, SDL2's built-in config on macOS for Metal excludes Apple Silicon. This is due to thinking that the 64-bit Mac platform would always be x86_64. My patch fixes this by using the catch-all of 64-bit platforms.
This fixes bad report parsing for various newer Xbox controllers, and this driver is now preferred over XInput, since it handles more than 4 controllers.
C.W. Betts
This patch adds support to the GameController framework on macOS Big Sur and later, adding support for MFi controllers as well as rumble support for PS4 and Xbox One. There is some code to make sure that the IOKit joystick handler doesn't include two controllers at once.
While the GameController framework is present in earlier versions of macOS, there was no public, approved way of checking if a specific IOHIDDevice is a controller that GameController could handle. This was changed in Big Sur.
Added support for the PS4 controller gyro and accelerometer on iOS and HIDAPI drivers
Also fixed an issue with the accelerometer on iOS having inverted axes
In recent versions of EGL headers on Linux, the MESA_EGL_NO_X11_HEADERS macro is
deprecated and has been replaced with EGL_NO_X11. As a result, the configure
script would fail the compilation check for EGL headers and disable EGL (and by
extension, Wayland) support when X11 headers are not installed. Fix this by
adding the correct macro to disable X11 support in the headers.
The configure/cmake scripts were checking for these functions but we didn't
have the SDL_config.h.* pieces in place. The other config headers are best
guesses.
As the name suggests, the hint should only apply to SDL_THREAD_PRIORITY_TIME_CRITICAL
The resulting priorities for my current distro result in these values:
| High | Time Critical
Hint |--------------|-----------------
0 | P=10 N=-10 | P=5 N=-15
1 | P=10 N=-10 | P=-21 N=0
Building on FreeBSD fails:
/buildbot/worker/SDL/sdl-freebsd-amd64/src/src/joystick/linux/SDL_sysjoystick.c:26:2: error: SDL now requires a Linux 2.4+ kernel with /dev/input/event support.
#error SDL now requires a Linux 2.4+ kernel with /dev/input/event support.
^
/buildbot/worker/SDL/sdl-freebsd-amd64/src/src/joystick/linux/SDL_sysjoystick.c:35:10: fatal error: 'sys/inotify.h' file not found
#include <sys/inotify.h>
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Spooky
For some reason the Logitech Extreme 3D joystick was added to SDL_gamecontrollerdb.h in the linux section only.
This breaks the joystick in linux as it is not a gamepad. I am unable to correctly use or map the Logitech Exteme 3D joystick in games that use SDL2 in linux.
Please remove Logitech Extreme 3D from SDL_gamecontrollerdb.h Linux section. It is a joystick not a gamepad.
Bart van der Werf
When directinput fails to load, but a controlller is plugged in, an access violation happens.
This is due to IEventHandler_CRawGameControllerVtbl_InvokeAdded calling SDL_DINPUT_JoystickPresent which does not check if dinput is assigned signalling initialization of directinput.
Joel Linn
This fixes two types of MSVC compiler warnings.
- One parameter in the function signatures of two WGI event handlers had one level of indirection too much (and did not match Windows SDK headers). The indirection was cast away so it still worked.
- size_t was implicitly cast to UINT32 for a number of (constant) string lengths.
wahil1976
This patch adds the KBIO text input driver for FreeBSD, which allows text input to fully work without text spilling out into the console. It also supports accented input, AltGr keys and Alt Lock combinations.
Tested with US accent keys layout and various AltGr layouts.
Alex S
...which allows SDL to talk to webcamd/iichid. (Webcamd actually bundles quite a few gamepad drivers.) Note that this does _not_ disable usbhid, both joystick backends will be compiled.
This uses pre-recorded evdev capabilities, so that we can check for
regressions without the devices having to be physically present.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
This improves SDL's ability to detect joystick hotplug in a container
environment.
We cannot reliably receive events from udev in a container, because they
are delivered as netlink events, which are authenticated by their uid
being 0. However, in a user namespace created by an unprivileged user
(for example bubblewrap, as used by Flatpak and Steam's
pressure-vessel-wrap), the kernel does not allow us to map uid 0, and
the netlink events appear to be from the kernel's overflowuid (typically
65534/nobody), meaning libudev cannot distinguish between genuine uevents
from udevd and an attack by a malicious local user.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Anything with X, Y and Z axes but no buttons is probably an
accelerometer (this is the assumption made in udev).
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Previously we only checked for at least one button or key and at least
the X and Y absolute axes, but this has both false positives and false
negatives.
Graphics tablets, trackpads and touchscreens all have buttons and
absolute X and Y axes, but we don't want to detect those as joysticks.
On normal Linux systems ordinary users do not have access to these
device nodes, but members of the 'input' group do.
Conversely, some game controllers only have digital buttons and no
analogue axes (the Nintendo Wiimote is an example), and some have axes
and no buttons (steering wheels or flight simulator rudders might not
have buttons).
Use the more elaborate heuristic factored out from SDL's udev code path
to handle these cases.
In an ideal world we could use exactly the same heuristic as udev's
input_id builtin, but that isn't under a suitable license for inclusion
in SDL, so we have to use a parallel implementation of something
vaguely similar.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
This works on capability bitfields that can either come from udev or
from ioctls, so it is equally applicable to both udev and non-udev
input device detection.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
Device enumeration via libudev can fail in a container for two reasons:
* the netlink protocol between udevd and libudev is considered private,
so there is no API guarantee that the version of libudev in a container
will understand netlink messages from a dissimilar version of udevd
on the host system;
* the netlink protocol between udevd and libudev relies for security on
being able to check the uid of each message, but in a container with
a user namespace where host uid 0 is not mapped, the libudev client
cannot distinguish between messages from host uid 0 and messages from
a different, malicious user on the host
To make this easier to experiment with, always compile the fallback
code path even if libudev is disabled. libudev remains the default if
enabled at compile time, but the fallback code path can be forced.
Signed-off-by: Simon McVittie <smcv@collabora.com>
GetAsyncKeyState() and GetRawInputData() report the state of the physical
buttons without applying the user's primary/secondary mouse button swap
preference. Swap the buttons returned from these functions, so we expose a
consistent view of the buttons to SDL callers. This new behavior also matches
the behavior of macOS and X11 backends.
See the Remarks section of the GetAsyncKeyState() function on MSDN.
We should only perform the VK_LEFT, VK_UP, etc. mapping if none of the other
special mappings apply. This allows the scancode normalization for the number
pad to take place as intended.
When we request realtime priority from rtkit, we have a rttime limit. If we exceed
that limit, the kernel will send SIGKILL to the process to terminate it.
This isn't something that most high priority processes will want, only processes
that selectively opt into SCHED_RR/FIFO through SDL_HINT_THREAD_PRIORITY_POLICY
should be subject to this level of scrutiny.
This change:
* Switches non-apple posix OSs to use SCHED_OTHER instead of SCHED_RR
for SDL_THREAD_PRIORITY_HIGH/SDL_THREAD_PRIORITY_TIME_CRITICAL.
* Fixes using a hardcoded RLIMIT_RTTIME, instead queries it from rtkit
* Only sets RLIMIT_RTTIME for MakeRealtime rtkit requests
* Adds a note regarding the possible SIGKILL with SDL_HINT_THREAD_PRIORITY_POLICY
* Introduces SDL_HINT_THREAD_FORCE_REALTIME_TIME_CRITICAL to allow apps to acquire realtime scheduling policies on Linux
CPU Vendor ID "Shanghai" and "CentaurHauls" belongs to Zhaoxin.
Background:
Shanghai Zhaoxin Semiconductor Co., Ltd ("Zhaoxin") , established in 2013,
headquartered in Zhangjiang, Shanghai, China. Zhaoxin aims at providing
general-purpose x86 processors.
Related Zhaoxin Linux Kernel patch can be found at
https://lore.kernel.org/lkml/01042674b2f741b2aed1f797359bdffb@zhaoxin.com
Best regards.
Debugging inside rtkit showed we were failing the RLIMIT_RTTIME check, now that we're asking for realtime and not just high-priority due to a change in SDL.
Between that and the DBus code in SDL being wrong in previous changelist I'm not sure how this could have ever worked.
Nov 02 20:34:15 redcore rtkit-daemon[2825]: Failed to parse MakeThreadRealtime() method call: Argument 1 is specified to be of type "uint32", but is actually of type "int32"
Nov 02 20:34:15 redcore rtkit-daemon[2825]: Failed to parse MakeThreadRealtime() method call: Argument 1 is specified to be of type "uint32", but is actually of type "int32"
Docs:
http://git.0pointer.net/rtkit.git/tree/README
CLIENTS:
To be able to make use of realtime scheduling clients may
request so with a small D-Bus interface that is accessible on
the interface org.freedesktop.RealtimeKit1 as object
/org/freedesktop/RealtimeKit1 on the service
org.freedesktop.RealtimeKit1:
void MakeThreadRealtime(u64 thread_id, u32 priority);
void MakeThreadHighPriority(u64 thread_id, s32 priority);
wcodelyokoyt
The atom name that X11_GetAtomName() returns never gets freed, which result in a minor memory leak (14 bytes?) every time the user drops a file on a window.
You can see the line in question here:
6b6170caf6/src/video/x11/SDL_x11events.c (L1350)
Fix: call XFree on name after the while loop.
Joel Linn
This patch fixes a MSVC warning, which is dependent on the regional settings of the build system. Although the character is inside a comment and harmless, it is undesirable to disable the warning for this.
OpenGL leaves the final line segment open, SDL's software renderer does not,
so we need a tiny bit of trigonometry here to move one more pixel in the right
direction.
Xbox Elite controllers use AUX1-AUX4 to represent the paddle buttons when using the HIDAPI driver
PS4 and PS5 controllers use AUX1 to represent the touchpad button
Nintendo Switch Pro controllers use AUX1 to represent the capture button
This allows one to build Raspberry Pi versions on an ancient version of
Raspbian and get both the KMSDRM and RPI video targets built into SDL, giving
maximum binary compatibility from linking against an older glibc, etc, but
also making one library that can access video on all RPi models and OS
releases.
batyastudios
Basicly there is problem and somewhat a solution: https://discourse.libsdl.org/t/setwindowmaximumsize-bug/28267
If you SDL_SetWindowMaximumSize() after SDL_SetWindowMinimumSize() with one of axes have the same value, function will have no effect.
This: (line 2144@SDL_video.c)
if (max_w <= window->min_w || max_h <= window->min_h) {
SDL_SetError("SDL_SetWindowMaximumSize(): Tried to set maximum size smaller than minimum size");
return;
}
May be changed to this:
if (max_w < window->min_w || max_h < window->min_h) {
SDL_SetError("SDL_SetWindowMaximumSize(): Tried to set maximum size smaller than minimum size");
return;
}
When converting audio from signed to unsigned values of vice-versa
the silence value chosen by SDL was the value of the device, not
of the stream that the data was being put into. After conversion
this would lead to a very high or low value, making the speaker
jump to a extreme positon, leading to an audible noise whenever
creating, destroying or playing scilence on a device that reqired
such conversion.
UnmapNotify event does not mean that window has been iconified. It
just reports that window changed state from mapped to unmapped.
XReparentWindow can unmap and remap window if it was mapped. This
causes unnecessary events - HIDDEN, MINIMIZED, RESTORED and SHOW.
These events are problematic with Metacity 3.36+ which started to
remove window decorations from fullscreen windows.
- SDL makes decorated window fullscreen
- Metacity removes decorations
- SDL gets UnmapNotify and exits from fullscreen
- Metacity re-adds decorations
As SDL will also get MapNotify event it will try to restore
window state causing above steps to repeat.
https://bugzilla.libsdl.org/show_bug.cgi?id=5314
Add a minimal my_gradd.h containing structures and constants only used
by SDL_os2vman.c -- based on public knowledge from around the internet
including pages from http://www.osfree.org and http://www.edm2.com .
Original code assigned MCIMixSetup.ulSamplesPerSec value to it, but it
is just the freq... We now change spec->samples only either if it is 0
or we changed the frequency, by picking a default of ~46 ms at desired
frequency (code taken from SDL_audio.c:prepare_audiospec()).
With this, the crashes I have been experiencing are gone.
- video: VideoBootStrap->available() is gone.
- thread: all important SDL_CreateThread internal data now put into
struct SDL_Thread: changes to SDL_SYS_CreateThread().
- events / video: SDL_SetDoubleClickTime() removed -- functionality
moved to SDL_mouse.c:SDL_MouseDoubleClickTimeChanged().
- video: struct SDL_VideoDevice-> CreateWindow and CreateWindowFrom
members renamed to CreateSDLWindow and CreateSDLWindowFrom
Has been happening with testfilesystem from 2.0.6 and newer because
of commit 572a721879ef.
Also set error strings in certain error conditions.
Also applied coding style / whitespace fixes, while I was there.
- Displays may have been added, removed or changed and all cached monitor
handles are invalidated as a result.
- Display events are handled in three steps:
1. Mark all currently know displays as invalid
2. Enumerate all displays, adding new ones and marking known displays as valid
3. Remove all displays still invalid after enumeration
- Display connect/disconnect events are sent when displays are added or removed
after initial setup
- SDL_config.h.in: add missing defines SDL_SENSOR_COREMOTION
and SDL_SENSOR_WINDOWS (configure did set SDL_SENSOR_WINDOWS
but it never went in SDL_config.h or Makefile.)
- SDL_config.h.cmake: remove duplicated SDL_SENSOR_XXX cmake
defines.
- autofoo, cmake: check for sensorsapi.h header before enabling
windows sensors.
(Also see: https://bugzilla.libsdl.org/show_bug.cgi?id=4822)
Building the current tree against 10.8 SDK, clang emits the following warning:
src/video/cocoa/SDL_cocoawindow.m:1846:27: warning: instance method '-isOperatingSystemAtLeastVersion:' not found (return type defaults to 'id') [-Wobjc-method-access]
![processInfo isOperatingSystemAtLeastVersion:version]) {
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/opt/MacOSX10.8.sdk/System/Library/Frameworks/Foundation.framework/Headers/NSProcessInfo.h:20:12: note: receiver is instance of class declared here
@interface NSProcessInfo : NSObject {
^
1 warning generated.
isOperatingSystemAtLeastVersion is an 10.10 thing.
loadNibNamed:owner:topLevelObjects is available on 10.8 and newer.
There is an issue report here about an app failing to function on
10.7 and earlier: https://discourse.libsdl.org/t/28179
I _think_ this is a right thing to do; it fixes a .wav file I have here that
has blockalign==2 when channels==2 and bitspersample==16, which otherwise
would fail.
This could fix a rare crash if:
- onConfigurationChanged is called before onCreate();
or
shared libraries failed to load and onConfigurationChanged() is called
Add hint SDL_HINT_ANDROID_BLOCK_ON_PAUSE_PAUSEAUDIO not to pause audio when
the app goes to background.
(It requires SDL_ANDROID_BLOCK_ON_PAUSE as "Non blocking")
SDL_cocoametalview was consuming the first click rather than passing it
through to the SDLView underneath which overrides [NSView acceptsFirstMouse]
based on the user's SDL_HINT_MOUSE_FOCUS_CLICKTHROUGH preference.
that are mapped to it and automatically invalidate them when it is freed
- refcount is kept so that an external application can still create a reference
to SDL_Surface.
- lock_data was un-used and is now renamed and used as a list keep track of the blitmap
"In the second half of 2021, new apps will be required to publish with the Android App Bundle on Google Play"
(see https://developer.android.com/guide/app-bundle)
And "Android App Bundles don't support APK expansion (*.obb) files".
Rainer Deyke
While most of the KMOD_* flags are enums, the combination flags KMOD_CTRL, KMOD_ALT, KMOD_SHIFT and KMOD_GUI are defined as macros. This breaks third-party code that uses these KMOD_* names for local identifiers, such as OGRE. The correct thing to do is to make them all enums.
It is a protocol error to attempt to create a pointer confine (i.e.
`SDL_SetWindowGrab`) while a locked pointer is active, and vice-versa.
Instead of aborting due to a protocol error, this commit makes SDL
gracefully downgrade locked pointers to confines when appropriate.
We now handle HiDPI correctly, and touches are clamped to the viewport. So
if you are rendering to a logical 640x480 in a 720p window, and touch the
letterboxing at point (640,700), it will report the touch at (0.5,1.0) instead
of outside the documented range.
Previously the first card with non-empty connectors, encoders
and crtcs would be selected, however KMSDRM_VideoInit could still reject
it if the connector was not connected. This allow finding the first card
(in a multi GPU setup) that is actually connected to a display.
Manuel Alfayate Corchete
I noticed pt2-clone had problems with it's optional hardware mouse on the KMSDRM backend: cursor had a transparent block around it.
So I was investigating and it seems that a GBM cursor needs it's pixels to be alpha-premultiplied instead of straight-alpha.
A
lso, I was previously relying on "manual testing" for the cursor size, but it's far better to use whatever the DRM driver recommends via drmGetCap(): any working driver should make a size recommendation via drmGetCap(), so that's what we use now. I took this decision because I found out that the AMDGPU driver reported working cursor sizes that would appear garbled on screen, and only the recommended cursor size works.
This fixes a case where you render to the backbuffer, then render to a render
target, set the current target back to the backbuffer, and then present
without drawing anything else; in this circumstance, the Present command
would never happen.
Fixes Bugzilla #5011.
This is handled in in the higher-level SDL_GL_LoadLibrary().
All uses of SDL_EGL_LoadLibrary (which calls the Only version) are just
target-specific wrappers for their own GL_LoadLibrary hook, with two
exceptions which now handle driver_loaded correctly (although it's
questionable if these init-if-no-one-did-it-correctly-already code blocks
should exist at all, fwiw).
Fixes Bugzilla #5190.
jackmacwindowslinux
I'm testing my application that uses SDL2 on the new Apple Silicon Macs. I set up the SDL 2.0.12 source code from the website and tried to build it. The first issue I ran into was that it was always building OpenGL ES, even if --disable-video-opengles was passed to configure. OpenGL ES headers do not seem to be present on the Apple Silicon macOS SDK, except for the iOS SDK headers. Then I had problems with the joystick driver, where some classes used on iOS were not available on macOS.
After looking through the configure.ac script a bit, I found that iOS targets are selected when the build host matches "arm*-apple-darwin*". Clang on macOS 11.0 on arm64 reports the host as "arm64-apple-darwin20.0.0", which matches the iOS target. This means that ARM Mac compilation will always be detected as iOS. Unfortunately, there doesn't seem to be an easy way to detect Mac vs. iOS targets, since they now both use the same triplet & compiler for building.
I'm not sure what the best way to fix this is, but maybe there could be an additional target flag to specify whether to build for macOS or iOS? This might break compatibility, though: with this approach, either all old scripts that used configure to build for iOS fail, or all new builds on macOS without a flag fail (silently?).
Instead of creating an X11 connection to test that X11 is available,
closing the connection, and then reconnecting for real, use the same
connection to handle both cases.
The X11 connection retry delay mechanism in the case where X11 is
dynamically loaded has been removed. It was only necessary to avoid
authetnication token reuse from the XOpenDisplay call that used to
exist in X11_Available. Now that this call is only made once, it
is no longer needed.
Also drop unused and inapplicable code from a comment.
***
The two are only ever called together, and combining them makes it possible
to eliminate redundant symbol loading and redundant attempts to connect
to a display server.
For systems without strlcpy and strlcat, just declare them as if they exist;
the analyzer possibly still knows the details of these functions and can
utilize that in its analysis.
Most of this patch was from meyraud705 at gmail and Martin Gerhardy. Thanks!
Fixes Bugzilla #5163.
Apparently the "-x objective-c" made it down to the linker, who then treats
the .o file as Objective-C source code. Apparently the -ObjC argument does
the same thing but gets ignored by the linker.
Fixes Bugzilla #4988.
Manuel Alfayate Corchete
This small patch fixes the KMSDRM_CreateSurfaces() call in KMSDRM_CreateWindow(), that was segfaulting deeper into SDL internals because the windata->viddata pointer wasn't set before the KMSDRM_CreateSurfaces() call.
So that's what this small patch does.
Now, L?VE2D works perfectly well on the Raspberry Pi 3, instead of just segfaulting.
Ellie
I just tripped over this: stb_image when requesting 3 channels with 8-bit actually returns them as 3 bytes per pixel with no alignment, so basically 4 pixels are 12 bytes with no padding (0...2, 3...5, 6...8, and 9...11). This I would have naively expected to be called RGB888 or BGR888, since there is no "dead" unused byte as I would expect for something called e.g. RGBX8888.
However, SDL2's SDL_PIXELFORMAT_BGR888 uses 4 bytes, same as SDL_PIXELFORMAT_BGRX8888, even though the latter appears to be a longer storage format - which it isn't, internally. It's just swapped, in byte order X, B, G, R (instead of BGRX). So why isn't the macro name also swapped, as "XBGR888" instead of just "BGR888"?
I find the formats therefore named inconsistently, and unless there is a reason for this I suggest these changes:
1. deprecate SDL_PIXELFORMAT_BGR888 in favor of a new SDL_PIXELFORMAT_XBGR8888
and
2. deprecate SDL_PIXELFORMAT_RGB888 in favor of a new SDL_PIXELFORMAT_XRGB8888
JackBoosY
In src/video/winrt/SDL_winrtgamebar.cpp line 55:
virtual HRESULT STDMETHODCALLTYPE add_VisibilityChanged(
__FIEventHandler_1_IInspectable *handler,
Windows::Foundation::EventRegistrationToken *token) = 0;
The macro __FIEventHandler_1_IInspectable defined in windows.fondation.h(Windows10 SDK 10.0.17763.0) line 3576:
#define __FIVector_1_Windows__CFoundation__CPoint ABI::Windows::Foundation::Collections::__FIVector_1_Windows__CFoundation__CPoint_t
but no longer exists in Windows 10 SDK 10.0.19041.0.
After searching this macro in the sdk include path, I found that it was defined in many header files. But it should be replaced in windows.system.h .
On some systems, GetClipCursor() impacts performance when called frequently, so only call it every once in a while to make sure we haven't lost our capture.
Manuel Alfayate Corchete
I'm trying to build SDL2 with threads support here in GNU/Linux, both X86 and ARM, and it does not seem to be possible ATM:
/home/manuel/src/SDLLLL/src/core/linux/SDL_threadprio.c:233:26: error: 'rtkit_max_realtime_priority' undeclared (first use in this function)
Manuel Alfayate Corchete
This patch is needed so programs that do this work as expected:
1) Start in a different video mode than the mode used by the system and then...
2) Try to go fullscreen with the mode originally used by the system via SetWindowFullScreen() with the SDL_WINDOW_FULLSCREEN_DESKTOP flag.
An example would be pt2-clone in https://github.com/8bitbubsy/pt2-clone.
This program does this:
Starts with:
video.window = SDL_CreateWindow("", SDL_WINDOWPOS_CENTERED,
SDL_WINDOWPOS_CENTERED, screenW, screenH, windowFlags);
and then, *IF* the user has configured it in fullscreen mode in its .ini, it tries to go fullscreen with the desktop mode:
SDL_SetWindowFullscreen(video.window, SDL_WINDOW_FULLSCREEN_DESKTOP);
This sequence of operations is currently failing because SDL_SetDisplayModeForDisplay() in SDL_video.c fails because display->desktop_mode is not being initialized with its correct value: SetDisplayMode() in SDL_kmsdrmvideo.c will not be able to set the mode because it detects the mode to have a driverdata of 0x0 ("if (!modedata)") and rightfully returns an error.
So, the included patch fixes this small problem, and programs that first change the video mode and then try to go fullscreen with the system video mode will now work.
The patch simply fixes an small omission, but its really needed now that dynamic video mode changing was implemented on the KMSDRM backend.
Ryan C. Gordon
As discussed here:
https://discourse.libsdl.org/t/question-about-implementation-of-sdl-updatewindowsurfacerects/27561
"As you can see this function [WIN_UpdateWindowFramebuffer, in src/video/windows/SDL_windowsframebuffer.c] calls BitBlt on entire screen, even though it accepts the rects. Rects variable is not even used in this function at all. Now my question is why is that the case?"
Anthony Pesch
I was looking into my own input bug and noticed an issue in the HIDAPI code while looking over it. I don't have a controller that goes down this path to test and try to provoke the issue, but it looks pretty straight forward.
The memmove to shift the joystick id array on disconnect isn't scaling the size by sizeof(SDL_JoystickID), likely corrupting the ids on disconnect.
Giovanni Bajo
The CMake build system supports several audio frameworks for Linux: one of them is sndio.
All frameworks can be built with "runtime linking" (that is, using dlopen to load the library at runtime). In sdlchecks.cmake, there's code to do the same with sndio:
=================================================================
# Requires:
# - n/a
# Optional:
# - SNDIO_SHARED opt
# - HAVE_DLOPEN opt
macro(CheckSNDIO)
if(SNDIO)
# TODO: set include paths properly, so the sndio headers are found
check_include_file(sndio.h HAVE_SNDIO_H)
find_library(D_SNDIO_LIB sndio)
if(HAVE_SNDIO_H AND D_SNDIO_LIB)
set(HAVE_SNDIO TRUE)
file(GLOB SNDIO_SOURCES ${SDL2_SOURCE_DIR}/src/audio/sndio/*.c)
set(SOURCE_FILES ${SOURCE_FILES} ${SNDIO_SOURCES})
set(SDL_AUDIO_DRIVER_SNDIO 1)
if(SNDIO_SHARED)
if(NOT HAVE_DLOPEN)
message_warn("You must have SDL_LoadObject() support for dynamic sndio loading")
else()
FindLibraryAndSONAME("sndio")
set(SDL_AUDIO_DRIVER_SNDIO_DYNAMIC "\"${SNDIO_LIB_SONAME}\"")
set(HAVE_SNDIO_SHARED TRUE)
endif()
else()
list(APPEND EXTRA_LIBS ${D_SNDIO_LIB})
endif()
set(HAVE_SDL_AUDIO TRUE)
endif()
endif()
endmacro()
=================================================================
The feature is gated by an option called SNDIO_SHARED. It is also fully implemented in SDL_sndioaudio.c
Unfortunately, it seems there is a missing line in CMakeLists.txt, so SNDIO_SHARED is not defined:
======================================================================
set_option(ALSA "Support the ALSA audio API" ${UNIX_SYS})
dep_option(ALSA_SHARED "Dynamically load ALSA audio support" ON "ALSA" OFF)
set_option(JACK "Support the JACK audio API" ${UNIX_SYS})
dep_option(JACK_SHARED "Dynamically load JACK audio support" ON "JACK" OFF)
set_option(ESD "Support the Enlightened Sound Daemon" ${UNIX_SYS})
dep_option(ESD_SHARED "Dynamically load ESD audio support" ON "ESD" OFF)
set_option(PULSEAUDIO "Use PulseAudio" ${UNIX_SYS})
dep_option(PULSEAUDIO_SHARED "Dynamically load PulseAudio support" ON "PULSEAUDIO" OFF)
set_option(ARTS "Support the Analog Real Time Synthesizer" ${UNIX_SYS})
dep_option(ARTS_SHARED "Dynamically load aRts audio support" ON "ARTS" OFF)
set_option(NAS "Support the NAS audio API" ${UNIX_SYS})
set_option(NAS_SHARED "Dynamically load NAS audio API" ${UNIX_SYS})
set_option(SNDIO "Support the sndio audio API" ${UNIX_SYS})
set_option(FUSIONSOUND "Use FusionSound audio driver" OFF)
dep_option(FUSIONSOUND_SHARED "Dynamically load fusionsound audio support" ON "FUSIONSOUND" OFF)
======================================================================
You can see that all frameworks define a "dep_option" NAME_SHARED, and SNDIO is the only one where the option is missing.
This means that runtime loading of sndio is never activated. If sndio is found at configuration time, it is always activated in "linked" mode, so that the final binary will have a load-time dependency with libsdnio. This is unfortunate.
To fix the problem, it is sufficient to add this line:
dep_option(SNDIO_SHARED "Dynamically load the sndio audio API" ${UNIX_SYS} ON "SNDIO" OFF)
I've verified that this fixes the bug, and sndio can now be dynamically loaded as expected.
It currently behaves like a locking key which is pressed
when Caps Lock is enabled and released when disabled. This
means that apps that trigger events on Caps Lock key down will
only fire these events every other time Caps Lock is pressed.
Lacky
It looks like refactoring of SDL2 internal API has broken SDL_RenderFillRect for DirectFB. In new version function SDL_RenderFillRect returns 0, but rectangle is not visible.
Replacing "count" with "len" in the argument list for SDL_memcpy in DirectFB_QueueFillRects fixes problem.
Jan Bujak
I wrote a new driver for my gamepad on Linux. I'd like SDL to support it out-of-box, as currently it just treats it as a generic joystick instead of a gamepad. From what I can see the only way to do that is to either 1) pick one of the already supported controllers' PID, VID and button layouts and have my driver send that (effectively lying that it's something else), or 2) submit a preconfigured, hardcoded mapping to SDL.
Both of those, in my opinion, are silly when we already have the Linux Gamepad Specification which standarizes this:
https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/v4.15/input/gamepad.html
Unfortunately SDL doesn't make use of it currently. So I've took it upon myself to add it; patch is in the attachments.
Basically what the patch does is that if SDL finds no built-it controller mappings for a given joystick it then asks the joystick backend to autodetect it, and that uses the relevant evdev bits to figure out which button/axis is which. (See the specs for more details.)
With this patch applied my own driver for my controller works out-of-box with SDL with no extra configuration and is correctly recognized as a gamepad; this is also going to be the case for any other driver which follows the Linux Gamepad Specification.
Arithmatic operations promote Uint8 to signed int. If the top bit of a
Uint8 is set, and it is left shifted 24 places, then the result is not
representable in a signed 32 bit int. This would be undefined behaviour
on systems where int is 32 bits.
It makes it clearer who owns the memory, and more reasonable to free it on
failure in the creating function.
(and, of course, pacifies static analysis.)
Manuel Alfayate Corchete
On the KMSDRM backend, there is no such thing as a desktop, yet some programs could (and DO) use SDL_GetGlobalMouseState().
So I think its good idea that, in KMSDRM, it returns the same mouse coordinates anyway as SDL_GetMouseState() would return. There is nothing else it could return, as far as I can understand, since there is no desktop anyway.
This small patch does precisely that.
Manuel Alfayate Corchete
The KMSDRM backend was doing things wrong because of some small (but important) misconceptions on how KMS/DRM works: to implement a largely broken non-vsync refresh mechanism, the SwapWindow() function was issuing new pageflips before previous ones had completed, thus causing EBUSY returns, buffer mismanagement, etc... resulting in general breakage on vsync disabling from apps, that would not allow vsync to work again without KMSDRM video re-initialization.
To further clarify, on most DRM drivers async pageflips are NOT working nowadays, so all issued pageflips will complete on next VBLANK, NOT ASAP (calling drmModePageFlip() with the DRM_MODE_PAGE_FLIP_ASYNC flag will return error).
The old code was assuming that can just issue a synchronous (=on VBLANK) pageflip and then pass a 0 timeout to the pull() function so we do not wait for the pageflip event, thinking that this will lead to correct non-vsynced screen updates from the program: That is plain wrong.
Each pageflip has to be waite before issuing a new one, ALWAYS. And if we do not support ASYNC pageflips on the DRM driver level, then we are forced to wait for the next VBLANK. There is no way around it.
I have also added many comments on the KMSDRM code. This is needed for future reference for me or others who may need to look at this code: KMS/DRM terminology regarding what SYNC and ASYNC mean in pageflip terms, and where to do certain things and why, is not trivial. It is not desirable or possible to invest time on researching the same concepts every time there is need to dive into this code. So please leave all these comments in the patch.
1. Comment that SDL_SetThreadPriority will make any necessary system changes when applying priority.
2. Add a hint to override SDL's default behavior for scheduler policy.
3. Modify the pthreads SDL_SetThreadPriority so that instead of just using the current thread scheduler policy it will change it to a policy that should work best for the requested priority.
4. Add hint checks in SDL_SetThreadPriority so that #3 can be overridden if desired.
5. Modify the Linux SDL_SetThreadPriority so that in the case that policy, either by SDL defaults or from the hint, is a realtime policy it uses the realtime rtkit API.
6. Prior to calling rtkit on Linux make the necessary thread state changes that rtkit requires. Currently this is done every time as it isn't expected that SDL_SetThreadPriority will be called repeatedly for a thread.
The compiler understands it, but the "qcc" compiler driver doesn't, and the
standard Khronos headers upset QNX anyhow, since they try to include X11
headers in the __unix__ section.
If this is a problem, we can write a test for the compiler flag, but shouldn't
we _always_ use our Khronos headers instead of depending on the system...?
michaeljosephmaltese
Display ends up taking only 1/4 of the screen area. It needs to call "setWantsBestResolutionOpenGLSurface:highdpi", like when creating a window the normal way.
wengxt
Due to the new major fcitx version is coming close, the existing code need to be ported to use new Fcitx dbus interface.
The new dbus interface is supported by both fcitx 4 and 5, and has a good side effect, which is that it will work with flatpak for free. Also the patch remove the dependency on fcitx header. Instead, it just hardcodes a few enum value in the code so need to handle the different header for fcitx4 or 5.
meyraud705
'SDL_Windows::driverdata' of a Wayland window is allocated by calloc in 'Wayland_CreateWindow' but freed by SDL_free in 'Wayland_DestroyWindow'.
meyraud705
I see how the documentation is confusing. I think that the choice of the axis is an implementation detail. The documentation should state the goal of this value, so I propose this wording:
"Use this value to play an effect on the steering wheel axis. This provides
better compatibility across platforms and devices as SDL will guess the
correct axis."
Value could even be renamed 'SDL_HAPTIC_STEERING_AXIS'.
For Linux, sending an effect on the X axis with a Logitech wheel works. Others brands don't have driver for Linux as far as I know.
This is only supported on PulseAudio. You can set a description when opening
your audio device that will show up in pauvcontrol, which lets you set
per-stream volume levels.
Fixes Bugzilla #4801.
dark_sylinc
Trying to build SDL with VS2019 using CMake will encounter a linking error
More specifically:
1>SDL_string.obj : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol memset referenced in function SDL_vsnprintf_REAL
* 8BitDo N30 Pro 2
* 8BitDo SN30 Gamepad
* 8BitDo SN30 Pro+
* 8BitDo Zero 2
* SZMY-POWER PC Gamepad
* ThrustMaster eSwap PRO Controller
* ZEROPLUS P4 Wired Gamepad
In additional, all 8BitDo controllers use SDL_HINT_GAMECONTROLLER_USE_BUTTON_LABELS to have the correct mapping based on user preferences.
This patch removes deferred error string formatting: now we do it during
SDL_SetError(), so there's no limit on printf-style arguments used.
Also removes stub for managing error string translations; we don't have the
facilities to maintain that and the way we set arbitrary error strings
doesn't really make this practical anyhow.
Since the final error string is set right away and unique to the thread,
we no longer need a static buffer for legacy SDL_GetError(), and we don't
have to allocate 5x 128-byte argument fields per-thread. Also, since we now
use SDL_vsnprintf instead of parsing the format string ourselves, there's a
lot of code deleted and we have access to more robust formatting powers now.
This does mean the final error strings can't be more than 128 bytes, down
from the theoretical maximum of around 768, but I think this is probably okay.
They might truncate but they will always be null-terminated!
Fixes Bugzilla #5092.
The joystick layer can't necessarily give us perfect centering, but we know
that the game controller level has logical absolute idle positions that have
nothing to do with the physical device.
So send game controller events to make it look like the device is completely
untouched before sending the final removal event.
This driver supports the Razer Atrox Arcade Stick
Some of the quirks of this driver, inherent in Windows Gaming Input:
* There will never appear to be controllers connected at startup. You must support hot-plugging in order to see these controllers.
* You can't read the state of the guide button
* You can't get controller events in the background
meyraud705
On line 220 of SDL_hidapi_xbox360.c https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/file/4608f0e6e8e3/src/joystick/hidapi/SDL_hidapi_xbox360.c#l220
if (!XINPUTGETSTATE(user_index, &xinput_state[user_index].state) == ERROR_SUCCESS) {
logical not is only applied to the left hand side of this comparison.
I think you mean:
if (XINPUTGETSTATE(user_index, &xinput_state[user_index].state) != ERROR_SUCCESS) {
Caleb Cornett
Just ran into this, and from my testing, whatever re-added the dependency is a _major_ regression. Not only is your app forced to link with CoreBluetooth, but iOS has apparently tightened up security and won't even let you _test_ your app unless it specifies the NSBluetoothAlwaysUsageDescription in an Info.plist. It doesn't even pop up an error message, it just straight up crashes.
Adding the permission isn't a good solution either, since I'd really, really rather not have my app request users' bluetooth to always be enabled, especially if the only apparent reason is for Steam Controller support.
On Raspberry Pi 3 via the VC4 driver in firmware KMS mode, none of the
found configs match the desired format, causing the function to fall through
without any config being selected.
Fix by first iterating over the found configs, and if no match exists,
don't exclude the non-matching configs. This should fix RPI3 and possibly other
targets without breaking targets that have a matching native format (such as RPI4).
This allows you to bind surfaceless contexts on a background thread to, for
example, load assets in a separate context, for platforms that have different
requirements about sharing surfaces, etc.
Martin's notes on the matter:
"Here's a patch that enables passing NULL windows to SDL_GL_MakeCurrent, if
the involved APIs allow it. Currently, this is only the case for EGL, and
even then only if some specific extensions are present (which they usually
are).
If "surfaceless" contexts are not supported, SDL_GL_MakeCurrent continues to
generate an error (albeit with a more specific error message than it used to),
so this should not break anything that wasn't broken before."
(Please see https://bugzilla.libsdl.org/show_bug.cgi?id=3695 for more
discussion.)
Fixes Bugzilla #3695.
This behavior matches SDL_RecreateWindow and makes it less likely that
another piece of code (e.g. a DestroyWindowFramebuffer implementation)
will attempt to use or free the stale surface pointer.
A project being built entirely statically will call pkg-config with
--static, which utilises the Libs.private field. Conversely it will
not use --static when not being built entirely statically, even if
there is only a static build of SDL available. This will most likely
cause the build to fail due to underlinking unless we merge the Libs
fields.
This is what the Meson build system does when it generates pkg-config
files. This also also follows the behaviour of sdl2-config.
At the same time, the runtime linker flags are not applicable to
static-only builds so only add them for shared builds.
From hmk:
"When scaling is enabled (e.g. via SDL_RenderSetLogicalSize, size not equal
to window size), mouse motion events are also scaled. Small motions are
rounded up (SDL_max() when the value after scaling is less than 1), while
larger motions are truncated by the floating point -> integer conversion.
https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/file/b18197f9bf9d/src/render/SDL_render.c#l658
The end result feels something like mouse reverse mouse acceleration + angle
snapping at low speeds, but less consistent (amount of truncation & rounding
depends on how fast the mouse is moved) and potentially much worse if the
scaling factor is large. This pretty much makes it useless for anything
where you need precise mouse aiming (think of games). I suspect this is why
aiming gets so terrible in some games that let you use scaling to reduce the
render resolution (e.g. Ion Fury).
With 4x4 scaling, I can reproduce a situation where it takes three fast flicks
of the mouse across the pad to undo one slow sweep across the pad. In other
words, extreme reverse acceleration. This does not happen when scaling is
disabled.
Furthermore, any game that uses relative mouse motion events for 3D camera
rotation probably wants the raw mouse deltas and not a value that depends on
scaling and resolution and rounding and truncation. Ideal camera rotation
just takes mouse input, multiplies it by sensitivity, and adds it to the
angle-in-radians or whatever measure is used for yaw & pitch. Pixels and
screen resolution or window dimensions should not be a part of the equation
at all, even if it could be implemented without rounding errors.
[...]
This [patch] completely eliminates angle snapping for me, and makes
sensitivity consistent. In other words, it's completely usable for, say,
aiming in a first person shooter."
Partially fixes Bugzilla #4811.
Caleb Cornett's comments:
"A few weeks ago, Alex added a partial Metal API to SDL2:
https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/22c8e7cd8d38
I noticed it was missing a few features that would help Metal become a
first-class citizen in SDL, so I went ahead and wrote them! Here are the new
APIs:
1. SDL_WINDOW_METAL flag for SDL_CreateWindow(). This allows the programmer
to specify that they intend to create a window for use with SDL_MetalView.
The flag is used to ensure correct usage of the API and to prevent
accidentally defaulting to OpenGL on iOS.
2. SDL_Metal_GetLayer(). This function takes a SDL_MetalView and returns a
pointer to the view's backing CAMetalLayer. This simplifies things
considerably, since in the current version of the SDL_Metal API the
programmer is required to bridge-cast a SDL_MetalView handle to an NSView or
UIView (depending on the platform) and then extract the layer from there.
SDL_Metal_GetLayer automatically handles all of that, making the operation
simple and cross-platform.
3. SDL_Metal_GetDrawableSize(). This function already exists in the current
SDL_Metal API (and is used behind-the-scenes for SDL_Vulkan_GetDrawableSize
on Apple platforms) but was not publicly exposed. My patch exposes this
function for public use. It works just like you'd expect.
Tested on macOS 10.14 and iOS 12.4."
Fixes Bugzilla #4796.
This does not account for scrollbars nor margins. But is much better then returning the full display size when not running fullscreen, but for example in an iframe.
The first terminator is for input parameters. The second terminator was for the
output parameters.
If an error occurs when calling MakeThreadHighPriority(), e.g. a bad thread id,
then the reply from connection_send_with_reply_and_block() will be null.
Anthony Pesch's notes on his patch:
"Currently, the WASAPI backend creates a stream in shared mode and sets the
device's callback size to be half of the shared stream's total buffer size.
This works, but doesn't coordinate will with the actual hardware. The hardware
will raise an interrupt after every period which in turn will signal the
object being waited on inside of WaitDevice. From my empirical testing, the
callback size was often larger than the period size and not a multiple of it,
which resulted in poor latency when trying to time an application based on the
audio callback. The reason for this looked something like:
* The device's callback would be called and and the audio buffer was filled.
* WaitDevice would be called.
* The hardware would raise an interrupt after one period.
* WaitDevice would resume, see that a a full callback had not been played and
then wait again.
* The hardware would raise an interrupt after another period.
* WaitDevice would resume, see that a full callback + some extra amount had
been played and then it would again call our callback and this process would
repeat.
The effect of this is that the pacing between subsequent callbacks is poor -
sometimes it's called very quickly, sometimes it's called very late.
By matching the callback's size to the stream's period size, the pacing of
calls to the user callback is improved substantially. I didn't write an actual
test for this, but my use case for this was my Dreamcast emulator
(https://redream.io) which uses the audio callback to help drive the emulation
speed. Without this change and with the default shared stream buffer (which
has a period of ~10ms) I would get frame times that were between ~3-30
milliseconds; after this change I get frame times of ~11-22 milliseconds.
Note, this patch also has a change that removes passing a duration to the
Initialize call. It seems that the default duration used (when 0 is passed)
does typically match up with the duration returned by GetDevicePeriod, however
the Initialize docs say:
> To set the buffer to the minimum size required by the engine thread, the
> client should call Initialize with the hnsBufferDuration parameter set to 0.
> Following the Initialize call, the client can get the size of the resulting
> buffer by calling IAudioClient::GetBufferSize.
This change isn't strictly required, but I made it to hopefully rule out
another source of unexpected latency."
Fixes Bugzilla #4592.
If called from background threads, use Grand Central Dispatch to use the
main thread instead. On the main thread, just call them directly.
Fixes Bugzilla #4932.
Apparently, recent versions of autotools will issue an error if an empty
description is supplied to AC_DEFINE(). Avoid these errors by just
adding a space in the square brackets.
Partially fixes Bugzilla #4908.
The warnings were produced by GCC 9.2.x for x86_64-linux-gnu or
i386-pc-msdosdjgpp targets.
Most of the fixes involve changing the type of a variable rather than
the format specifier. For many of the affected test conuter variables,
a basic int seems sufficient.
Some format specifier warnings still remain for cases where changing
type or casting seemed inappropriate. Those warnings will probably
require some new format specifier macros (e.g. SDL_PRIu32).
Jason
In iOS, URL Events trigger the DropFile event. I would also expect the same event to be fired on the macOS platform but this is not implemented at all in the AppDelegate.
Konrad
It appears that I cannot use SDL_RenderReadPixels on a bound framebuffer (SDL_Texture set as render target) as it simply results in gibberish data. However, drawing that framebuffer into the default target (window surface) does render it correctly. Other backends (OpenGL, software, Direct3D) do work fine.
It looks to me like D3D11_RenderReadPixels just gets the general backbuffer and not the current render target and its backbuffer.
Here is the patch which actually fetches the current render target and its underlying ID3D11Resource which is ID3D11Texture2D.
DominikD
There are several tests that need resources in the output directory to work:
* `testiconv` depends on `utf8.txt`
* `testoverlay2` and `teststreaming` depend on `moose.dat`
This patch adds these two files to the `RESOURCE_FILES` variable.
One could also copy `shapes\*.bmp` over to the output directory for `testshape` to use but this patch doesn't do that for three reasons:
* executable takes path as an argument and doesn't need these files side by side
* these are ~45MB and copying them over would cause build directory to swell
* there are already files in the output directory that can be used with this test (`sample.bmp` and `button.bmp`)
There are multiple SDL APIs that internally sink into dbus calls, e.g. battery
status, thread priority. If those calls happen in different threads simultaneously
it can result in dbus crashes.
To abide by dbus's multithreading guidelines we must call dbus_threads_init_default()
to enable dbus's internal locking mechanisms:
https://dbus.freedesktop.org/doc/api/html/group__DBusThreads.html#gac7b8a7001befc3eaa8c6b043151008dc
Additionally, access to a DBusMessage must be synchronized between threads.
SDL was already abiding that guideline as the DBusMessage structs aren't shared.
The following email from the dbus mailing list hints that arbitrating access to
the DBusConnection on the SDL may also be required:
https://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/dbus/2017-September/017306.html
Currently the message is double terminated, which results in SDL_DBus_CallMethodInternal()
incorrectly assuming that the other party is always returning true.
I'm not super familiar with dbus, so I'm not sure if this could also be the cause of this bug:
https://github.com/ValveSoftware/steam-for-linux/issues/6901
So if you go into System Preferences on a MacBook and toggle between a pair of
connected bluetooth headphones and built-in internal speakers, SDL will
switch the device it is playing sound through, to match this setting, on the
fly.
Likewise if the default output device is a USB thing and is unplugged; as the
default device changes at the system level, SDL will pick this up and carry
on with the new default. This is different from our unplug detection for
specific devices, as in those cases we want to send the app a disconnect
notification, instead of migrating transparently as we now do for default
devices.
Note that this should also work for capture devices; if the device changes,
SDL will start recording from the new default.
Fixes Bugzilla #4851.
This avoids the need to malloc something extra, use a semaphore, etc, and
fixes Emscripten with pthreads support, which might not spin up a web worker
until after SDL_CreateThread returns and thus can't wait on a semaphore at
this point in any case.
Fixes Bugzilla #5064.
Build with directfb is broken due to a spurious '}' and a missing 'E'
since version 2.0.12 and https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/4c2dcf490cba:
/home/buildroot/autobuild/run/instance-2/output-1/build/sdl2-2.0.12/src/video/directfb/SDL_DirectFB_render.c: In function 'SetBlendMode':
/home/buildroot/autobuild/run/instance-2/output-1/build/sdl2-2.0.12/src/video/directfb/SDL_DirectFB_render.c:202:9: error: case label not within a switch statement
202 | case SDL_BLENDMODE_MUL:
| ^~~~
/home/buildroot/autobuild/run/instance-2/output-1/build/sdl2-2.0.12/src/video/directfb/SDL_DirectFB_render.c:205:67: error: 'DSBF_DSTCOLOR' undeclared (first use in this function); did you mean 'DSBF_DESTCOLOR'?
205 | SDL_DFB_CHECK(destsurf->SetSrcBlendFunction(destsurf, DSBF_DSTCOLOR));
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~
Fixes:
- http://autobuild.buildroot.org/results/83ccefee68c2800c0544e6f40fa8bc8ee6b67b77
Signed-off-by: Fabrice Fontaine <fontaine.fabrice@gmail.com>
Andrei Kortunov
Hello. I try to implement an application for Android, which uses a new sensors API from 2.0.9 to control a camera rotation via built-in gyroscope, using the code from the test/testsensor.c as an example.
Gyroscope input itself works well, but an interval between SDL_SENSORUPDATE events is about 200ms (the SENSOR_DELAY_NORMAL, I believe), when I need the interval about 20-40ms (the SENSOR_DELAY_GAME or SENSOR_DELAY_FASTEST).
Test apps in Xcode-iOS/Test/TestiPhoneOS.xcodeproj weren't launching
in the most-recent release of Xcode and the iOS Simulator (version 11.3.1).
This was caused by their shared Info.plist file not defining a
CFBundleShortVersionString (as reported by Xcode, when launching a test
app from within Xcode).
If a driver's implementation of CreateWindowFramebuffer sets the window
surface, use that rather than overwriting it. A driver may set the window
surface if data cannot be passed via the CreateWindowFramebuffer output
parameters (e.g. surface palette colors).
Otherwise our cached state goes out of sync when updating a texture. Since
these state changes aren't necessary, they were removed instead of updating
the cached state.
Fixes Bugzilla #4998.
bluenaxela+sdl
I've noticed that the Switch Pro Controller hidapi driver does not report battery levels when connected via Bluetooth, despite having code for setting joystick->epowerlevel.
This is caused by the driver always using k_eSwitchInputReportIDs_SimpleControllerState via Bluetooth. Using that mode means that the state reports you get back from the controller do not include battery state. Not using the full controller state over Bluetooth effectively makes this driver's support for setting joystick->epowerlevel entirely pointless, only ever reporting SDL_JOYSTICK_POWER_WIRED.
Is there a reason this was set to only use SimpleControllerState via Bluetooth?
I've attached a patch I'm using to allow getting battery level for the Switch Pro Controller.
A couple notes about this patch:
1) It changes LoadStickCalibration to accept the input_mode that is selected, because that's really what should determine what is used for stick extents, since stick extents differ between the modes.
2) In my patch I only use FullControllerState when the vid/pid matches the official Switch Pro Controller, as a cautionary measure in case some third-party controllers have problems with FullControllerState mode via Bluetooth (I noticed a HORI Wireless Switch Pad I had seemed to not read controller calibration correctly for stick extents. Maybe it's calibration data was uninitialized on account of having never been used with a Switch? I'm unsure, though if that guess is right maybe SDL2 should be detecting an uninitiated calibration state and using some sensible defaults)
There are a number of poorly behaved HID devices that time out on attempts to
read various strings. Rather than end up on an endless treadmill of blacklisting
broken devices, reduce our risk by only querying devices that are gamepads.
SDL_hidapijoystick.c already checks these same usages, so we shouldn't
exclude any working HID devices (caveat below).
This also makes HidP_GetPreparsedData() and HidP_GetCaps() failure skip
the device entirely, but that seems desired. If a device can't even return basic
top-level collection data properly, we want nothing to do with that broken device.
If we do find devices that work with HIDAPI joystick and fail these calls, we can
add an exception via VID+PID matching.
bluenaxela+sdl
The HORI Wireless Switch Pad does not properly connect via bluetooth. I did some debugging and found that the code that tries to control the Home LED causes this controller to disconnect.
This results in a dlsym() call, which causes Emscripten to panic if the game
wasn't explicitly built dlopen support. eglGetProcAddress works just fine on
this platform, so just let that codepath handle it.
Eric Jing
When the project directory path contains spaces, CMake butchers the include path for the hidapi files.
I traced the problem to the cmake/sdlchecks.cmake file at line 1091, which sets flags for the build process. I surrounded the problem flag with double quotes, shown below, and CMake works with spaces in the project directory path.
This is a multi-part fix, and is the 2nd attempt at a fix for Bug 5034. Here
are the problems being addressed:
1. On macOS 10.14.x and earlier, trying to call IOHIDDeviceUnscheduleFromRunLoop
without a prior, paired call to IOHIDDeviceScheduleWithRunLoop, appears to
lead to a crash. A per-device flag has been added to make sure that these
calls are paired.
2. DARWIN_JoystickDetect was free'ing its SDL_joystick's hwdata field
(via FreeDevice) without setting it to NULL, and DARWIN_JoystickRumble wasn't
checking for a NULL hwdata. FreeDevice will now set hwdata to NULL and
DARWIN_JoystickRumble will check for a NULL hwdata.
meyraud705
Added Linux implementation, otherwise you get "Unsupported direction type" error.
Added documentation to explain why one would use SDL_HAPTIC_FIRST_AXIS.
Mathieu Laurendeau
Consider a device supporting effects on multiple axes.
There's currently no way to play effects against a single-axis direction.
A device supporting effects against X and Y may not allow to play effects with a two-axis direction coordinate, even if one of the coordinates is null.
My current (ugly) work around for this is to add a direction type SDL_HAPTIC_X_FORCE to play effects against a X-axis only direction (patch attached).
This issue impacted two GIMX users using the following wheels:
- Leo Bodnar SimSteering force feedback wheel
- Accuforce direct drive wheel
Playing constant/spring/damper effects against a X-axis direction worked well for the first wheel, but not for the second one.
A better strategy seems to play the effects against the first axis reported by the DirectInput enumeration.
This strategy also works with Logitech wheels (at least the DFGT).
It's been more than a year that I have the latest patch (playing effects against the first axis only) in the GIMX software. It's being used by thousands of people, mostly for adapting their FFB wheel to the PS4. I had no report that proves this strategy to be wrong.
Jimb Esser
Add new RawInput controller API, and improved correlation with XInput/WGI
Reorder joystick init so drivers can ask the others if they handle a device reliably
Do not poll disconnected XInput devices (major perf issue)
Fix various cases where incorrect correlation could happen
Simple mechanism for propagating unhandled Guide button presses even before guaranteed correlation
Correlate by axis motion as well as button presses
Fix failing to zero other trigger
Fix SDL_HINT_JOYSTICK_HIDAPI not working if set before calling SDL_Init()
Add missing device to device names
Disable RawInput if we have a mismatch of XInput-capable but not RawInput-capable devices
Updated to SDL 2.0.13 code with the following notes:
New HID driver: xbox360w - no idea what that is, hopefully urelated
SDL_hidapijoystick.c had been refactored to couple data handling logic with device opening logic and device lists caused some problems, yields slightly uglier integration than previously when the 360 HID device driver was just handling the data.
SDL_hidapijoystick.c now often pulls the device off of the joystick_hwdata structure for some rumble logic, but it appears that code path is never reached, so probably not a problem.
Looks like joystick_hwdata was refactored to not include a mutex in other drivers, maintainers may want to do the same refactor here if that's useful for some reason.
Something changed in how devices get names, so getting generic names.
Had to fix a (new?) bug where removing an XInput controller caused existing controllers (that moved to a new XInput index) to get identified as 0x045e/0x02fd ("it's probably Bluetooth" in code), rendering the existing HIDAPI_IsDevicePresent and new RAWINPUT_IsDevicePresent unreliable.
Jimb Esser
Add new RawInput controller API, and improved correlation with XInput/WGI
Reorder joystick init so drivers can ask the others if they handle a device reliably
Do not poll disconnected XInput devices (major perf issue)
Fix various cases where incorrect correlation could happen
Simple mechanism for propagating unhandled Guide button presses even before guaranteed correlation
Correlate by axis motion as well as button presses
Fix failing to zero other trigger
Fix SDL_HINT_JOYSTICK_HIDAPI not working if set before calling SDL_Init()
Add missing device to device names
Disable RawInput if we have a mismatch of XInput-capable but not RawInput-capable devices
Updated to SDL 2.0.13 code with the following notes:
New HID driver: xbox360w - no idea what that is, hopefully urelated
SDL_hidapijoystick.c had been refactored to couple data handling logic with device opening logic and device lists caused some problems, yields slightly uglier integration than previously when the 360 HID device driver was just handling the data.
SDL_hidapijoystick.c now often pulls the device off of the joystick_hwdata structure for some rumble logic, but it appears that code path is never reached, so probably not a problem.
Looks like joystick_hwdata was refactored to not include a mutex in other drivers, maintainers may want to do the same refactor here if that's useful for some reason.
Something changed in how devices get names, so getting generic names.
Had to fix a (new?) bug where removing an XInput controller caused existing controllers (that moved to a new XInput index) to get identified as 0x045e/0x02fd ("it's probably Bluetooth" in code), rendering the existing HIDAPI_IsDevicePresent and new RAWINPUT_IsDevicePresent unreliable.
Malte Kie?ling
I get a build error in SDL_sysjoystick.c:74 for the merged patch, but its nothing to sweat about, just -Werror=declaration-after-statement doing its usual stuff.
David Ludwig
I have created a new driver for SDL's Joystick and Game-Controller subsystem: a Virtual driver. This driver allows one to create a software-based joystick, which to SDL applications will look and react like a real joystick, but whose state can be set programmatically. A primary use case for this is to help enable developers to add touch-screen joysticks to their apps.
The driver comes with a set of new, public APIs, with functions to attach and detach joysticks, set virtual-joystick state, and to determine if a joystick is a virtual-one.
Use of virtual joysticks goes as such:
1. Attach one or more virtual joysticks by calling SDL_JoystickAttachVirtual. If successful, this returns the virtual-device's joystick-index.
2. Open the virtual joysticks (using indicies returned by SDL_JoystickAttachVirtual).
3. Call any of the SDL_JoystickSetVirtual* functions when joystick-state changes. Please note that virtual-joystick state will only get applied on the next call to SDL_JoystickUpdate, or when pumping or polling for SDL events (via SDL_PumpEvents or SDL_PollEvent).
Here is a listing of the new, public APIs, at present and subject to change:
------------------------------------------------------------
/**
* Attaches a new virtual joystick.
* Returns the joystick's device index, or -1 if an error occurred.
*/
extern DECLSPEC int SDLCALL SDL_JoystickAttachVirtual(SDL_JoystickType type, int naxes, int nballs, int nbuttons, int nhats);
/**
* Detaches a virtual joystick
* Returns 0 on success, or -1 if an error occurred.
*/
extern DECLSPEC int SDLCALL SDL_JoystickDetachVirtual(int device_index);
/**
* Indicates whether or not a virtual-joystick is at a given device index.
*/
extern DECLSPEC SDL_bool SDLCALL SDL_JoystickIsVirtual(int device_index);
/**
* Set values on an opened, virtual-joystick's controls.
* Returns 0 on success, -1 on error.
*/
extern DECLSPEC int SDLCALL SDL_JoystickSetVirtualAxis(SDL_Joystick * joystick, int axis, Sint16 value);
extern DECLSPEC int SDLCALL SDL_JoystickSetVirtualBall(SDL_Joystick * joystick, int ball, Sint16 xrel, Sint16 yrel);
extern DECLSPEC int SDLCALL SDL_JoystickSetVirtualButton(SDL_Joystick * joystick, int button, Uint8 value);
extern DECLSPEC int SDLCALL SDL_JoystickSetVirtualHat(SDL_Joystick * joystick, int hat, Uint8 value);
------------------------------------------------------------
Miscellaneous notes on the initial patch, which are also subject to change:
1. no test code is present in SDL, yet. This should, perhaps, change. Initial development was done with an ImGui-based app, which potentially is too thick for use in SDL-official. If tests are to be added, what kind of tests? Automated? Graphical?
2. virtual game controllers can be created by calling SDL_JoystickAttachVirtual with a joystick-type of SDL_JOYSTICK_TYPE_GAME_CONTROLLER, with naxes (num axes) set to SDL_CONTROLLER_AXIS_MAX, and with nbuttons (num buttons) set to SDL_CONTROLLER_BUTTON_MAX. When updating their state, values of type SDL_GameControllerAxis or SDL_GameControllerButton can be casted to an int and used for the control-index (in calls to SDL_JoystickSetVirtual* functions).
3. virtual joysticks' guids are mostly all-zeros with the exception of the last two bytes, the first of which is a 'v', to indicate that the guid is a virtual one, and the second of which is a SDL_JoystickType that has been converted into a Uint8.
4. virtual joysticks are ONLY turned into virtual game-controllers if and when their joystick-type is set to SDL_JOYSTICK_TYPE_GAMECONTROLLER. This is controlled by having SDL's default list of game-controllers have a single entry for a virtual game controller (of guid, "00000000000000000000000000007601", which is subject to the guid-encoding described above).
5. regarding having to call SDL_JoystickUpdate, either directly or indirectly via SDL_PumpEvents or SDL_PollEvents, before new virtual-joystick state becomes active (as specified via SDL_JoystickSetVirtual* function-calls), this was done to match behavior found in SDL's other joystick drivers, almost all of which will only update SDL-state during SDL_JoystickUpdate.
6. the initial patch is based off of SDL 2.0.12
7. the virtual joystick subsystem is disabled by default. It should be possible to enable it by building with SDL_JOYSTICK_VIRTUAL=1
Questions, comments, suggestions, or bug reports very welcome!
Ethan Lee
Basically replicating the solution of the Switch Controller's button label issue. Physical layout should take priority unless it's explicitly requested by the user or application!
ciremo6483
In `SDL_iconv_string` the `while (inbytesleft > 0)` loop can end up in a state where it never terminates because the library `iconv` function called from `SDL_iconv` doesn't consume any bytes.
This happened when a `WCHAR_T` input string was being converted to `UTF-8` but contained invalid characters. It would first It would first skip a few bytes due to `case SDL_ICONV_EILSEQ` but when there were 3 bytes remaining of `inbytesleft` `iconv` just didn't consume anything more (but didn't throw an error either).
It just so happens that the Microsoft Classic IntelliMouse `product_string` contains such invalid characters (`"Microsoft? Classic IntelliMouse?"`), meaning the function would get stuck with said mouse plugged in.
A fix for this would be to check if `inbytesleft` was unchanged after an iteration and in that case either decrement the counter like when `SDL_ICONV_EILSEQ` is returned or simply break the loop.
cmediaplayer
Hi, i already mentioned in the SDL discourse a bug that recreating of a texture occours pixel shader problem on direct3d renderer. There is no problem for direct3d11. You can see the issue by using my app named C Media Player which is available for Windows for free using my web site www.cmediaplayer.com. Just follow the steps:
*Open a media file
*When playing the file change the scale quality under the video menu.
*You will see the problem.
Prior to this fix, we would hit the existing_instance >= 0 case and move the joystick
again to a different index than the one requested by the caller. It also breaks the assumption
that a SDL_JoystickID is only present in SDL_joystick_players at one location.
Anthony Pesch
I was just communicating with one of the Retropie developers regarding this.
This change removed the forced window focus change on creation (3534cb3793) as part of the change no longer assumes there's only a single window being created. This was perhaps an over-aggressive removal.
Due to that change, joystick events are only received if SDL_SetKeyboardFocus is called explicitly, or if the app has specified SDL_HINT_JOYSTICK_ALLOW_BACKGROUND_EVENTS.
I think that part of my change should be reverted to continue setting mouse / keyboard focus to the window being created. If SDL_WINDOW_INPUT_FOCUS is to be used as an input flag the code could be conditional, but that would still leave existing software broken.
The 8BitDo SF30 Pro Gamepad will generate a single motor pulse for each rumble message, so we need to do this frequently to have continous rumble on this device.
pelya
KaiOS is an OS for feature phones, with numeric keypad and non-touch screen, and typically 512 Mb RAM and 4 Gb flash.
It is based on Firefox OS, all apps are made with HTML5 and Javascript. SDL can be cross-compiled using emscripten and packaged as native app.
This patch adds support for star '*' and pound '#' keys on such phones to generate SDL events.
It appears that with some (presumably) flaky drivers or hardware that the WriteFile in hid_write never completes leading to GetOverlappedResult to block forever waiting for it.
This fixes compilation errors that occur when trying to compile SDL2 for
a X11-less target. The errors were due to the fact that Mesa will
include X11 headers unless a couple of macros are defined.
Signed-off-by: Paul Cercueil <paul@crapouillou.net>
Jake Breen
When I run SDL_INIT with SDL_INIT_JOYSTICK it stalls for about 10 seconds (last report was 10,615ms), but only if I'm currently playing audio. (Like in Spotify for example.)
querying something related to device access (last dll loaded)
'BabbysFirst64.exe' (Win32): Loaded 'C:\Windows\SysWOW64\deviceaccess.dll'.
I use a USB DAC because my mobo's audio out is pretty not great. And I've noticed unplugging it seems to solve the issue. I haven't noticed any other issues that are caused by my DAC.
My DAC is the Sound BlasterX G1 https://us.creative.com/p/gaming-headsets/sound-blasterx-g1
Vid = 041E
PID = 3249
My system specs:
- Windows 10 Pro
- Ryzen 2700x
- 16GB Ram
- Nvidia 2070 RTX
Additional USB devices plugged in:
- Valve Index
- Xbox One Elite Controller
Charles Huber
This patch fixes the segfault on my Pi, though the valid display index range reported by the CHECK_DISPLAY_INDEX() macro in src/video/SDL_video.c is a little weird:
$ SDL_VIDEO_EGL_DRIVER=libEGL.so SDL_VIDEO_GL_DRIVER=libGLESv2.so ./a.out
SDL_Init(): displayIndex must be in the range 0 - -1
rofferom
I have an annoying issue on MacOS about XBoxOne Bluetooth rumble (Vendor: 0x045e, Product: 0x02fd).
When 360controller is installed, rumble is working correctly. However, Bluetooth rumble isn't working at all, with or without 360controller installed (although it is working with Chrome + https://html5gamepad.com).
I looked at the code, and it seems that XBox controllers are managed in MacOS in this file: SDL_hidapi_xbox360.c. The XBoxOne file is disabled for MacOS in SDL_hidjoystick_c.h.
The function HIDAPI_DriverXbox360_Rumble() is called correctly, and hid_write() returns no error.
I have tried a stupid test. I took the rumble packet from 360controller: ec4e88eb2d/XBOBTFF/FFDriver.cpp (L620). With the patch I have attached, I manage to have rumble working on Bluetooth (with some stupid vibration level, but it proves it can if the packet is changed).
But it breaks the USB rumble with 360controller. A comment in the function makes an explicit reference to 360controller, I think that's why I have broken this specific usecase.
I don't know what is the correct way to fix this, but it seems that the current implementation has a missing case for Bluetooth support.
Note that I also tested master this morning, and I have another issue:
if (!device->ffservice) {
return SDL_Unsupported();
}
test fails in DARWIN_JoystickRumble(). This test has been done quickly, I'm not totaly confident about its accuracy.
Elmar
creating a fullscreen window with SDL_CreateWindow(..SDL_WINDOW_FULLSCREEN_DESKTOP..) in MacOS works fine, except if it was triggered by the user with the green knob in the top left window title bar.
Then "something" is different, and SDL_CreateWindow hangs for 15-20 seconds (tested in MacOS 10.13 and 10.14).
Responsible for the hang is this code in SDL_cocoawindow.m - Cocoa_SetWindowFullscreenSpace:
const int maxattempts = 3;
int attempt = 0;
while (++attempt <= maxattempts) {
/* Wait for the transition to complete, so application changes
take effect properly (e.g. setting the window size, etc.)
*/
const int limit = 10000;
int count = 0;
while ([data->listener isInFullscreenSpaceTransition]) {
if ( ++count == limit ) {
/* Uh oh, transition isn't completing. Should we assert? */
break;
}
SDL_Delay(1);
SDL_PumpEvents();
}
if ([data->listener isInFullscreenSpace] == (state ? YES : NO))
break;
/* Try again, the last attempt was interrupted by user gestures */
if (![data->listener setFullscreenSpace:(state ? YES : NO)])
break; /* ??? */
}
One trivial workaround is to change 'const int limit = 10000' to 500. Then the freeze is so short that it doesn't look like a freeze to the user.
Looking further into the problem, I observed that the function Cocoa_SetWindowFullscreenSpace recursively calls itself via some ObjectiveC messages. I managed to extract a callstack for this (copied below): Note how Cocoa_SetWindowFullscreenSpace in stack line 22 calls SDL_PumpEvents, which eventually arrives at SDL_SendWindowEvent, which calls SDL_UpdateFullscreenMode (stack line 0), which then calls Cocoa_SetWindowFullscreenSpace again (not shown). This recursive second call is the one that hangs.
Another "solution" that worked for me was to add a flag to SDL_Window that is set in Cocoa_SetWindowFullscreenSpace and causes this function to return immediately if called from itself.
Obviously, this is also an ugly hack, but I don't have enough time to dive into this crazy Cocoa/ObjectiveC business deep enough to find a proper solution. But hopefully it's easy for one of the experts around.
Note that there is a "failure to go fullscreen"-message involved, maybe using the green knob causes this failure at first.
I can unfortunately not provide a minimum example.
Best regards,
Elmar
0 com.yasara.View 0x00000001007495af SDL_UpdateFullscreenMode + 207
1 com.yasara.View 0x00000001006e2591 SDL_SendWindowEvent + 401
2 com.yasara.View 0x0000000100775a72 -[Cocoa_WindowListener windowDidResize:] + 370
3 com.yasara.View 0x0000000100776550 -[Cocoa_WindowListener windowDidExitFullScreen:] + 512
4 com.apple.AppKit 0x00007fff3180a2a4 -[_NSWindowEnterFullScreenTransitionController failedToEnterFullScreen] + 692
5 com.apple.AppKit 0x00007fff31c59737 -[_NSEnterFullScreenTransitionController _doFailedToEnterFullScreen] + 349
6 com.apple.AppKit 0x00007fff3172aa53 __NSFullScreenDockConnectionSendEnterForSpace_block_invoke + 135
7 libxpc.dylib 0x00007fff6114b9b1 _xpc_connection_reply_callout + 36
8 libxpc.dylib 0x00007fff6114b938 _xpc_connection_call_reply_async + 82
9 libdispatch.dylib 0x00007fff60ec7e39 _dispatch_client_callout3 + 8
10 libdispatch.dylib 0x00007fff60ede3b0 _dispatch_mach_msg_async_reply_invoke + 322
11 libdispatch.dylib 0x00007fff60ed2e25 _dispatch_main_queue_callback_4CF + 807
12 com.apple.CoreFoundation 0x00007fff33d39e8b __CFRUNLOOP_IS_SERVICING_THE_MAIN_DISPATCH_QUEUE__ + 9
13 com.apple.CoreFoundation 0x00007fff33d3959a __CFRunLoopRun + 2335
14 com.apple.CoreFoundation 0x00007fff33d38a28 CFRunLoopRunSpecific + 463
15 com.apple.HIToolbox 0x00007fff32fd1b35 RunCurrentEventLoopInMode + 293
16 com.apple.HIToolbox 0x00007fff32fd1774 ReceiveNextEventCommon + 371
17 com.apple.HIToolbox 0x00007fff32fd15e8 _BlockUntilNextEventMatchingListInModeWithFilter + 64
18 com.apple.AppKit 0x00007fff3128deb7 _DPSNextEvent + 997
19 com.apple.AppKit 0x00007fff3128cc56 -[NSApplication(NSEvent) _nextEventMatchingEventMask:untilDate:inMode:dequeue:] + 1362
20 com.yasara.View 0x000000010076fab2 Cocoa_PumpEvents + 290
21 com.yasara.View 0x00000001006dd1c7 SDL_PumpEvents_REAL + 23
22 com.yasara.View 0x00000001007795cf Cocoa_SetWindowFullscreenSpace + 223
23 com.yasara.View 0x000000010074970b SDL_UpdateFullscreenMode + 555
24 com.yasara.View 0x00000001006e2476 SDL_SendWindowEvent + 118
25 com.yasara.View 0x0000000100774ff7 -[Cocoa_WindowListener resumeVisibleObservation] + 135
26 com.yasara.View 0x000000010077664c Cocoa_ShowWindow + 188
27 com.yasara.View 0x0000000100749492 SDL_FinishWindowCreation + 546
28 com.yasara.View 0x0000000100748da5 SDL_CreateWindow_REAL + 1573
29 com.yasara.View 0x000000010010d9b1 vga_setvideomode + 1347
30 com.yasara.View 0x00000001003f0d46 mod_initscreen + 2614
31 com.yasara.View 0x00000001003f344b mod_reinitscreen + 460
32 com.yasara.View 0x00000001003f370d mod_resizescreen + 383
33 com.yasara.View 0x0000000100418e39 mod_main + 815
34 com.yasara.View 0x000000010029ca5d main2 + 5766
35 com.yasara.View 0x000000010011d1b7 main.main_cpuok + 19
Ethan Lee
Attached is a diff that I used to get SetThreadPriority working locally. I still have no idea what the minimum SDK version is since Microsoft never documented it, but it's worth pointing out that they're much more aggressive about using the latest VS and UWP SDK anyway (for example, an updated Xbox is no longer compatible with VS2017, and updates are required to have a network connection of any kind).
Malte Kie?ling
At the moment i get following warnings from kmsdrm:
* in SDL_kmsdrmvideo.c KMSDRM_DestroySurfaces is return type int, but thats never returned or checked against
* in SDL_kmsdrmvideo.c KMSDRM_DestroySurfaces the variable viddata is not used
* in SDL_kmsdrmopengles.c KMSDRM_GLES_LoadLibrary a cast to NativeDisplayType is missing
I attached a patch for them :)
- Regression of test_1.c of bug 3827, after fix from bug 4798.
- Blending is also needed when the palette contains alpha value, but not necessarily colorkey.
- Clean up SDL_ConvertColorkeyToAlpha which doesn't seem to need 'ignore_alpha' parameter any-more.
(see bug 3827)
A good metric of this is when the titlebar's "minimize" button is reenabled,
which doesn't happen by the time windowDidExitFullscreen triggers.
This fixes minimizing a fullscreen window on macOS.
Fixes Bugzilla #4177.
This is the OpenGL line drawing fix for Bugzilla #3182, but there's some
disagreement about what the renderers should do here, so I'm backing this out
until after 2.0.12 ships, and then we'll reevaluate all the renderer backends
to decide what's correct, and make them all work the same.
Mohamed
It would be useful to be able to do either `#include "SDL2/SDL.h"` or `#include "SDL.h"`. This patch allows that and adds compatibility with other build systems. It also allows differentiating between SDL1 and SDL2.
Vitaly Novichkov
Recent attempt to build a recent HG state of SDL2 via AppVeyor gives the failure:
https://ci.appveyor.com/project/Wohlstand/sdl-mixer-x/builds/30821858/job/359gqvypi2f18nok
```
C:\projects\sdl-mixer-x\build-MinGW-w32-MinSizeRel-Win32-VB6-Binding\external\AudioCodecs\src\AudioCodecs-build\external\SDL2\src\SDL2HG\src\dynapi\SDL_dynapi_procs.h:56:29: error: conflicting types for 'SDL_CreateThread'
SDL_DYNAPI_PROC(SDL_Thread*,SDL_CreateThread,(SDL_ThreadFunction a, const char *b, void *c),(a,b,c),return)
Malte Kie?ling
Since https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/f908bd722523 / bug 4966 i cannot build SDL anymore. The error i get is, essentially, caused by -Werror=declaration-after-statement in SDL_kmsdrmvideo.c and SDL_kmsdrmopengles.c
Wait up to 100 milliseconds, since the window manager might alter or
outright veto the window change...or not respond at all.
In a well-functioning system, though, this should help make sure
that SDL_SetWindowPosition's results match reality.
Fixes Bugzilla #4646.
OpenGL apparently needs to not do any drawing between wl_egl_window_resize
and eglSwapBuffers, but Vulkan apps don't use SDL to present, so they
never call into an equivalent of SDL_GL_SwapWindow where our Wayland code
was handling pending resize work.
Fixes Bugzilla #4722.
This is obnoxious and wrong, but the patch that activates the Dock before
activating the app fixes the _menu_ not responding on Catalina, but the
first window created by the app won't have keyboard focus without a small
delay inserted.
This obviously needs a better solution, but it gets it limping along correctly
for now.
sjordan
We did some investigations into a different direction which I would like to share. As mentioned previously the scaling setting in the preferences play an important role for our problem and they also hint towards an issue with point/pixel scaling factors.
We found an interesting correlation between our fail case and the behavior of [nsWindow.screen backingScaleFactor]. It turns out that whenever we encounter the fail case the scale factor is zero when we print it quickly after calling SDL_CreateWindow. After some time the value changes to a non-zero value. In the success case the scaling factor is nonzero 'immediately'. Note that we don't use that factor. We also find that the window backingScaleFactor does not show the strange behavior even in the fail case.
We have also attempted to find out whether any event triggers the transition from zero to non-zero. We found the transition happening when we call SDL_PollEvent. We can even force this to happen by explicitly adding a SDL_PollEvent at an early stage, but it will only happen if a certain amount of time elapsed, so we need to add some sleep before the call to trigger the transition at an earlier stage. All that seems to imply that the transition happens async and that SDL_PollEvent merely causes the system to update its internal state at that time.
We have also verified that the scaling setting in the preferences does NOT directly correlate to the scaling factor behavior. We find that a particular scaling setting can lead to a fail case for one resolution and a success case for another resolution. This shows that the scaling setting alone does not determine whether the problem will appear or not.
We have also verified on another Mac with 10.14 that the scaling factor is always non-zero and we always have the success case.
I have no idea how to interpret this initial-zero behavior and haven't found any usable information on the screen backing scale factor. It seems as 10.15 does some stuff more async than before and maybe the problem could be caused by unfortunate timings. I would be very interested to hear your opinion about that.
...
Finally we found the cause of all our problems: it's the origin hack in Cocoa_SetWindowFullscreen:
/* Hack to fix origin on Mac OS X 10.4 */
NSRect screenRect = [[nswindow screen] frame];
if (screenRect.size.height >= 1.0f) {
rect.origin.y += (screenRect.size.height - rect.size.height);
}
If we comment this one out our game and testdraw2 do behave correctly.
It turns out that if a window is not fully contained in the screen, it's screen property becomes zero and therefore we saw a zero when printing the backing scale factor (although it's not clear why it became nonzero later).
We suggest to add a runtime check which skips this code for 10.15 (or possibly earlier if you happen to know that the hack is not needed for certain older versions).
More info: consider the line
NSRect screenRect = [[nswindow screen] frame];
in Cocoa_SetWindowFullscreen. We found that this rect has the dimensions of the desktop
on our OS X 10.15 setup. This is true both for the success case and the fail case. It seems as the success case is actually a fail case in disguise.
On the other Mac with OS X 10.14 the same rect has the dimension of the newly created screen. This is what I would expect, because at that time the window has already been created successfully and there should be a newly created screen associated to the window.
What are the cases in which the whole origin conversion code for the fullscreen case is supposed to have a non-trivial result?
Today we found that if we print the dimensions of [nswindow screen] later, then we find them to be correct. So the conclusion seems to be that OS X 10.15 does indeed do the window/screen setup more async than before and that the origin correction code uses the [nswindow screen] at a time where the window/screen setup isn't finalized yet.
It was done to allow hotkey resizing of borderless windows, but Windows will sometimes draw it, regardless of our WM_* message handling. See bug 4466 for more details.
Alex Denisov
When using Win10 on-screen keyboard (tooltip.exe), the left and right cursor keys in it do not produce SDLK_LEFT and SDLK_RIGHT events.
Windows messages generated by the on-screen keyboard, for some reason, have their scancodes set to zeroes. Here is the log from Spy++:
WM_KEYDOWN nVirtKey:VK_LEFT cRepeat:1 ScanCode:00 fExtended:0 fAltDown:0 fRepeat:0 fUp:0
WM_KEYUP nVirtKey:VK_LEFT cRepeat:1 ScanCode:00 fExtended:0 fAltDown:0 fRepeat:1 fUp:1
Regular physical keyboard produces VK_LEFT (ScanCode:4B) and VK_RIGHT (ScanCode:4D) which are interpreted correctly.
With on-screen keyboard, the switch statement in VKeytoScancode() does not check for VK_LEFT and VK_RIGHT, returning SDL_SCANCODE_UNKNOWN, which in turn does not get mapped to anything (because the scan codes are zeroes).
Add an include on SDL_error.h to avoid the following build failure
without threads:
/home/buildroot/autobuild/instance-0/output-1/host/opt/ext-toolchain/bin/../lib/gcc/arm-buildroot-linux-uclibcgnueabihf/8.3.0/../../../../arm-buildroot-linux-uclibcgnueabihf/bin/ld: build/.libs/SDL_threadprio.o: in function `SDL_LinuxSetThreadPriority_REAL':
SDL_threadprio.c:(.text+0x0): undefined reference to `SDL_Unsupported'
Fixes:
- http://autobuild.buildroot.org/results/7f7712c5bd47de4a3fcec1e0d0526fd5a3ecd532
Signed-off-by: Fabrice Fontaine <fontaine.fabrice@gmail.com>
Likewise for the GLES1 and GLES2 renderers.
This solves the missing pixel at the end of a line and removes all the
heuristics for various platforms/drivers. It's possible we could still use
GL_LINE_STRIP with this and save some vertex buffer space, assuming this
doesn't upset some driver somewhere, but this seems to be a clean fix that
makes the GL renderers match the software renderer output.
Diamond-exit rule explanation:
http://graphics-software-engineer.blogspot.com/2012/04/rasterization-rules.html
Fixes Bugzilla #3182.
Anthony Pesch
* Remove triple buffering support. As far as I can tell, this goes against the libdrm API; the EGL implementations themselves control the buffering. Removing it isn't absolutely necessary as it seemingly works on the Pi at least, but I noticed this while doing my work and explained my reasoning in the commit.
* Replace the crtc_ready logic which allocates an extra bo to perform the initial CRTC configuration (which is required before calling drmModePageFlip) with a call to drmModeSetCrtc after the front and back buffers are allocated, avoiding this allocation.
* Standardized the SDL_*Data variable names and null checks to improve readability. Given that there were duplicate fields in each SDL_*Data structure, having generic names such as "data" at times was very confusing.
* Removed unused fields from the SDL_*Data structures and moves all display related fields out of SDL_VideoData and into SDL_DisplayData. Not required since the code only supports a single display right now, but this was helpful in reading and understanding the code initially.
* Implement KMSDRM_GetDisplayModes / KMSDRM_SetDisplayMode to provide dynamic modeset support.
These changes have been tested on a Raspberry Pi 4 and a Dell XPS laptop with an HD 520.
As an update, I went back over the triple buffer changes and left them in. I didn't entirely get the code originally, I had just seen it calling KMSDRM_gbm_surface_lock_front_buffer twice for a single swap and had removed it because I was paranoid of bugs stemming from it while working on the modeset changes.
I've made a few small changes to the logic that had thrown me off originally and rebased the changes:
* The condition wrapping the call to release buffer was incorrect.
* The first call to KMSDRM_gbm_surface_lock_front_buffer has been removed. I don't understand why it existed.
* Added additional comments describing what was going on in the code (as it does fix the buffer release pattern of the original code before it).
meyraud705
In SDL_hidapi_switch.c
line 443: Function BTrySetupUSB call WriteProprietary with pBuf=NULL and ucLen=0
line 376: WriteProprietary check its input (!pBuf && ucLen > 0) || ucLen > sizeof(packet.rgucProprietaryData): ucLen is 0 so it passes
line 382: WriteProprietary call memcpy with pBuf=NULL
meyraud705
Dualshock4 on bluetooth need 78 bytes for the rumble data while SDL_HIDAPI_RumbleRequest can only hold 64 bytes.
'volatile' is not meant for thread synchronization.
The list of rumble request could grow infinitely if user call SDL_JoystickRumble too much. The documentation says "Each call to this function cancels any previous rumble effect", so overwriting pending request seem like a good idea.
This fixes a crash whereby SDL could crash on macOS/Darwin, if and when a
USB game controller gets unplugged. SDL was not retaining a reference
to the controller's OS/IOKit-provided 'device object', and was capable
of trying to use it, after a device was hot-unplugged.
There is now a thread that handles all HIDAPI rumble requests and a lock that guarantees that we're not reading and writing the device at the same time.
The index and indices were swapped; Which is fine as long as there are
no gaps in the ABS_HAT* event availability but otherwise things do get confused.
Signed-off-by: Sjoerd Simons <sjoerd.simons@collabora.co.uk>
Cameron Cawley
This adds a number of files used by the build systems to the .hgignore file. Most of them are for CMake, but there are other additions as well.
Malte
clion builds into cmake-build-debug, cmake-build-release etc. by default. Also, it creates the .idea forlder in wich it places some (mostly local) config.
Since SDL is perfectly buildable from within the IDE, i think it'd be nice to have the build and ide artifacts ignored by hg.
Martin Fiedler
To be precise, this is about *desktop OpenGL* on X11. For OpenGL ES, EGL is already used (as it's the only way to get an OpenGL ES context), as Sylvain noted above.
To shine some light on why this is needed:
In 99% of all cases, using GLX on X11 is fine, even though it's effectively deprecated in favor of EGL [1]. However, there's at least one use case that *requires* the OpenGL context being created with EGL instead of GLX, and that's DRM_PRIME interoperability: The function glEGLImageTargetTexture2DOES simply doesn't work with GLX. (Currently, Mesa actually crashes when trying that.)
Some example code:
https://gist.github.com/kajott/d1b29c613be30893c855621edd1f212e
Runs on Intel and open-source AMD drivers just fine (others unconfirmed), but with #define USE_EGL 0 (i.e. forcing it to GLX), it crashes. The same happens when using SDL for window and context creation.
The good news is that most of the pieces for EGL support on X11 are already in place: SDL_egl.c is pretty complete (and used for desktop OpenGL on Wayland, for example), and SDL_x11opengl.c has the aforementioned OpenGL-ES-on-EGL support. However, when it comes to desktop OpenGL, it's hardcoded to fall back to GLX.
I'm not advocating to make EGL the default for desktop OpenGL on X11; don't fix what ain't broken. But something like an SDL_HINT_VIDEO_X11_FORCE_EGL would be very appreciated to make use cases like the above work with SDL.
[1] source: Eric Anholt, major Linux graphics stack developer, 7 years ago already - see last paragraph of https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=MTE3MTI
Luis Caceres
The current handling of Wayland mouse pointer events only handles wl_pointer.axis events, which, according to the Wayland documentation, deal with mouse wheel scroll events on a continuous scale. While this is reasonable for some input sources (e.g. touchpad two-finger scrolling), it is not for mouse wheel clicks which generate wl_pointer.axis events with large deltas.
This patch adds handling for wl_pointer.axis_discrete and wl_pointer.frame events and prefers to report SDL_MouseWheelEvent in discrete units if they are available. This means that for mouse wheel scrolling we count in clicks, but for touchpad two-finger scrolling we still use whatever units Wayland uses. This behaviour is closer to that of the X11 backend.
Since these events are only available since version 5 of the wl_seat interface, this patch also checks for this and falls back to the previous behaviour if its not available. I also had to add definitions for some of the pointer and keyboard events specified in versions 2-5 but these are just stubs and do nothing.
Make sure the thread is actually paused, and context backep-up, before
SurfaceView is destroyed (eg surfaceDestroyed() actually returns).
Add a timeout when surfaceDestroyed() is called, and check 'backup_done' variable.
It prevents crashes like:
#00 pc 000000000000c0d0 /system/lib64/libutils.so (android::RefBase::incStrong(void const*) const+8)
#01 pc 000000000000c7f4 /vendor/lib64/egl/eglSubDriverAndroid.so (EglAndroidWindowSurface::UpdateBufferList(ANativeWindowBuffer*)+284)
#02 pc 000000000000c390 /vendor/lib64/egl/eglSubDriverAndroid.so (EglAndroidWindowSurface::DequeueBuffer()+240)
#03 pc 000000000000bb10 /vendor/lib64/egl/eglSubDriverAndroid.so (EglAndroidWindowSurface::GetBuffer(EglSubResource*, EglMemoryDesc*)+64)
#04 pc 000000000032732c /vendor/lib64/egl/libGLESv2_adreno.so (EglWindowSurface::UpdateResource(EsxContext*)+116)
#05 pc 0000000000326dd0 /vendor/lib64/egl/libGLESv2_adreno.so (EglWindowSurface::GetResource(EsxContext*, EsxResource**, EsxResource**, int)+56)
#06 pc 00000000002ae484 /vendor/lib64/egl/libGLESv2_adreno.so (EsxContext::AcquireBackBuffer(int)+364)
#07 pc 0000000000249680 /vendor/lib64/egl/libGLESv2_adreno.so (EsxContext::Clear(unsigned int, unsigned int, unsigned int, EsxClearValues*)+1800)
#08 pc 00000000002cb52c /vendor/lib64/egl/libGLESv2_adreno.so (EsxGlApiParamValidate::GlClear(EsxDispatch*, unsigned int)+132)
Improve handling of landscape/portrait orientation. Promote to SCREEN_ORIENTATION_SENSOR_* when needed.
Android window can be somehow resizable.
If SDL_WINDOW_RESIZABLE is set, window size change is allowed, for instance when orientation changes (provided the hint allows it).
Konrad
I took the liberty of rewriting this function a bit as it seemed to be unnecessary extended with ifs regarding flags (we can check everything in one pass which seem to be the thing which confuses Visual C++ 2019 as well).
Also, I have made CPU features an int instead of uint because if we check it against flags which are all ints it might as well just be int (no signed/unsigned bitwise comparison).
Konrad
This kind of blending is rather quite useful and in my opinion should be available for all renderers. I do need it myself, but since I didn't want to use a custom blending mode which is supported only by certain renderers (e.g. not in software which is quite important for me) I did write implementation of SDL_BLENDMODE_MUL for all renderers altogether.
SDL_BLENDMODE_MUL implements following equation:
dstRGB = (srcRGB * dstRGB) + (dstRGB * (1-srcA))
dstA = (srcA * dstA) + (dstA * (1-srcA))
Background:
https://i.imgur.com/UsYhydP.png
Blended texture:
https://i.imgur.com/0juXQcV.png
Result for SDL_BLENDMODE_MOD:
https://i.imgur.com/wgNSgUl.png
Result for SDL_BLENDMODE_MUL:
https://i.imgur.com/Veokzim.png
I think I did cover all possibilities within included patch, but I didn't write any tests for SDL_BLENDMODE_MUL, so it would be lovely if someone could do it.
This sequence works across Microsoft, PowerA, PDP, and HORI controllers.
The newer Microsoft XBox firmware requires synchronizing the rumble sequence number, when SDL sees it after the initial connect
The Razer Wildcat controller requires waiting for init responses before continuing the initialization sequence.
The PDP Battlefield 1 controller takes over a second to be ready for initialization, and if initialization is attempted before then, it will fail.
Use XGetKeyboardControl to initialize the current XKeyboardState, and
skip XAutoRepeatOn invocation if global_auto_repeat is AutoRepeatModeOn.
This fixes SDL2 when the X11 client is untrusted.
Do not try to guess MIT_SHM extension availability from the string
returned by XDisplayName, use the appropriate API instead.
This fixes SDL2 inside hasher.
Christoph Charles
The new source files for coremotion sensors don't seem to have been included correctly in configure.in. This leads to the build script ios-build.sh to fail at link time, complaining about missing symbols, namely about missing SDL_COREMOTION_SensorDriver.
Murad
On my system, SDL_GetPowerInfo() returns -1 seconds of battery life left. I have quickly investigated that in my case SDL uses sys interface to get battery data. It tries to read "time_to_empty_now" file which is not always present. However, it is still possible to calculate remaining lifetime using "energy_now" and "power_now" files. This is what my simple patch (included as attachment) tries to accomplish.
Best wishes.
LinGao
We build SDL with Visual studio 2017 compiler on Windows Server 2016, but it failed to build due to error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol memset referenced in function SDL_SetJoystickIDForPlayerIndex with MSVC x64 on Windows on latest default branch. And we found that it can be first reproduced on 0fff06175109 changeset. Could you please help have a look about this issue? Thanks in advance!
Steps to Reproduce:
1.hg clone https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL D:\SDL\src
2.Open a VS 2017 x64 command prompt as admin and browse to D:\SDL
3.msbuild /p:Configuration=Release /p:Platform=x64 /p:WindowsTargetPlatformVersion=10.0.17134.0 VisualC\SDL.sln /t:Rebuild
Actual result:
Creating library D:\SDL\src\VisualC\x64\Release\SDL2.lib and object D:\SDL\src\VisualC\x64\Release\SDL2.exp
SDL_joystick.obj : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol memset referenced in function SDL_SetJoystickIDForPlayerIndex [D:\SDL\src\VisualC\SDL\SDL.vcxproj]
D:\SDL\src\VisualC\x64\Release\SDL2.dll : fatal error LNK1120: 1 unresolved externals [D:\SDL\src\VisualC\SDL\SDL.vcxproj]
Done Building Project "D:\SDL\src\VisualC\SDL\SDL.vcxproj" (Rebuild target(s)) -- FAILED.
The function we currently use, IOHIDDeviceRegisterRemovalCallback(), often
fails on Catalina with a "__CFRunLoopModeFindSourceForMachPort returned NULL"
error message. Once a removal callback is missed, we will eventually crash when
the joystick is closed attempting to use the invalid IOHIDDeviceRef.
https://forums.developer.apple.com/thread/124444
Konrad
This was something rather trivial to add, but asked at least several times before (I did google about it as well).
It should be possible to dynamically change scaling mode of the texture. It is actually trivial task, but until now it was only possible with a hint before creating a texture.
I needed it for my game as well, so I took the liberty of writing it myself.
This patch adds following functions:
SDL_SetTextureScaleMode(SDL_Texture * texture, SDL_ScaleMode scaleMode);
SDL_GetTextureScaleMode(SDL_Texture * texture, SDL_ScaleMode *scaleMode);
That way you can change texture scaling on the fly.
Using Wii U GameCube USB adapter with multiple controllers attached and
restarting SDL input in a game results in extra joysticks with NULL name.
HIDAPI_CleanupDeviceDriver() shut down joysticks by iterating through
device->num_joysticks but each HIDAPI_JoystickDisconnected() decreases
device->num_joysticks and shifts joysticks array down. Resulting in only
half of controllers being shutdown. It worked with only 1 controller
attached though.
Disconnect HIDAPI device joystick 0 until there are none left.
Message in the log, when going to background:
"call to OpenGL ES API with no current context (logged once per thread)"
Because of SDL_WINDOWEVENT_MINIMIZED is sent from the Java Activity thread.
It calls SDL_RendererEventWatch(), _WindowEvent() and glFinish() without context.
Solution is to move sending of SDL_WINDOWEVENT_MINIMIZED to the SDL thread.
Added the functions SDL_JoystickFromPlayerIndex(), SDL_JoystickSetPlayerIndex(), SDL_GameControllerFromPlayerIndex(), and SDL_GameControllerSetPlayerIndex()
Rare exception, not catch-able, which appears when the activity gets in a broken
state.
java.lang.IllegalStateException:
at android.app.FragmentManagerImpl.checkStateLoss (FragmentManagerImpl.java:1323)
at android.app.FragmentManagerImpl.popBackStackImmediate (FragmentManagerImpl.java:493)
at android.app.Activity.onBackPressed (Activity.java:2215)
at org.libsdl.app.SDLActivity.onBackPressed (SDLActivity.java)
at android.app.Activity.onKeyUp (Activity.java:2193)
at android.view.KeyEvent.dispatch (KeyEvent.java:2685)
at android.app.Activity.dispatchKeyEvent (Activity.java:2423)
at org.libsdl.app.SDLActivity.dispatchKeyEvent (SDLActivity.java)
For some obscure reason, the order in which the libdrm/libgbm libraries
are loaded matters.
Without this fix, the first call to check_modesetting() will work and
load then unload all symbols properly, but the second call to this
function will lock up as soon as dlopen() is called on libdrm.
Swapping the order in which the libdrm and libgbm libraries are loaded
is enough to fix (or work around?) this issue.
Fixes#4891:
https://bugzilla.libsdl.org/show_bug.cgi?id=4891
Signed-off-by: Paul Cercueil <paul@crapouillou.net>
Aaron Barany
I realized I made a minor mistake in my patch: I changed the constructor prototype for SDL_DisplayData, but didn't update the declaration in the .h file. The compiler and linker don't complain, but it would probably be best to fix in case a later change runs into a problem from the mismatch. I have attached a patch to fix this.
meyraud705
On a Dualshock 4 controller using hidapi driver, calling SDL_JoystickRumble with a duration too long (SDL_HAPTIC_INFINITY for example) causes the rumble to stop immediately.
This happens because of integer overflow on line 301 of SDL_hidapi_ps4.c
(https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/file/a3077169ad23/src/joystick/hidapi/SDL_hidapi_ps4.c#l301), which sets expiration time in the past.
When we initialize the controller it has an internal rumble sequence number, and if our rumble sequence number doesn't match that, rumble won't happen. To fix that we cycle through the range of sequence numbers, and at some point we'll match up with the controller's sequence number and it'll roll forward until it matches our next rumble sequence number.
Aaron Barany
There appears to be no way to directly access the display DPI on iOS, so as an approximation the DPI for the iPhone 1 is used as a base value and is multiplied by the screen's scale. This should at least give a ballpark number for the various screen scales. (based on https://stackoverflow.com/questions/25756087/detecting-iphone-6-6-screen-sizes-in-point-values it appears that both 2x and 3x are used)
I have updated the patch to use a table of current devices and use a computation as a fallback. I have also updated the fallback computation to be more accurate.
Aaron Barany
Add SDL_HINT_VIDEO_EXTERNAL_CONTEXT hint to notify SDL that the graphics context is external. This disables the automatic context save/restore behavior on Android and avoids using OpenGL by default when SDL_WINDOW_VUKLAN isn't set.
When the application wishes to manage the OpenGL contexts on Android, this avoids cases where SDL unbinds the context and creates new contexts, which can interfere with the application's operation.
When using Vulkan and Metal renderer implementations, this avoids SDL forcing OpenGL to be enabled on certain platforms. While using the SDL_WINDOW_VULKAN flag can be used to achieve the same thing, it also causes Vulkan to be loaded. If the application uses Vulkan directly, this is not necessary, and fails window creation when using Metal due to Vulkan not being present. (assuming MoltenVK isn't installed)
Aaron Barany
Since OpenGL is deprecated on iOS, it is advantageous to be able to remove all OpenGL related code when building SDL for iOS. This patch adds the necessary #if checks to compile in this case.
SDL_SendWindowEvent will only send a RESTORED event if the window has
the minimized or maximized flag set. However, for a SHOWN event, it
will clear the minimized flag. Since the SHOWN event was being sent
first for a MapNotify event, the RESTORED event would never be sent.
Swapping the SendWindowEvent calls around fixes this.
https://bugzilla.libsdl.org/show_bug.cgi?id=4821
Calling open() on input devices can generate device I/O which blocks
the main thread and causes dropped frames. Using stat() we can avoid
opening anything unless /dev/input has changed since we last polled.
We could have used something fancy like inotify, but it didn't seem
worth the added complexity for this uncommon non-udev case.
Eric Shepherd
Currently, SDL on Cocoa macOS creates a rudimentary menu bar programmatically if none is already present when the app is registered during setup.
SDL could be much more easily and flexibly used on macOS if upon finding that no menus are currently in place, it first looked for the application's main menu nib or xib file and, if found, loaded that instead of programmatically building the menus.
This would then let developers simply drop in a nib file with a menu bar defined in it and it would be installed and used automatically.
Attached is a patch that does just this. It changes the SDL_cocoaevents.m file to:
* In Cocoa_RegisterApp(), before calling CreateApplicationMenus(), it calls a new function, LoadMainMenuNibIfAvailable(), which attempts to load and install the main menu nib file, using the nib name fetched from the Info.plist file. If that succeeds, LoadMainMenuNibIfAvailable() returns true; otherwise false.
* If LMMNIA() returns false, CreateApplicationMenus() is called to programmatically build the menus as before.
* Otherwise, we're done, and using the menus from the nib/xib file!
I made these changes to support a project I'm working on, and felt they were useful enough to be worth offering them for uplift. They should have zero impact on existing projects' behavior, but make Cocoa SDL development miles easier.
(note from PulkoMandy on Bugzilla #4442 about why this is a desirable patch:
"The event mask: note that the window and GL view run in their own thread
which I don't expect to be too much CPU bound, and will quickly pop these
messages and forward them to the main thread in our SDL code. Therefore the
B_NO_POINTER_HISTORY should be no problem, and is the default on Haiku
anyway (it was not in BeOS, but we changed that and added a
B_FULL_POINTER_HISTORY flag to request the old behavior explicitly). So, this
seems fine.")
Partially fixes Bugzilla #4442.
Michael Roe
The mappings for keyboard scancodes on Linux do not include keypad left and right parentheses (used on some Microsoft keyboard), keypad plus/minus, LANG1 and LANG2 (used on Korean keyboards), XK86MenuKB, and F20 (remapped to Audio Mic Mute in the usual X11 config).
Solra Bizna
I have written a program that, in the event that the user requests more MSAA samples than their hardware supports, attempts to gracefully fall back to the best MSAA available. This code works with my conventional OpenGL renderer, but if I change nothing about the code except to make it request an OpenGL ES profile instead, Xlib kills the program with an error that looks like:
X Error of failed request: BadWindow (invalid Window parameter)
Major opcode of failed request: 4 (X_DestroyWindow)
Resource id in failed request: 0x5c00008
Serial number of failed request: 188
Current serial number in output stream: 193
To trigger the bug, attempt to create a window with the SDL_WINDOW_OPENGL flag, with SDL_GL_CONTEXT_PROFILE_MASK set to SDL_GL_CONTEXT_PROFILE_ES, and with SDL_GL_MULTISAMPLESAMPLES set to any unsupported value. SDL_CreateWindow properly returns NULL, but at this point the program is already doomed. Xlib will shortly terminate the program with an error. Calling SDL_CreateWindow again will immediately trigger this termination.
I have attached a skeletal program that reproduces this bug for me. Replacing SDL_GL_CONTEXT_PROFILE_ES with SDL_GL_CONTEXT_PROFILE_COMPATIBILITY avoids the bug (but, obviously, doesn't create an OpenGL ES context).
As I suspected, the problem was with XDestroyWindow being called twice on the same window. The X11_CreateWindow function in src/video/x11/SDL_x11window.c calls SetupWindowData. If initialization fails after that point, XDestroyWindow gets called on the window by a subsequent call to X11_DestroyWindow. But, later in the same function, iff a GLES context is requested and initializing it fails, X11_XDestroyWindow (which wraps XDestroyWindow) is manually called. Shortly after, the intended call to X11_DestroyWindow occurs, which attempts to destroy the same window again. Boom.
(The above confusing summary involves three separate, similarly-named functions: XDestroyWindow, X11_DestroyWindow, X11_XDestroyWindow)
I have attached a simple patch that removes the redundant X11_XDestroyWindow calls. I've tested that XDestroyWindow still gets called for the windows in question, and that it only gets called once.
Fixes a race where we try to build version res file in build directory
before it has even been created. Prevents errors like:
/bin/bash ../SDL2-2.0.10/build-scripts/updaterev.sh
/bin/bash ../SDL2-2.0.10/build-scripts/mkinstalldirs build
mkdir -p -- build
x86_64-pokysdk-mingw32-windres --include-dir=/home/pokybuild/yocto-worker/meta-mingw/build/build/tmp/work/x86_64-nativesdk-mingw32-pokysdk-mingw32/nativesdk-libsdl2/2.0.10-r0/recipe-sysroot/opt/poky/3.0/sysroots/x86_64-pokysdk-mingw32/usr/include ../SDL2-2.0.10/src/main/windows/version.rc build/version.o
x86_64-pokysdk-mingw32-windres: build/version.o: No such file or directory
Makefile:692: recipe for target 'build/version.o' failed
make: *** [build/version.o] Error 1
make: *** Waiting for unfinished jobs....
touch build/.created
WARNING: exit code 1 from a shell command.
Extension of fix:
https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/bb65ba8e039b
Signed-off-by: Anuj Mittal <am.devel@gmail.com>
---
configure.ac | 2 +-
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)
- _num_clips was not set in constructor, so a NULL _clips could be
mistakenly dereferenced.
- As _clips is accessible outside the class, it is not a good idea to
free/reallocate it. Try to limit this by reallocating only when it needs to
grow.
Partially fixes Bugzilla #4442.
warning: either cast from 'int' to 'size_t' (aka 'unsigned long') is ineffective, or there is loss of precision before the conversion [bugprone-misplaced-widening-cast]
This can happen if a window is still grabbed when we try to move it, or if
the X11 ecosystem is just in a bad mood, I guess.
This makes sure that SDL will report the correct position for a window;
otherwise, SDL_GetWindowPosition will just report whatever the last
SDL_SetWindowPosition call requested, even if the window didn't actually move.
Fixes Bugzilla #4646.
Much of the heavy lifting of this optimization is lifted from the Pixman
project, which is distributed under an MIT-style license. As far as possible,
these elements have been relicensed to the zlib license.
Fixes an issue in macOS 10.15 where the displayed content would move up after entering, exiting and re-entering exclusive fullscreen when certain display modes were used (bug #4822).
Bug #3949 is also related to this change.
Use eglGetProcAddress for everything on EGL >= 1.5. Try SDL_LoadFunction first
for EGL <= 1.4 in case it's a core symbol, and as a fallback if
eglGetProcAddress fails. Finally, for EGL <= 1.4, fallback to
eglGetProcAddress to catch extensions not exported from the shared library.
(Maybe) Fixes Bugzilla #4794.
Sylvain
Seems to be a regression in this commit: https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/7fdbffd47c0e
SDL_CalculatePitch() was using format->BytesPerPixel, now it uses SDL_BYTESPERPIXEL().
The underlying issue is that "surface->format->BytesPerPixel" is *not* always the same as SDL_BYTESPERPIXEL(format);
BytesPerPixel defined as format->BytesPerPixel = (bpp + 7) / 8;
vs
#define SDL_BYTESPERPIXEL(format) ... (format & 0xff)
Because of SDL_pixels.h format definitions, one is giving a BytesPP 1, the other 0.
Using (1 << 14) instead of 0x4000 might be clearer for the maintainer, but
it makes it harder to look up these flags when debugging an app. The value
has to be written once by one person, the has to be read by tons of people
over and over.
"This patch does the following:
* Instead of SDL_FillRects calling SDL_FillRect in a loop the opposite
happens -- SDL_FillRect (a specific case) calls SDL_FillRects (a general case)
with a count of 1
* The switch/case block is moved out of the loop -- it modifies the color
once and stores the fill routine in a pointer which is then used throughout
the loop"
Fixes Bugzilla #4674.
The 10 ms delay effectively caps input polling at 100 Hz and rendering
at 100 FPS if applications use these functions in their event loop. The
delay may also lead to dropped frames even at 60 FPS due if they are
unlucky enough to hit the delay and rendering takes longer than 6 ms.
fix building with Mesa 19.2
With Mesa 19.2 building fails with:
/include/GLES/gl.h:63:25: error: conflicting types for 'GLsizeiptr'
The same type is defined in include/SDL_opengl.h for OpenGL and the two
headers should not be included at the same time.
This was just never noticed because the same header guard '__gl_h_' was
used. This was changed in Mesa. The result is this error.
Fix this the same way GLES2 already handles this: Don't include the GLES
header when the OpenGL header was already included.
(https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/6a3670d6108d)
The X11 target sets mouse->last_x and last_y in EnterNotify and then calls
SDL_SendMouseMotion(), which throws away the new position because it matches
the mouse->last_x and last_y we just set, meaning that if the pointer is
in the window when it created, SDL_GetMouseState() will report a position of
0,0 until a MotionNotify event (the pointer moves) arrives and corrects the
mouse state.
Mostly fixes Bugzilla #1612.
The SDL_USE_LIBDBUS define is set inside SDL_debug.h, therefore the
circular dependency made it impossible for this feature to be enabled.
Instead, guard SDL_dbus.h based on the autoconf variable HAVE_DBUS_DBUS_H
Additionally, fix one of the rtkit comments. CAP_SYS_NICE isn't required
to achieve high priority. But there is some scheduler config that rtkit
needs the app to setup.
The Offscreen video driver is intended to be used for headless rendering
as well as allows for multiple GPUs to be used for headless rendering
Currently only supports EGL (OpenGL / ES) or Framebuffers
Adds a hint to specifiy which EGL device to use: SDL_HINT_EGL_DEVICE
Adds testoffscreen.c which can be used to test the backend out
Disabled by default for now
This fills in the CFBundleVersion and CFBundleShortVersionString fields,
if and when SDL's test-apps are built via CMake. This is needed to install
the .app bundles on iOS 13+ (using 'xcrun simctl install booted path/to/testsuchandsuch.app')
To use, set the following CMake variables when running CMake's configuration stage:
- CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME=tvOS
- CMAKE_OSX_SYSROOT=<SDK> (examples: appletvos, appletvsimulator, appletvos12.4, /full/path/to/AppleTVOS.sdk, etc.)
- CMAKE_OSX_ARCHITECTURES=<semicolon-separated list of CPU architectures> (example: "arm64;x86_64")
When using a recent version of CMake (3.14+), this should make it possible to:
- build SDL for iOS, both static and dynamic
- build SDL test apps (as iOS .app bundles)
- generate a working SDL_config.h for iOS (using SDL_config.h.cmake as a basis)
To use, set the following CMake variables when running CMake's configuration stage:
- CMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME=iOS
- CMAKE_OSX_SYSROOT=<SDK> (examples: iphoneos, iphonesimulator, iphoneos12.4, /full/path/to/iPhoneOS.sdk, etc.)
- CMAKE_OSX_ARCHITECTURES=<semicolon-separated list of CPU architectures> (example: "arm64;armv7s")
Examples:
- for Simulator, using the latest, installed SDK:
cmake path/to/SDL -DCMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME=iOS -DCMAKE_OSX_SYSROOT=iphonesimulator -DCMAKE_OSX_ARCHITECTURES=x86_64
- for Device, using the latest, installed SDK, 64-bit only
cmake path/to/SDL -DCMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME=iOS -DCMAKE_OSX_SYSROOT=iphoneos -DCMAKE_OSX_ARCHITECTURES=arm64
- for Device, using the latest, installed SDK, mixed 32/64 bit
cmake path/to/SDL -DCMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME=iOS -DCMAKE_OSX_SYSROOT=iphoneos -DCMAKE_OSX_ARCHITECTURES="arm64;armv7s"
- for Device, using a specific SDK revision (iOS 12.4, in this example):
cmake path/to/SDL -DCMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME=iOS -DCMAKE_OSX_SYSROOT=iphoneos12.4 -DCMAKE_OSX_ARCHITECTURES=arm64
- for Simulator, using the latest, installed SDK, and building SDL test apps (as .app bundles):
cmake path/to/SDL -DSDL_TEST=1 -DCMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME=iOS -DCMAKE_OSX_SYSROOT=iphonesimulator -DCMAKE_OSX_ARCHITECTURES=x86_64
Background:
Chengdu Haiguang IC Design Co., Ltd (Hygon) is a Joint Venture
between AMD and Haiguang Information Technology Co.,Ltd., aims at
providing high performance x86 processor for China server market.
Its first generation processor codename is Dhyana, which
originates from AMD technology and shares most of the
architecture with AMD's family 17h, but with different CPU Vendor
ID("HygonGenuine")/Family series number(Family 18h).
Related Hygon kernel patch can be found on:
http://lkml.kernel.org/r/5ce86123a7b9dad925ac583d88d2f921040e859b.1538583282.git.puwen@hygon.cn
Best regards.
The LE transformation for vec_perm has an implicit assumption that the
permutation is being used to reorder vector elements (in this case 4-byte
integer word elements), not to reorder bytes within those elements. Although
this is legal behavior, it is not anticipated by the transformation performed
by the compilers.
This causes pygame-1.9.1 test failure on PPC64LE because blitted pixmaps are
corrupted there due to how SDL uses vec_perm().
From RedHat / Fedora: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1392465
Original patch was provided by: Menanteau Guy <menantea@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
If KMSDRM_drmModeSetCrtc is called when the swap interval is
set to 0, the driver behaves as though vertical sync is engaged by
limiting framerate to the refresh rate, but performance is much worse
than with vertical sync enabled.
Resolve this issue by ensuring that the Crtc is only set up once,
and KMSDRM_drmModePageFlip is called, albeit without any followup
queueing or waiting for flips.
Daniel Drake
A long time ago, it was possible to play neverball on Linux using the accelerometer found in HP laptops.
The kernel exposes the accelerometer as a joystick (/dev/input/jsX) as well as an evdev device (/dev/input/eventX). I guess it worked fine when SDL was using the js interface, but then stopped working here: http://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/fdaeea9e7567
Looking at current code which uses udev to discover joysticks, it looks for the udev tag ID_INPUT_JOYSTICK.
However udev's internal input_id logic specifically tags accelerometers as ID_INPUT_ACCELEROMETER and nothing else.
This looks like a good fit for SDL_HINT_ACCELEROMETER_AS_JOYSTICK.
Ozkan Sezer
As for the issue: This bmp reports bpp=0, therefore SDL_CalculatePitch()
returns pitch==0, which is then fed to SDL_malloc() (which is malloc())
and malloc(0) returns _something_ which is not NULL but not someting
that we expect.. Then testsprite.c:LoadSprite() accesses the pixels
as *(Uint8*)pixels which valrind reports as:
==15533== Invalid read of size 1
==15533== at 0x8048C08: LoadSprite (testsprite.c:45)
==15533== by 0x80492FC: main (testsprite.c:224)
==15533== Address 0x449e588 is 0 bytes after a block of size 0 alloc'd
==15533== at 0x40072B2: malloc (vg_replace_malloc.c:270)
==15533== by 0x4045719: SDL_CreateRGBSurface (SDL_surface.c:126)
==15533== by 0x40403C1: SDL_LoadBMP_RW (SDL_bmp.c:237)
==15533== by 0x8048BB2: LoadSprite (testsprite.c:36)
==15533== by 0x80492FC: main (testsprite.c:224)
Besides, valrind also reports this:
==15533== Conditional jump or move depends on uninitialised value(s)
==15533== at 0x40403F3: SDL_LoadBMP_RW (SDL_bmp.c:247)
==15533== by 0x8048BB2: LoadSprite (testsprite.c:36)
==15533== by 0x80492FC: main (testsprite.c:224)
Easy/quick solution would be early-rejecting a bmp with 0 bpp from SDL_bmp.c:SDL_LoadBMP_RW()
Caleb Cornett
SDL_ShowMessageBox on UIKit doesn't do anything special with buttons that are marked with the flag SDL_MESSAGEBOX_BUTTON_RETURNKEY_DEFAULT. According to Apple's documentation on UIAlertController, a button can respond to a return key if it's marked as the preferredAction of the controller. SDL doesn't set a preferredAction currently, so I've attached a patch to fix that.
Callum McGing
While the CMake build checks for ibus and does enable the ibus backend with set(HAVE_IBUS_IBUS_H TRUE), this does not define SDL_USE_IME, thus CMake built SDL2 (as in Arch Linux) cannot use IME at all.
The attached patch fixes this behaviour when building against ibus. IME support will still fail when only fcitx is available on the build system.
M Stoeckl
To reproduce:
1. Run any SDL-based program with a Wayland compositor, orphaning it so that it doesn't have an immediate parent process. (For example, from a terminal, running `supertux2 & disown`.) The program should use the wayland backend, i.e. by setting environment variable SDL_VIDEODRIVER=wayland.
2. Kill the compositor process.
Results:
- The SDL program will keep running.
Expected results:
- The SDL program should close. (What close should mean here, I'm not sure - is injecting an SDL_Quit the appropriate action when a video driver disconnects?)
Build data:
2019-06-22, hg tip (12901:bf8d9d29cbf1), Linux, can reproduce with sway, weston, and other Wayland oompositors.
nullcheck the device coming back from InputDevice.getDevice(deviceId) in new code added to sdlactivity.onkey.
java.lang.NullPointerException:
at org.libsdl.app.SDLSurface.onKey (SDLActivity.java:1793)
at android.view.View.dispatchKeyEvent (View.java:13321)
at android.view.ViewGroup.dispatchKeyEvent (ViewGroup.java:1912)
at android.view.ViewGroup.dispatchKeyEvent (ViewGroup.java:1912)
at android.view.ViewGroup.dispatchKeyEvent (ViewGroup.java:1912)
at android.view.ViewGroup.dispatchKeyEvent (ViewGroup.java:1912)
at com.android.internal.policy.DecorView.superDispatchKeyEvent (DecorView.java:685)
at com.android.internal.policy.PhoneWindow.superDispatchKeyEvent (PhoneWindow.java:1869)
at android.app.Activity.dispatchKeyEvent (Activity.java:3447)
at org.libsdl.app.SDLActivity.dispatchKeyEvent (SDLActivity.java:496)
@dang @saml @dave
This is currently supported on Linux and macOS. iOS and Android are not
supported at all, Windows support could be added with some changes to the libusb
backend. The Visual Studio and Xcode projects do not use this feature.
Based on Valve Software's hid.cpp, written in collaboration with Andrew Eikum.
Galadrim
As I have seen, SDL implements its own command line parser for Windows in SDL_windows_main.c. Unfortunately, it doesn't seem to allow command line arguments with trailing backslashes if quoting is required.
Usually, when you write an application that gets command line arguments passed as argc and argv, the parsing is done by parse_cmdline. The Windows API also provides the function CommandLineToArgvW, so an application can parse itself if only the command line string is provided. Both functions behave almost identically according to their documentation. If the argument "\\" (including the quotes) is passed, they both turn it into a single backslash.
The SDL command line parser on the other hand doesn't recognize the second quote character as the closing character in this example and therefore includes it in the parsed argument. The parser does not count the number of backslashes preceding a quote. It always treats a quote as escaped if a backslash is in front of it. Therefore, it should be impossible to quote and escape an argument correctly, if it has a trailing backslash and contains characters that require quoting.
Of course, each application is allowed to implement its own parsing rules, so SDL is free to do so. But the problem I see is that there are arguments, that are impossible to be passed to the parser correctly, as I described above. Is there a reason, why SDL does not simply use CommandLineToArgvW instead of implementing its own parser?
Here are some links that show that correct argument parsing, as it is usually done in Windows, is quite complicated:
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/desktop/api/shellapi/nf-shellapi-commandlinetoargvwhttp://www.windowsinspired.com/how-a-windows-programs-splits-its-command-line-into-individual-arguments/
Caleb Cornett
Unlike iOS and macOS, tvOS does not have any persistent local storage. In fact, the ApplicationSupport directory pointed to by the existing Cocoa GetPrefPath() throws an error whenever any attempt is made to access it. To get any local storage on an Apple TV, our only option is to use a temporary cache directory.
This patch changes the tvOS PrefPath to this cache directory and also logs a critical warning that this if developers want their save data to persist across game sessions, they must use some form of iCloud storage.
superfury
I notice that, somehow, when locking the mouse into place(using SDL_SetRelativeMouseMode), somehow at least the movement information gets through to both mouse movement and touch movement events?
My app handles both, so when moving a touched finger accross the app(using RDP from an Android device) I see the mouse moving inside the app when it shouldn't(meaning that the touch movement is ignored properly by the app(press-location dependant) but the mouse movement is still performed due to the mouse movement events)?
alexrice999
I have a knock off wired xbox 360 controller called afterglow for xbox 360 controller. Despite there being a few afterglow controllers in the controller mapping the guid of my controller seems to map to Generic Xbox pad. This binding is as follows:
```
"030000006f0e00001304000000010000,Generic X-Box pad,a:b0,b:b1,back:b6,dpdown:h0.4,dpleft:h0.8,dpright:h0.2,dpup:h0.1,guide:b8,leftshoulder:b4,leftstick:a0,lefttrigger:a2,leftx:a0,lefty:a1,rightshoulder:b5,rightstick:a3,righttrigger:a5,rightx:a3,righty:a4,start:b7,x:b2,y:b3,",
```
When running openmw I have a strange issue that the joysticks work for up and down movements but not for side to side. I managed to track this down to the side to side events being classified as joystick events instead of gamepad events.
I believe this is due to both "leftstick" and "leftx" being bound to "a0" which seems odd to me. If I change openmw's mappings to remove these the controller works as expected. I was hoping someone who knows a lot more than me (as I have only been exploring this today trying to fix my controller) would know what is happening
With multitouch, register to receive XI_Motion (which desctivates MotionNotify),
so that we can distinguish real mouse motions from synthetic one.
(bug 4690)
(and it defaults to "yes" on those platforms. Other places, which use libusb,
still default to no because they probably need root permissions to work.)
Windows generates fake raw mouse events for touchscreens for compatibility
with legacy apps that predate touch support in Windows. We already handle
touch events explicitly, so drop the synthetic events to avoid duplicates.
This time, we make anything we think is a MacBook trackpad report its touches
as SDL_MOUSE_TOUCHID, even though they're not _actually_ synthesized events,
and let all mouse input--even if the OS synthesized it from a multitouch
trackpad on our behalf--look like physical input. This is backwards from
reality, but produces the results most apps will expect.
Note that if you have a real touch device that doesn't appear to be the
trackpad, it'll produce real touch events with unique device ids, so it's
not a total loss here, but also note that the way we decide if it was the
trackpad is an imperfect heuristic; it happens to work out right now, but
it's not impossible that a real touchscreen could come to the Mac at some
point and (incorrectly?) call it a "mouse" input, etc.
But for now, good enough.
Fixes Bugzilla #4690.
Anthony Pesch
The previous code first configured the period size using snd_pcm_hw_par-
ams_set_period_size_near. Then, it further narrowed the configuration
space by calling snd_pcm_hw_params_set_buffer_size_near using a buffer
size of 2 times the _requested_ period size in order to try and get a
configuration with only 2 periods. If the configured period size was
larger than the requested size, the second call could inadvertently
narrow the configuration space to contain only a single period.
Rather than fixing the call to snd_pcm_hw_params_set_buffer_size_near
to use a size of 2 times the configured period size, the code has been
changed to use snd_pcm_hw_params_set_periods_min in order to more
clearly explain the intent.
Cameron Gutman
The bugfix in https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/ca9417a52f18 caused SDL_SetRelativeMouseMode() to begin failing on Vivante (Steam Link). Even though Vivante doesn't have a SetRelativeMouseMode() or WarpMouse() function, it's in relative mode already (because it uses evdev) so the function was actually working as intended.
I think providing a no-op SetRelativeMouseMode() function for Vivante is a reasonable fix. Since it's already getting relative events through evdev, it really is a no-op to "enter relative mode".
In fact, this is probably the right thing to do for all backends that use evdev (vivante, raspberry, and kmsdrm). Raspberry and kmsdrm both have WarpMouse() implementations so SDL_SetRelativeMouseMode() isn't failing there, but it still seems to make sense not to have to do the fake warping if they're evdev-based anyway.
"Starting with changeset 12433, the mouse cursor is not displayed on the
Raspberry Pi platform, due to a bug in the handling of the new
"global_cursor" in RPI_ShowCursor(). Currently, if cursor == global_cursor,
the function immediately returns 0. The function should not return here.
Instead, if cursor == global_cursor, it shouldn't try to hide the current
cursor and update global_cursor = cursor. However, it *should* still continue
through the rest of the function."
Fixes Bugzilla #4699.
The real problem is that SDL_atomic.c was built in thumb mode instead of ARM mode, which is required to use the mcr instruction on ARM platforms. Added a compiler error to catch this case so we don't generate code that does infinite recursion.
I also added a potentially better way to handle things on Linux ARM platforms, based on comments in the Chromium headers, which we can try out after 2.0.10 ships.
daniel.c.sinclair
Hi, this patch breaks dpad/hat input on my PS4 controller. The attached patch restores functionality. Calling SDL_PrivateJoystickHat() at the end of BSD_JoystickUpdate was setting the hat state to zero on every kind of input, instead of just the HUG_DPAD events.
Using IOKit for this pops up a warning at startup on macOS 10.15 ("Catalina"),
asking the user to authorize the app to listen to all keyboard input in the
system, which is unacceptable.
I _think_ we were using IOKit under incorrect presumptions here; the Stack
Overflow link mentioned in it was complaining about not being able to use
flagsChanged to differentiate between left and right mod keys, but that's not
an issue for capslock.
It's also possible this code was trying to deal with capslock changing when
the window didn't have focus, but we handle this elsewhere now, if we didn't
at the time.
GetWindowText() wants you to tell it the size of the buffer--including the
terminating NULL char--but we weren't counting that last char, losing the
last char of the string in the process. This was only seen with the special
case of SDL_CreateWindowFrom() to use an existing native window, not
the usual SDL_CreateWindow() codepath.
Fixes Bugzilla #4696.
Braden Obrzut
https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/file/7dc39b047055/CMakeLists.txt#l911
I believe the following should also be specified there:
set(SDL_VIDEO_OPENGL_ES 1)
set(SDL_VIDEO_RENDER_OGL_ES 1)
As it is now GLES1 support is missing when building for Android despite it linking to the library.
It causes the HIDAPI devices to always be opened on enumeration, which causes crashes in the Windows drivers when multiple applications are reading and writing at the same time. We can revisit this after 2.0.10 release.
The Nintendo USB GameCube Adapter has two USB connectors. Black for data
and grey for additional power for rumble. The Wii U and other software
require both cables to use rumble. The rumble is weaker without the
second USB cable. Other than that I don't know if there is any negative
side affects from using rumble with only one cable.
Jan Martin Mikkelsen
Patch to scan /dev/dri based on names rather than file type
Loading KMS/DRM on FreeBSD fails because the "available" code in the driver checks for character device nodes under /dev/dri and the /dev/dri/card* files are symlinks rather than device nodes nodes on FreeBSD. The symlink points to /dev/drm/0.
The attached patch counts /dev/dri/card* entries rather than directory entries which are character devices.
Sylvain
I think what happening with the software renderer is:
* you're somehow in background (so texture creation is not possible)
* it resizes and wants to push a SDL_WINDOWEVENT_SIZE_CHANGED
It call:
https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/file/a010811d40dd/src/render/SDL_render.c#l683
* GetOutputSize
* SW_GetOutputSize
* SW_ActivateRenderer
* SDL_GetWindowSurface
* SDL_CreateWindowFramebuffer which is mapped to SDL_CreateWindowTexture
and it ends up re-creating the surface/a texture, while being in background
Manuel Sabogal
There is an issue on the latest commit of the mercurial repo when SDL_THREADS_DISABLED is set:
src/core/linux/SDL_threadprio.c:79:28: error: unknown type name 'Sint64'; did you mean 'int'
It was originally added to work around an input event problem in the code of a specific app which mixed SDL and native UIViews, but that app solved its problems in a better manner since then.
Also implemented SDL_JoystickGetDevicePlayerIndex() on iOS and tvOS, and added support for reading the new menu button state available in iOS and tvOS 13.
(technically, this function never returns an error at this point, but since
it _does_ have an "uhoh, is this corrupt data?" comment that it ignores, we
should probably make sure we handle error cases in the future. :) )
Matteo Beniamino
Pressing a trigger button on a Steam Controller causes a segmentation fault both with stable version and latest mercurial head on Linux. I'm using the recent hid_steam kernel module with lizard_mode disabled (that is no keyboard/mouse emulation). I suspect this is what's happening: the driver exposes two hats. The two hats have indices 0 and 2. Inside linux/SDL_sysjoystick.c two hats are allocated in allocate_hatdata for joystick->hwdata->hats. In HandleHat function the hat parameter (that can be 2) is directly used as the index of the array that only has two elements, causing an out of bounds access. SDL is not expecting to have "holes" between hats indices.
The index 2 is calculated in HandleInputEvents() as (ABS_HAT2X - ABS_HAT0X) / 2 where ABS_HAT2X is the value associated to the hat inside the hid_steam module.
Jan Martin Mikkelsen
The attached patch adds support for single-touch evdev devices.
These devices report ABS_X, ABS_Y and BTN_TOUCH events. This patch sets them up as MT devices with a single slot and handles the appropriate messages.
This was to deal with broken vsync support in macOS 10.14, which we assumed
would remain broken indefinitely, but a later 10.14 released fixed it.
This is a loss of late-swap support, but there are several subtle problems
in our CVDiplayLink code that are also evaporating, to be fair.
Fixes Bugzilla #4575.
(Backed out changeset 8760fed23001)
Dzmitry Malyshau
Current code, search paths, and error messages are written to only consider MoltenVK on macOS as a Vulkan Portability implementation. It's not the only implementation available to the users. gfx-portability [1] has been shown to run a number of titles well, including Dota2, Dolphin Emulator, and vkQuake3, often out-performing MoltenVK in frame rate and stability (see Dolphin benchmark [2]).
There is no reason for SDL to be that specific, it's not using any MVK-specific functions other than the WSI initialization ("VK_MVK_macos_surface"). gfx-portability exposes this extension as well, and a more generic WSI extension is in process. It would be good if SDL was written in a more generic way that expect a Vulkan Portability library as opposed to MoltenVK specifically.
[1] https://github.com/gfx-rs/portability
[2] https://gfx-rs.github.io/2019/03/22/dolphin-macos-performance.html
This device is a copy of the Xbox Controller S and currently the one most sold
when shopping for a 'new' Xbox gamepad on eBay and AliExpress.
Except for the quirky USB ID id behaves just like a normal Xbox controller (when
ignoring the subpar build quality)
LinGao
We build SDL with Visual studio 2017 compiler on Windows Server 2016, but it failed to build due to error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol _memset referenced in function _IMA_ADPCM_Decode on latest default branch. And we found that it can be first reproduced on ca7283111ad0 changeset. Could you please help have a look about this issue? Thanks in advance!
Caleb Cornett
On iOS 12, creating a window with the SDL_WINDOW_FULLSCREEN flag does not dim the home indicator or defer system gestures. The same goes for setting the SDL_HINT_IOS_HIDE_HOME_INDICATOR to "2" -- it has no effect at all.
I've tracked down the source of this misbehavior to a timing issue. The initial `setNeedsUpdate...` calls were happening too early and getting applied to the launch screen by mistake. In the attached patch, I've added a call to those functions right after the launch screen is hidden so that they apply to the main view controller instead. This appears to fix the issue, at least on my iPhone 6s Plus.
Simon Hug
Attached is a minor cleanup patch. It changes the option name of one hint to something better, puts one or two more checks in, and adds explicit casting where warnings could appear otherwise.
I hope the naming of the hints and their options is acceptable. It would be kind of awkward to change them after they get released with an official SDL version.
Simon Hug
I had a look at this and made some additions to SDL_wave.c.
The attached patch adds many checks and error messages. For some reason I also added A-law and ?-law decoders. Forgot exactly why... but hey, they're small.
The WAVE format is seriously underspecified (at least by the documents that are publicly available on the internet) and it's a shame Microsoft never put something better out there. The language used in them is so loose at times, it's not surprising the encoders and decoders behave very differently. The Windows Media Player doesn't even support MS ADPCM correctly.
The patch also adds some hints to make the decoder more strict at the cost of compatibility with weird WAVE files.
I still think it needs a bit of cleaning up (Not happy with the MultiplySize function. Don't like the name and other SDL code may want to use something like this too.) and some duplicated code may be folded together. It does work in this state and I have thrown all kinds of WAVE files at it. The AFL files also pass with it and some even play (obviously just noise). Crafty little fuzzer.
Any critique would be welcome. I have a fork of SDL with a audio-loadwav branch over here if someone wants to use the commenting feature of Bitbucket:
https://bitbucket.org/ChliHug/SDL
I also cobbled some Lua scripts together to create WAVE test files:
https://bitbucket.org/ChliHug/gendat
Sylvain
On Android, if you set no attribute using SDL_GL_SetAttribute(), and try to create a SDL Render OpenGLES 1:
- it loads first by default GLESv2 libraries
- creates the rendere OpenGLES 1
- recreates the Window to have a context 1.1 ( https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/file/4db4cfd59470/src/render/opengles/SDL_render_gles.c#l298 )
But it doesn't unload libraries, then reload GLESv1 lib. So the SDL_Renderer OpenGLES 1 is working with GLES 2 libs, which seems inconsistent.
If you, at first, set
SDL_GL_SetAttribute(SDL_GL_CONTEXT_PROFILE_MASK, SDL_GL_CONTEXT_PROFILE_ES);
SDL_GL_SetAttribute(SDL_GL_CONTEXT_MAJOR_VERSION, 1);
SDL_GL_SetAttribute(SDL_GL_CONTEXT_MINOR_VERSION, 1);
It will correctly load GLES v1 libraries.
Here's a small patch to reload egl libs when SDL_RecreateWindow() is called.
It fixes the issue, also the case from bug 4042
( SDL_RecreateWindow() is used by SDL_Renderer gl, gles1, gles2. )
Ozkan Sezer
A horde of strict aliasing violation warnings are emitted from joystick
layer, and also from a few other places. This happens with gcc-4.4.7 on
Linux CentOS 6.10. Some other sysjoystick would possibly have the same
warnings.
Attached my full log here. Example entry:
src/joystick/SDL_joystick.c: In function 'SDL_GetJoystickGUIDInfo':
src/joystick/SDL_joystick.c:1094: warning: dereferencing pointer '({anonymous})' does break strict-aliasing rules
janisozaur
There are many cases which are not able to be handled by SDL's audio conversion routines, including too low (negative) rate, too high rate (impossible to allocate).
This patch aims to report such issues early and handle others in a graceful manner. The "INT32_MAX / RESAMPLER_SAMPLES_PER_ZERO_CROSSING" value is the conservative approach in terms of what can _technically_ be supported, but its value is 4'194'303, or just shy of 4.2MHz. I highly doubt any sane person would use such rates, especially in SDL2, so I would like to drive this limit further down, but would need some assistance to do that, as doing so would have to introduce an arbitrary value. Are you OK with such approach? What would a good value be? Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-resolution_audio) lists 96kHz as the highest sampling rate in use, even if I quadruple it for a good measure, to 384kHz it's still an order of magnitude lower than 4MHz.
ace
I got this bug in SDL_ttf:
https://bugzilla.libsdl.org/show_bug.cgi?id=4524
Sylvain proposed solution:
SDL_RWseek(RWops, 0, RW_SEEK_SET);
And it works, but i can use it my project, because it written in C# with SDL2-CS wrapper and there not export for macroses:
#define SDL_RWsize(ctx) (ctx)->size(ctx)
#define SDL_RWseek(ctx, offset, whence) (ctx)->seek(ctx, offset, whence)
#define SDL_RWtell(ctx) (ctx)->seek(ctx, 0, RW_SEEK_CUR)
#define SDL_RWread(ctx, ptr, size, n) (ctx)->read(ctx, ptr, size, n)
#define SDL_RWwrite(ctx, ptr, size, n) (ctx)->write(ctx, ptr, size, n)
#define SDL_RWclose(ctx) (ctx)->close(ctx)
Therefore, I suggest replacing this macros with functions so that they can be exported and used in bindings
This device is a copy of the Xbox Controller S and currently the one most sold
when shopping for a 'new' Xbox gamepad on eBay and AliExpress.
Except for the quirky USB ID id behaves just like a normal Xbox controller (when
ignoring the subpar build quality)
Noam Preil
In src/joystick/linux/SDL_sysjoystick.c:
The ConfigJoystick function's axes detection starts with a for loop using an index i for Linux's axes names. When i gets to ABS_HAT0X, it's set to ABS_HAT3Y and a continue statement appears, to skip the hats. This makes sense, as SDL handles hats separately from axes.
However, in PollAllValues, *two* indices are used: a and b. Both start out the same, and remain so until the hats are reached. At that point, a becomes identical to the i from ConfigJoystick's loop, but b is equal to a - (ABS_HAT3Y - ABS_HAT0X), or a - 8.
While all the joystick->hwdata->abs_* structures in ConfigJoystick used i - which would here be a - as both the index and the ioctl argument, PollAllValues uses b for the structure index and a as the ioctl argument.
It would appear, however, that no joystick HAS such axes, and that the b index is entirely unnecessary.
I tested three separate joysticks, and while that was far from a complete listing, I was unable to find a joystick with an axis above 0x08.
tschwinger
Respect the BUILD_SHARED_LIBS variable when defined, and build either shared or static libs, which is CMake's default behavior (See https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/variable/BUILD_SHARED_LIBS.html).
If the variable is not defined, the current behavior remains unchanged and both variants are built where the platform supports it. This way, it remains possible to build both in one shot, which seems convenient for distro builds and useful to promote some consistency between them.
tschwinger
Followup to #3651
As already noted by Ryan, no framework is being built, so we better install to lib/cmake.
That code was originally part of a patch submitted by David Demelier, whose credit BTW got lost (I combined his patch for #3572 with fixes for #2576 and #3613 resulting in #3651 because things started to depend on another).
I tested that the configuration files are found correctly in the new location on MacOS X based on a hint to the root (see https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/command/find_package.html#search-procedure).
Dexter Friedman
When using a Dualshock 4 controller (model numbers CUH-ZCT1U and CUH-ZCT2U), pressing anywhere on the center touchpad does not send an SDL_JOYBUTTONDOWN event. I have verified this with testjoystick:
Repro steps:
1. Plug in a DS4 over USB
2. Compile testjoystick and run: testjoystick.exe 0
3. Press and hold the touchpad. Observe that no lime green box appears
Expected behavior:
A lime green box appears while the touchpad is pressed.
Notes:
I've attached a patch here that works on my PC and produces the expected behavior in testjoystick, for both DS4 model numbers I listed earlier.
If I understand correctly, by exposing this as a joystick button, the gamecontroller API mapping can be modified with a change to gamecontrollerdb.txt in the future.
Matt Brocklehurst
We've noticed that if you are playing audio on Windows via the WASAPI interface and you unplug and reconnect the device a few times the program hangs.
We've debugged the problem down to
static void
WASAPI_WaitDevice(_THIS)
{
... snip ...
if (WaitForSingleObjectEx(this->hidden->event, INFINITE, FALSE) == WAIT_OBJECT_0) {
... snip ...
}
This WaitForSingleObjectEx does not havbe a time out defined, so it hangs there forever.
Our suggested fix we found was to include a time out of say 200mSec
We have done quite a bit of testing with this fix in place on various hardware configurations and it seems to have resolved the issue.
The Nintendo USB GameCube adapter has four controller ports. Return
the port number as 0 to 3 from SDL_JoystickGetPlayerIndex() and
SDL_JoystickGetDevicePlayerIndex().
Nia Alarie
The NetBSD audio driver has a few problems. Lots of obsolete code, and extremely bad performance and stuttering.
I have a patch in NetBSD's package system to improve it. This is my attempt to upstream it.
The changes include:
* Removing references to defines which are never used.
* Using the correct structures for playback and recording, previously they were the wrong way around.
* Using the correct types ('struct audio_prinfo' in contrast to 'audio_prinfo')
* Removing the use of non-blocking I/O, as suggested in #3177.
* Removing workarounds for driver bugs on systems that don't exist or use this driver any more.
* Removing all usage of SDL_Delay(1)
* Removing pointless use of AUDIO_INITINFO and tests that expect AUDIO_SETINFO to fail when it can't.
These changes bring its performance in line with the DSP audio driver.
bplu4t2f
When num lock is on, the scancode reported for numpad 5 is SDL_SCANCODE_KP_5, which is correct. However, when num lock is off, windows reports the VK_CLEAR virtual key code, which is incorrectly translated into SDL_SCANCODE_CLEAR inside of the VKeytoScancode(WPARAM vkey) function.
Jan Martin Mikkelsen
The evdev interface is available on FreeBSD, with the xf86-input-evdev for include files in /usr/local/include/linux, so <linux/input.h> works, or when build with the native evdev option, where <dev/evdev/input.h> is available.
Jan Martin Mikkelsen
The file src/core/linux/SDL_evdev.c uses the Linux specific types __u32 and __s32. This breaks things on FreeBSD when building with evdev.
Cameron Gutman
I was trying to use SDL_GetQueuedAudioSize() to ensure my audio latency didn't get too high while streaming data in from the network. If I get more than N frames of audio queued, I know that the network is giving me more data than I can play and I need to drop some to keep latency low.
This doesn't work well on WASAPI out of the box, due to the addition of GetPendingBytes() to the amount of queued data. As a terrible hack, I loop 100 times calling SDL_Delay(10) and SDL_GetQueuedAudioSize() before I ever call SDL_QueueAudio() to get a "baseline" amount that I then subtract from SDL_GetQueuedAudioSize() later. However, because this value isn't actually a constant, this hack can cause SDL_GetQueuedAudioSize() - baselineSize to be < 0. This means I have no accurate way of determining how much data is actually queued in SDL's audio buffer queue.
The SDL_GetQueuedAudioSize() documentation says: "This is the number of bytes that have been queued for playback with SDL_QueueAudio(), but have not yet been sent to the hardware." Yet, SDL_GetQueuedAudioSize() returns > 0 value when SDL_QueueAudio() has never been called.
Based on that documentation, I believe the current behavior contradicts the documented behavior of this function and should be changed in line with Boris's patch.
I understand that exposing the IAudioClient::GetCurrentPadding() value is useful, but a solution there needs to take into account what of that data is silence inserted by SDL and what is actual data queued by the user with SDL_QueueAudio(). Until that happens, I think the best approach is to remove the GetPendingBytes() call until SDL is able to keep track of queued data to make sense of it. This would make SDL_GetQueuedAudioSize() possible to use accurately with WASAPI.
In API 28, 0 width views can't take focus, so if someone tries to position the IME without setting a width, they'll stop getting text events.
Tested on Android 9: with a 0 size, it would send correctly letters a, b, c, etc. but not numbers.
Manuel Sabogal
I noticed that the current Android.mk builds a libhidapi.so library for Android but the CMake build hasn't been updated to do so. I'll attach a patch that fixes this issue.
Closing the window is asynchronous, but we free the window data immediately,
so we can get an updateLayer callback before the window is really destroyed which
will cause us to access the freed memory.
Clearing the content view will cause it to be immediately released, so no further
updateLayer callbacks will occur.
Sylvain
Currently SDL_CreateTextureFromSurface picks first valid format, and do a conversion.
format = renderer->info.texture_formats[0];
for (i = 0; i < renderer->info.num_texture_formats; ++i) {
if (!SDL_ISPIXELFORMAT_FOURCC(renderer->info.texture_formats[i]) &&
SDL_ISPIXELFORMAT_ALPHA(renderer->info.texture_formats[i]) == needAlpha) {
format = renderer->info.texture_formats[i];
break;
It could try to find a better format, for instance :
if SDL_Surface has no Amask, but a colorkey :
if surface fmt is RGB888, try to pick ARGB8888 renderer fmt
if surface fmt is BGR888, try to pick ABGR8888 renderer fmt
else
try to pick the same renderer format as surface fmt
if no format has been picked, use the fallback.
I think it goes with bug 4290 fastpath BlitNtoN
when you expand a surface with pixel format of size 24 to 32, there is a fast path possible.
So with this issue:
- if you have a surface with colorkey (RGB or BGR, not palette), it takes a renderer format where the conversion is faster.
(it avoids, if possible, RGB -> ABGR which means switching RGB to BGR)
- if you have a surface ABGR format, it try to take the ABGR from the renderer.
(it avoids, if possible, ABGR -> ARGB, which means switch RGB to BGR)
Thomas Frohwein
Hi,
If a gamepad lists the Dpad as 4 buttons (Dpad Up,Down, Left, Right) like with the Xbox 360 gamepad / XInput report descriptor used by OpenBSD (https://github.com/openbsd/src/blob/master/sys/dev/usb/uhid_rdesc.h#L184), this is not recognized by the SDL BSD backend and no hat or any other listing for the D-pad exists, e.g. in sdl2-jstest (https://gitlab.com/sdl-jstest/sdl-jstest).
The attached diff fixes this and makes the D-pad on my Xbox 360 and Logitech F310 controllers usable. It adds a hat to nhats when usage HUG_DPAD_UP is found, reads the state of the D-pad buttons into array dpad[], and turns the value of dpad[] into an SDL hat direction (dpad_to_sdl()).
Tested and works with Xbox 360 controller and Logitech F310 in XInput mode. Software-side tested with sdl2-jstest and Owlboy where this worked without problems or regressions.
I don't know if this would be applicable to other *BSDs and don't have an install to test it with, therefore wrapped it in __OpenBSD__ ifdefs.
Thanks,
thfr
Removed incorrect call to SDL_SendWindowEvent(window, SDL_WINDOWEVENT_MOVED, x, y);
If the position of the window isn't adjusted in the SetWindowPosition() call, then sending the window event would have no effect because x and y equals the window x and y. If the position of the window is adjusted in the SetWindowPosition() call, then we don't want to clobber it with values that the user passed in.
Sylvain
OpenGLES2 SDL renderer has support for textures ARGB, ABGR, RGB and BGR, whereas OpenGL SDL renderer only had ARGB.
If you think it's worth adding it, here's a patch. I quickly tried and it worked, but there may be missing things or corner case.
Andrei Drexler
For X11 GenericEvents, the associated data is only available between a call to XGetEventData and the matching XFreeEventData, i.e. in X11_HandleGenericEvent. Trying to call XGetEventData a second time on the same event will fail, so an application that wants to inspect XInput2 events (e.g. for stylus pressure) has no way of retrieving its data from queued SYSWM events.
The attached patch (based on SDL-2.0.7-11629) sends SYSWM messages from X11_HandleGenericEvent while the data is still available, allowing client code to register an event filter/watcher and process the event inside the callback.
Vivante drivers use the VK_KHR_display extension for rendering directly
to the frame buffer. This patch adds support to the video driver for
Vulkan rendering using that method.
- Add an utility function SDL_Vulkan_Display_CreateSurface that creates
a surface using this extension. The display to use (if there are
multiple) can be overridden using the environment variable
"SDL_VULKAN_DISPLAY".
- Use this function in a new compilation unit SDL_vivantevideo.c,
which implements the SDL_VIDEO_VULKAN methods of the driver structure.
Dan Ginsburg
I've seen this on several devices including Moto Z running Android 7 and a Snapdragon 845 running Android 9.
What happens is as follows:
SDLActivity.onWindowFocusChanged(true) happens pretty early on, but it's before we've done SDL_CreateWindow and so Android_Window is 0x0 thus this message does not get sent:
JNIEXPORT void JNICALL SDL_JAVA_INTERFACE(nativeFocusChanged)(
JNIEnv *env, jclass cls, jboolean hasFocus)
{
SDL_LockMutex(Android_ActivityMutex);
if (Android_Window) {
__android_log_print(ANDROID_LOG_VERBOSE, "SDL", "nativeFocusChanged()");
SDL_SendWindowEvent(Android_Window, (hasFocus ? SDL_WINDOWEVENT_FOCUS_GAINED : SDL_WINDOWEVENT_FOCUS_LOST), 0, 0);
}
SDL_UnlockMutex(Android_ActivityMutex);
}
When the window does get created, in Android_CreateWindow it does this:
window->flags &= ~SDL_WINDOW_RESIZABLE; /* window is NEVER resizeable */
window->flags &= ~SDL_WINDOW_HIDDEN;
window->flags |= SDL_WINDOW_SHOWN; /* only one window on Android */
window->flags |= SDL_WINDOW_INPUT_FOCUS; /* always has input focus */
/* One window, it always has focus */
SDL_SetMouseFocus(window);
SDL_SetKeyboardFocus(window);
The SDL_SetKeyboardFocus does send an SDL_WINDOWEVENT_FOCUS_GAINED message, but it gets eaten in SDL_SendWindowEvent because we've forced SDL_WINDOW_INPUT_FOCUS beforehand:
case SDL_WINDOWEVENT_FOCUS_GAINED:
if (window->flags & SDL_WINDOW_INPUT_FOCUS) {
return 0;
}
window->flags |= SDL_WINDOW_INPUT_FOCUS;
SDL_OnWindowFocusGained(window);
break;
I can fix the problem if I comment out this line from Android_CreateWindow:
window->flags |= SDL_WINDOW_INPUT_FOCUS; /* always has input focus */
I would propose that as a fix unless there is a reason not to.
Anthony @ POW Games
I tried adding different configChanges and sure enough, "navigation" worked! Now bluetooth controllers hot-plug nicely. So shall we add it as a default to the AndroidManifest.xml?
Funny that this is how this activity is described:
"navigation" The navigation type (trackball/dpad) has changed. (This should never normally happen.)
I think the reason behind this is because the bluetooth game controller I was testing doubles-up as a keyboard, which probably comes with a DPAD? It's a MOCUTE-032X_B63-88CE
Sylvain 2019-04-18 21:22:59 UTC
Changes:
- SDL_WINDOWEVENT_FOCUS_GAINED and SDL_WINDOWEVENT_FOCUS_LOST are sent when the java method onWindowFocusChanged() is called.
- If we have support for MultiWindow (eg API >= 24), SDL event loop is blocked/un-blocked (or simply egl-backed-up or not), when java onStart()/onStop() are called.
- If not, this behaves like now, SDL event loop is blocked/un-blocked when onPause()/onResume() are called.
So if we have two app on screen and switch from one to the other, only FOCUS events are sent (and onPause()/onResume() are called but empty. onStart()/onStop() are not called).
The SDL app, un-focused, would still continue to run and display frames (currently the App would be displayed, but paused).
Like a video player app or a chronometer that would still be refreshed, even if the window hasn't the focus.
It should work also on ChromeBooks (not tested), with two apps opened at the same time.
I am not sure this fix Dan's issue. Because focus lost event triggers Minimize function (which BTW is not provided on android).
https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/file/bb41b3635c34/src/video/SDL_video.c#l2653https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/file/bb41b3635c34/src/video/SDL_video.c#l2634
So, in addition, it would need to add by default SDL_HINT_VIDEO_MINIMIZE_ON_FOCUS_LOSS to 0.
So that the lost focus event doesn't try to minimize the window. And this should fix also the issue.
SDL_GetWindowDisplayMode was returning an incorrect result on iPhone Plus devices (tested on iOS 12.1/12.2). The problem was that the value returned by UIScreenMode was assumed to be the physical pixels on the display, rather than the scaled retina pixels. The fix is to use the scale returned by UIScreen.scale rather than the nativeScale.
java layer runs as if separate mouse and touch was 1,
Use SDL_HINT_MOUSE_TOUCH_EVENTS and SDL_HINT_TOUCH_MOUSE_EVENTS
for generating synthetic touch/mouse events
This was meant to migrate CoreAudio onto the same SDL_RunAudio() path that
most other audio drivers are on, but it introduced a bug because it doesn't
deal with dropped audio buffers...and fixing that properly just introduces
latency.
I might revisit this later, perhaps by reworking SDL_RunAudio to allow for
this sort of API better, or redesigning the whole subsystem or something, I
don't know. I'm not super-thrilled that this has to exist outside of the usual
codepaths, though.
Fixes Bugzilla #4481.
Max Waine
SDL_mouse.c, if compiled for Windows, requires GetDoubleClickTime to compile (available from winuser.h). Without Vulkan present this fails to compile as the include chain for winuser.h is the following.
SDL_mouse.c -> SDL_sysvideo.h -> SDL_vulkan_internal.h -> SDL_windows.h -> windows.h -> winuser.h.
Problem is that SDL_vulkan_internal.h doesn't include SDL_windows.h if Vulkan isn't present, so under MinGW/GCC it will give a -Wimplicit-function-declaration warning for GetDoubleClickTime, and under MSVC fails to compile completely.
The solution to this would be to simplify the include chain: including SDL_windows.h under the same condition as GetDoubleClickTime (#ifdef __WIN32__) in SDL_mouse.c (or another file that isn't quite so indirectly included).
Anthony Pesch
Fix snd_device_name_hint return value check
According to the ALSA documentation, snd_device_name_hint returns 0 on
success, otherwise a negative error code. The code previously only
considered -1 to be an error, which let other error codes through
resulting in a segfault when hints (which was NULL) was dereferenced
Stian Skjelstad
check if $sdl_framework is set, before checking if directory exists
Patch that was merged here https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/ad4968de54ec made it impossible for the SDL2 detection to fail, since one of the if statements fails to check if a variable is set or not.
if test -d $sdl_framework; then
can evaluate to true in some shells. I guess it falls into undefined behaviour when looking at the POSIX standard.
Petr Pisar
The root cause is that the POC BMP file declares 3 colors used and 4 bpp palette, but pixel at line 28 and column 1 (counted from 0) has color number 3. Then when the image loaded into a surface is passed to SDL_DisplayFormat(), in order to convert it to a video format, a used bliting function looks up a color number 3 in a 3-element long color bliting map. (The map obviously has the same number entries as the surface format has colors.)
Proper fix should refuse broken BMP images that have a pixel with a color index higher than declared number of "used" colors. Possibly more advanced fix could try to relocate the out-of-range color index into a vacant index (if such exists).
Note that a single USB device is responsible for all 4 joysticks, so a large
rewrite of the DeviceDriver functions was necessary to allow a single device to
produce multiple joysticks.
This lets you build a custom embedded device that roughly offers the "this
process is going to the background NOW" semantics of SDL on a mobile device.
Only two chars are used but the full prototype is:
int tioclinux(struct tty_struct *tty, unsigned long arg)
==5010== Syscall param ioctl(TIOCLINUX) points to uninitialised byte(s)
==5010== at 0x53E73C7: ioctl (syscall-template.S:78)
==5010== by 0x4A887DA: SDL_EVDEV_Init (SDL_evdev.c:163)
==5010== by 0x4A7D157: KMSDRM_VideoInit (SDL_kmsdrmvideo.c:509)
==5010== by 0x497D959: SDL_VideoInit_REAL (SDL_video.c:529)
==5010== by 0x487ACBC: SDL_InitSubSystem_REAL (SDL.c:171)
==5010== by 0x487B052: SDL_Init_REAL (SDL.c:256)
==5010== by 0x488F7D6: SDL_Init (SDL_dynapi_procs.h:85)
This lets apps see and choose between both an HDMI and DSI-connected display,
such as a television and the Pi Foundation's official touchscreen. It only
exposes the second display if the hardware reports that it is connected.
Petr Pisar
The reproducer has these data in BITMAPINFOHEADER:
biSize = 40
biBitCount = 8
biClrUsed = 131075
SDL_LoadBMP_RW() function passes biBitCount as a color depth to SDL_CreateRGBSurface(), thus 256-color pallete is allocated. But then biClrUsed colors are read from a file and stored into the palette. SDL_LoadBMP_RW should report an error if biClrUsed is greater than 2^biBitCount.
Surfaces are allocated using SDL_SIMDAlloc()
They are marked with SDL_SIMD_ALIGNED flag to appropriatly free them with SDL_SIMDFree()
(Flag is cleared when pixels is free'd in RLE, in case user would hijack the pixels ptr)
When providing its own memory pointer (SDL_CreateRGBSurfaceFrom()) and clearing
SDL_PREALLOC to delegate to SDL the memory free, it's the responsability of the user
to add SDL_SIMD_ALIGNED or not, whether the pointer has been allocated with SDL_malloc() or
SDL_SIMDAlloc().
Some blit combination are not supported (eg ARGB8888 -> SDL_PIXELFORMAT_INDEX1MSB)
So prevent SDL_ConvertSurface from creating a broken surface, which cannot be blitted
It was calling glClear without a context. The issue it was trying to
solve was actually that after destroying a window and creating a new one
, the contents of the old window were preserved. This no longer happens
since we resize the window to nothing on destroy.
If the browser left fullscreen mode by the user pressing ESC, the next
call to SDL_SetWindowFullscreen(1) will fail as it thinks the window is
already fullscreen. (#65)
InputDevice.SOURCE_CLASS_* are one bit
More readable to check that the source has this class_joystick set,
compared to the other statements, where the source is gamepad or dpad.
(Clean-up from bug 3958)
by checking Android_Window validity
- SDLThread: user application is exiting:
SDL_VideoQuit() and clearing SDL_GetVideoDevice()
- ActivityThread is changing orientation/size
surfaceChanged() > Android_SetScreenResolution() > SDL_GetVideoDevice()
- Separate function into Android_SetScreenResolution() and Android_SendResize(),
formating, and mark Android_DeviceWidth/Heigh as static
This also solves reports of this log message:
"INFO: The key you just pressed is not recognized by SDL. To help get this
fixed, please report this to the SDL forums/mailing list
<https://discourse.libsdl.org/> EVDEV KeyCode 330"
(EVDEV KeyCode 330 is BTN_TOUCH.)
Fixes Bugzilla #4147.
- If you call onPause() before CreateWindow(), SDLThread will run in infinite loop in background.
- If you call onPause() between a DestroyWindow() and a new CreateWindow(), semaphores are invalids.
SDLActivity.java: the first resume() starts the SDLThread, don't call
nativeResume() as it would post ResumeSem. And the first pause would
automatically be resumed.
- Currently, it tries to Attach the JVM first and update the thread local storage, which are two operations.
Now, it simply gives back the JNI Env stored for the thread.
- Android_JNI_SetupThreadi() should only be used for external.
For internal SDL thread, it's already called in RunThread() (SDL_systhread.c),
and other thread are Java threads which don't need to be attached. i
(even if it doesn't hurt to do it, since it's a no-op).
- JNI_OnLoad is filled with pthread_create, GetEnv, AttachCurrentThread...
It's called for all shared libraries which may don't want this setup,
and loading libraries can be also modified to be done from a static context,
or with relinker. So it's not really clear how, who and what it sets up.
=> Reduce this function to the minimal
SDLThread is a Java Thread, it's not needed to call 'Detach' from the JVM.
Clear mThreadKey, so that the pthread_create destructor is not called for this
thread.
SDLActivity thread priority is unchanged, by default -10 (THREAD_PRIORITY_VIDEO).
SDLAudio thread priority was -4 (SDL_SetThreadPriority was ignored) and is now -16 (THREAD_PRIORITY_AUDIO).
SDLThread thread priority was 0 (THREAD_PRIORITY_DEFAULT) and is -4 (THREAD_PRIORITY_DISPLAY).
Can be check by adding in build.grable:
gradle.projectsEvaluated {
tasks.withType(JavaCompile) {
options.compilerArgs << "-Xlint:unchecked" << "-Xlint:deprecation"
}
}
SDLActivity.java:1691: warning: [deprecation] A_8 in PixelFormat has been deprecated
case PixelFormat.A_8:
SDLActivity.java:1694: warning: [deprecation] LA_88 in PixelFormat has been deprecated
SDLActivity.java:1697: warning: [deprecation] L_8 in PixelFormat has been deprecated
SDLActivity.java:1700: warning: [deprecation] RGBA_4444 in PixelFormat has been deprecated
SDLActivity.java:1704: warning: [deprecation] RGBA_5551 in PixelFormat has been deprecated
SDLActivity.java:1716: warning: [deprecation] RGB_332 in PixelFormat has been deprecated
- destroy Android_ActivityMutex
- display any SDL error message that may have occured in this thread,
since SDL_GetError() is thread specific, and user has no access to it.
In the usual case, first call to onNativeOrientationChanged() is done before
SDL has been initialised and would just set an error message
"Video subsystem has not been initialized" without sending the event.
First error could happen if Android_SetWindowFullscreen somehow gets
called between SurfaceDestroyed() and SurfaceCreated()
Second error should not happen has native_window validity is guaranteed.
(It would happens previously with error -19)
It accesses data->native_window, which can be changed by onNativeSurfacedChanged().
Currently, Android_SetWindowFullscreen() may access data->native_window after it
has been released, and before a new reference is acquired.
(can be reproduced by adding some SDL_Delay() in onNativeSurfacedChanged and
Android_SetWindowFullscreen() ).
Default launch mode (standard) allows multiple instances of the SDLActivity.
( https://developer.android.com/guide/topics/manifest/activity-element#lmode )
Not sure this is intended in SDL as this doesn't work. There are static
variables in Java, in C code which make this impossible (allow one android_window) and
also Audio print errors.
There is also some code added in onDestroy as if it would be able to
re-initialize: https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/27686adb08c3
Bug Android activity life-cycle seems to show there is not transition to get out
of onDestroy()
https://developer.android.com/reference/android/app/Activity#ActivityLifecycle
( can be tested with "adb shell am start my.package.org/.MainActivity"
and "adb shell am start -n my.package.org/.MainActivity" )
Send me a message if there are real use-case for this !
Make sure there is not pending Pause accumulated, so the the application doesn't
remain paused and stucked in onDestroy().
Can be tested by adding:
SDLActivity.nativePause();
SDLActivity.nativePause();
mSingleton.finish();
Doesn't seem to happen manually, but symetrical to the pause handling.
Can be tested by adding:
mNextNativeState = SDLActivity.NativeState.PAUSED;
handleNativeState();
mNextNativeState = SDLActivity.NativeState.RESUMED;
handleNativeState();
mNextNativeState = SDLActivity.NativeState.PAUSED;
handleNativeState();
mNextNativeState = SDLActivity.NativeState.RESUMED;
handleNativeState();
Before, it ends in 'paused' state.
Now, it ends in 'resumed' state.
It may happen to have the sequence pause()/resume()/pause(), before polling
any events.
Before, it ends in 'resumed' state because as the check is greedy.
Now, always increase the Pause semaphore, and stop at each pause.
It ends in 'paused' state.
Related to bug 3250: set up a reconfiguration of SurfaceView holder.
Turn the screen off manually before the app starts
(repro rate is not 100%..)
"Pause" transition will add events:
SDL_WINDOWEVENT_ENTER
SDL_WINDOWEVENT_FOCUS_LOST
SDL_WINDOWEVENT_MINIMIZED
SDL_APP_WILL ENTER BACKGROUND
SDL_APP_DID ENTER BACKGROUND
"Resume" transition will add events:
SDL_APP_WILL ENTER FOREGROUND
SDL_APP_DID ENTER FOREGROUND
SDL_WINDOWEVENT_FOCUS_GAINED
SDL_WINDOWEVENT_RESTORED
If Android application doesn't empty the event loop in between, it enters in
"paused" state when SDL_WINDOWEVENT_RESTORED is fetched.
See bug 3250 for pratical case.
Occurs when application goes to background:
- Java activity is destroying SurfaceView holder and "egl_surface" (in onNativeSurfaceDestroyed())
- While native thread is in Android_GLES_SwapWindow(), prepared to call SDL_EGL_SwapBuffers()
The error is "call to eglSwapBuffers failed, reporting an error of EGL_BAD_SURFACE"
It an be reproduced easily by adding a SDL_Delay(100) at the begining of SDL_EGL_SwapBuffers(),
and putting the application into background.
Use a semaphore to prevent concurrency issues between Java Activity and Native thread code, when using 'Android_Window'.
(Eg. Java sending Touch events, while native code is destroying the main SDL_Window. )
This is the best option for macOS and iOS, the only platforms with Metal.
Pre-Metal versions of these platforms will fall back to OpenGL (ES), as
appropriate.
Huge thanks to Alexander Szpakowski, who worked incredibly hard to get the
Metal renderer to such a high-quality state!
Not only does this fix macOS 10.14 ("Mojave")'s broken NSOpenGLCPSwapInterval
support, it also lets us implement "adaptive vsync" on macOS!
CVDisplayLink is supported back to macOS 10.4 ("Tiger"), so we just use it
universally without version checks and dump NSOpenGLCPSwapInterval, Mojave or
not.
Switching between renderers "software -> opengl -> opengles2 -> software" fails.
"opengl -> opengles2" calls SDL_RecreateWindow() and frees "window->surface"
without marking it as "surface_invalid".
orbea
I am having a parallel build problem with -j3 or higher using the autotools build and slibtool instead of GNU libtool. Basically slibtool is faster than GNU libtool and it will start working before mkdir starts or finishes creating the build/ directory.
foo.null
I'm on macOS 10.14 and I think I'm using or around SDL 2.0.9. This is about the menu bar that SDL sets up which looks like:
<App Name> <Window> <View>
1. View menu never proceeds after the Window menu in any Mac application (it is always before).
2. For SDL, the only purpose of the View menu is for a single fullscreen menu item, which is not justifiable enough to reserve space for a menu. The View menu should thus be removed, and the full screen menu item should be added at the end inside of Window's menu. See built in apps like Dictionary, Chess, App Store (on 10.14) that do this.
3. SDL should add a "Close" menu item to the Window's submenu, and it should be the first item. Its key equivalent should map to command w. Without this, you cannot close the game window via this shortcut, and you cannot close the app's About window via this shortcut.
4. Apps typically use "Enter Full Screen" or "Exit Full Screen" depending on context, not "Toggle Full Screen" which is less user friendly -- I personally care about this point the least.
This happens if you try to lock the pointer and (caps & WL_SEAT_CAPABILITY_POINTER) is false
Leading to input->pointer being NULL which ends up bringing the wayland client down (at lease on weston)
Visual Studio doesn't define __ARM_ARCH nor _ARM_NEON, but _M_ARM and _M_ARM64,
so SDL_HasNEON() was bypassed.
PF_ARM_NEON_INSTRUCTIONS_AVAILABLE doesn't see to be defined (but still works
when defined as 19).
Only __ARM_NEON is defined with Android NDK and arm64-v8a
Tested on ndk-r18, ndk-r13 and also Xcode.
(Visual Studio needs a different fix).
Fixes Bugzilla #4409.
* Search for valid encoder in connector when it doesn't have an
encoder ID set.
* Search for valid CRTC in resources and encoder's possible CRTCs
when encoder doesn't have one set.
* Select default mode if CRTC doesn't have a valid one.
* Pick current_mode's W/H/Refresh Rate basing on current and
valid CRTC mode, not the saved one.
Cameron Gutman
After updating to SDL 2.0.9, I got a user report that my app was crashing when closing a SDL_WINDOW_FULLSCREEN window to return to my Qt-based UI. It looks like the dead SDL window is getting a spurious updateLayer call which is causing SDL to dereference a null SDL_WindowData pointer.
For some reason, this only happens when using SDL_WINDOW_FULLSCREEN and not windowed or SDL_WINDOW_FULLSCREEN_DESKTOP. I was also unsuccessful in my attempt to get a simple reproducer for this crash. The Session.cpp code is available 688c4a90d9/app/streaming/session.cpp but I slightly modified it (adding a SDL_PumpEvents() call at 1179 to immediately trigger the issue, otherwise it happened when Qt next pumped the event loop).
The crashing line is:
NSMutableArray *contexts = data->nscontexts;
Luke Dashjr
Bug 3993 was "fixed" by #undef'ing bool. But this breaks C99's stdbool.h bool too.
For example, mpv's build fails with:
../audio/out/ao_sdl.c:35:5: error: unknown type name ?bool?
It seems ill-advised to be #undef'ing *anything* here - what if the code including SDL_cpuinfo.h actually wants to use altivec?
Daniel Gibson
Even though my game (dhewm3) doesn't use SDL_INIT_JOYSTICK, SDL_PumpEvent() calls SDL_JoystickUpdate() which ends up calling hid_enumerate() every three seconds, and sometimes on my Win7 box hid_enumerate() takes about 5 seconds, which causes the whole game to freeze for that time.
maxxus
The Dualshock 3's motion sensors don't seem to be reported by the call to EVIOCGBIT but they still send EV_ABS events. Because they're not reported by EVIOCGBIT they're not assigned a proper axis ids and the default of 0 is used, which is the valid id for the left analog sticks left/right axis.
zen3d
While trying to build Pixie lisp (https://github.com/pixie-lang/pixie), which uses SDL for multimedia output, the mandelbrot example won't build. The problem is that internally pixie uses a templated function to dump a value, and gcc chokes because SDL_PIXELFORMAT_RGA8888 is an anonymous enum.
I solved the problem locally by changing from:
enum {
SDL_PIXELFORMAT_UNKNOWN,
... etc. ...
SDL_PIXELFORMAT_YUYV = ... etc ...
};
to:
typedef enum {
SDL_PIXELFORMAT_UNKNOWN,
... etc. ...
SDL_PIXELFORMAT_YUYV = ... etc ...
} SDL_PIXELFORMAT_ENUM;
The net result of this change is that the enum containing SDL_PIXELFORMAT_* is no longer an anonymous enum and can now be used by a templated function.
This local change fixes Pixie lisp for me.
I did notice that you use the idiom
typedef enum {
... etc ...
} SDL_FOO;
elsewhere in your code, so that change to SDL_PIXELFORMAT doesn't look like it would have a negative impact.
midwan
When trying to compile on a Raspberry Pi 3, running Raspbian Stretch (fully updated), a warning appears:
/home/pi/projects/SDL/src/test/SDL_test_memory.c: In function ?SDL_TrackAllocation?:
/home/pi/projects/SDL/src/test/SDL_test_memory.c:112:109: warning: format ?%llx? expects argument of type ?long long unsigned int?, but argument 5 has type ?unw_word_t {aka unsigned int}? [-Wformat=]
snprintf(entry->stack_names[stack_index], sizeof(entry->stack_names[stack_index]), "%s+0x%llx", sym, offset);
Joshua Root
The change resulting from Bug 4208 changed the compatibility_version of libSDL2 from 9.0.0 to 1.0.0. This is simply wrong.
This means that programs linked against 2.0.9 are considered by the dynamic linker to be compatible with all previous versions of libSDL2. This is not the case since new public symbols have been added.
The way compatibility_version and current_version are meant to work is:
* current_version increases every time the library changes in any way.
* compatibility_version is increased to match current_version whenever new public symbols are added.
Thus both versions should only ever increase. The solution to the Xcode project and autotools not having matching versions should have been to increase the version(s) in the Xcode project.
Reference: https://developer.apple.com/library/archive/documentation/MacOSX/Conceptual/BPFrameworks/Concepts/VersionInformation.html
Touch device types include SDL_TOUCH_DEVICE_DIRECT (a touch screen with window-relative coordinates for touches), SDL_TOUCH_DEVICE_INDIRECT_ABSOLUTE (a trackpad-style device with absolute device coordinates), and SDL_TOUCH_DEVICE_INDIRECT_RELATIVE (a trackpad-style device with screen cursor-relative coordinates).
Phone screens are an example of a direct device type. Mac trackpads are the indirect-absolute touch device type. The Apple TV remote is an indirect-relative touch device type.
For starters, we need to correctly respond to 0,0 configure after unsetting
fullscreen. Also, turns out that there should be no drawing calls at all
in between eglSwapBuffers and wl_egl_window_resize, as otherwise EGL can
already allocate a wrongly sized buffer for a next frame, so handle those
together.
Sylvain
SDL_android.c
src/core/android/SDL_android.c:1302:5: warning: variable 'br' is used uninitialized whenever switch default is taken [-Wsometimes-uninitialized]
default:
^~~~~~~
src/core/android/SDL_android.c:1306:12: note: uninitialized use occurs here
return br;
^~
src/core/android/SDL_android.c:1270:12: note: initialize the variable 'br' to silence this warning
jint br;
^
Maybe we could add some basics warning flags, not to see all warnings, but so that new warnings are caught sooner.
I would go for -Wall -Wextra, and some -Wno-warning for the allowed warnings.
./src/render/SDL_render.c(2168): Error! E1054: Expression must be constant
./src/render/SDL_render.c(2168): Error! E1054: Expression must be constant
./src/render/SDL_render.c(2175): Error! E1054: Expression must be constant
./src/render/SDL_render.c(2175): Error! E1054: Expression must be constant
./src/render/SDL_render.c(2322): Error! E1054: Expression must be constant
./src/render/SDL_render.c(2322): Error! E1054: Expression must be constant
./src/render/SDL_render.c(2322): Error! E1054: Expression must be constant
./src/render/SDL_render.c(2322): Error! E1054: Expression must be constant
./src/render/SDL_render.c(2329): Error! E1054: Expression must be constant
./src/render/SDL_render.c(2329): Error! E1054: Expression must be constant
./src/render/SDL_render.c(2329): Error! E1054: Expression must be constant
./src/render/SDL_render.c(2329): Error! E1054: Expression must be constant
./src/render/software/SDL_render_sw.c(602): Error! E1054: Expression must be constant
./src/render/software/SDL_render_sw.c(602): Error! E1054: Expression must be constant
./src/render/software/SDL_render_sw.c(602): Error! E1054: Expression must be constant
./src/render/software/SDL_render_sw.c(602): Error! E1054: Expression must be constant
Adds controller bindings to support the "Xbox One Wireless Controller
(Model 1708)" on Linux. The Model 1708 was released in 2016 alongside the
Xbox One S. It is the current model being sold by Microsoft as of writing.
(October 22, 2018)
src/vendor/SDL2/src/joystick/bsd/SDL_sysjoystick.c:353:5: error:
ISO C90 forbids mixed declarations and code [-Werror=declaration-after-statement]
reported by 'bch' at https://discourse.libsdl.org/t/25231
https://bugzilla.libsdl.org/show_bug.cgi?id=4350
We can't safely call GL_DestroyRenderer() until GL_LoadFunctions()
succeeds because we will be missing functions that we try to use
when activating the renderer for destruction if we have an GL context.
Rainer Sabelka
After I did an upgrade of my arch Linux installation (resulting in an update of Mesa to version 18.2.3), all my SDL2 applications which use the KMS/DRM driver stopped working.
Reason: Creating a Window with SDL_CreateWindow failed because the call to EGL
eglCreateWindowSurface() returns an error "EGL_BAD_MATCH".
After investigating with the debugger I figured, that the configuration, which has been selected from the output of eglChooseConfig(), has an "EGL_NATIVE_VISUAL_ID" which does not match the "format" of the underlying gbm surface.
The attached patch fixes the problem. It does so, by mimicking Weston's behavior.
All configurations returned from eglChooseConfig() which have an visual_id different from the gbm format are discarded, and only from the remaining ones the "best" match is selected.
Rainer Sabelka
When using SLD2 on a Linux console with the KMS/DRM video backend and Linux evdev keyboard support, the caps lock, scroll lock, and num lock leds do not work.
The attached patch adds ioctls for setting the LED state in SDL_evdev_kbd.c
Sylvain
Re-opening this issue.
It fixes the test-case, but it introduces a regression with another bug (bug #4313).
So here's a new patch that activate cropping of the source surface to solve the issue.
It also reverts the wrong changeset.
It prevents unneeded colorkey error message.
Otherwise, we are using the allocator before the app can set up its own hooks.
Now we use VirtualAlloc, and WideCharToMultiByte (because SDL_iconv uses
SDL_malloc, too!) to get ready to call into SDL_main.
This also makes console_wmain() call into the same routines as everything
else, so we don't have to deal with those allocations, too. Hopefully we
end up with the same results from GetCommandLine() as we do in wargv.
Fixes Bugzilla #4340.
Include guards in most changed files were missing, I added them keeping
the same style as other SDL files. In some cases I moved the include
guards around to be the first thing the header has to take advantage of
any possible improvements compiler may have for inclusion guards.
If we run into problems where these events aren't dispatched (initialized on a different thread than the main thread?) we may need to create a separate thread to handle device notifications like we do with the windows joystick subsystem.
If you enable this, you'll need to link with CoreBluetooth.framework and add something like this to your Info.plist:
<key>NSBluetoothPeripheralUsageDescription</key>
<string>MyApp would like to remain connected to nearby bluetooth Game Controllers and Game Pads even when you're not using the app.</string>
It needs to use Bool (which is an int) and not BOOL (which is CARD8), which
causes problems on platforms with different byte order and alignment, etc.
Fixes Bugzilla #4326.
On Mojave, this will report large numbers for retina displays in fullscreen
mode, which isn't how it works on previous versions.
(transplanted from c6c1731780e2bef94f944a4795e2dfbba46d9500)
I have no idea if this works (or if it ever worked, having now examined this
code), as I have no way to compile or test this.
If it's broken, send patches. :)
This means it doesn't have to block while the current frame finishes using the
vertex buffer; it just moves on to the next, probably-not-in-use buffer.
- high-level filters out duplicate render commands from the queue so
backends don't have to.
- Setting draw color is now a render command, so backends can put color
information into the vertex buffer to upload with everything else instead
of setting it with slower dynamic data later.
- backends can request that they always batch, even for legacy programs,
since the lowlevel API can deal with it (Metal, and eventually Vulkan
and such...)
- high-level makes sure the queue has at least one setdrawcolor and
setviewport command before any draw calls, so the backends don't ever have
to manage cases where this hasn't been explicitly set yet.
- backends allocating vertex buffer space can specify alignment, and the
high-level will keep track of gaps in the buffer between the last used
positions and the aligned data that can be used for later allocations
(Metal and such need to specify some constant data on 256 byte boundaries,
but we don't want to waste all that space we had to skip to meet alignment
requirements).
It now uses a growable linked list that keeps a pool of allocated items for
reuse, and reallocs the vertex array as necessary. Testsprite2 can scale to
20,000 (or more!) draws now without drama.
This moves all the rendering to a command list that is flushed to the GL as
necessary, making most common activities upload a single vertex buffer per
frame and dramatically reducing state changes. In pathological cases,
like Emscripten running on iOS's Safari, performance can go from a dozen
draw calls killing your performance to 1000 draw calls running smoothly.
This is work in progress, and not ready to ship. Among other things, it has
a hardcoded array that isn't checked for overflow. But the basic idea is
sound!
Sylvain
The issue is totally reproducible on P8 Lite.
"The dlopen() call doesn't include the app's native library directory. The behavior of dlopen() by Android is not guaranteed".
Workaround in getMainSharedObject()
Just replace
return library;
with
return getContext().getApplicationInfo().nativeLibraryDir + "/" + library;
src/core/linux/SDL_evdev.c:104:1: warning: "_THIS" redefined
In file included from src/core/linux/../../events/SDL_events_c.h:26,
from src/core/linux/SDL_evdev.c:45:
src/core/linux/../../events/../video/SDL_sysvideo.h:146:1: warning: this is the location of the previous definition
Alexandre
DirectFB supports 32-bit ABGR pixel format via DSPF_ABGR, but SDL doesn't map SDL_PIXELFORMAT_ABGR8888 to DSPF_ABGR.
A patch is attached and should add support for ABGR pixel format devices.
The only place angle is activated and causes effect is RenderCopyEx. All other
methods which use vertex shader, leave angle disabled and cause useless sin/cos
calculation in shader.
To get around shader's interface is changed to a vector that contains results
of sin and cos. To behave properly when disabled, cos value is set with offset
-1.0 making 0.0 default when deactivated.
As nice side effect it simplifies GLES2_UpdateVertexBuffer: All attributes are
vectors now.
Additional background:
* On RaspberryPi it gives a performace win for operations. Tested with
[1] numbers go down for 5-10% (not easy to estimate due to huge variation).
* SDL_RenderCopyEx was tested with [2]
* It works around left rotated display caused by low accuracy sin implemetation
in RaspberryPi/VC4 [3]
[1] https://github.com/schnitzeltony/sdl2box
[2] https://github.com/schnitzeltony/sdl2rendercopyex
[3] https://github.com/anholt/mesa/issues/110
Signed-off-by: Andreas M?ller <schnitzeltony@gmail.com>
This prevents us from clearing the clip rect globally when another application has set it.
There's also an experimental change to regularly update the clip rect for a window defensively, in case someone else has reset it. It works well, but I don't know if it's cheap enough to call as frequently as it would be called now, and might have other undesirable side effects.
Also fixed whitespace and SDL coding style
Dominik Reichardt
Xcode warns about
"Traditional headermap style is no longer supported; please migrate to using separate headermaps and set 'ALWAYS_SEARCH_USER_PATHS' to NO."
Just doing the latter is enough to silence the warning without ill effects on compiling. This affects the macOS Xcode projects as well as the iOS projects. Definitely not a bug but an annoying warning that could go away.
Otherwise if SDL_POWER_DISABLED is disabled (eg with --disable-power):
... with clang -pedantic:
src/power/SDL_power.c:48:50: warning: use of GNU empty initializer extension [-Wgnu-empty-initializer]
static SDL_GetPowerInfo_Impl implementations[] = {
^
src/power/SDL_power.c:48:50: warning: zero size arrays are an extension [-Wzero-length-array]
2 warnings generated.
... with gcc -pedantic:
src/power/SDL_power.c:48:50: warning: ISO C forbids empty initializer braces [-Wpedantic]
src/power/SDL_power.c:48:50: warning: ISO C forbids empty initializer braces [-Wpedantic]
static SDL_GetPowerInfo_Impl implementations[] = {
^
src/power/SDL_power.c:48:30: error: zero or negative size array ?implementations?
static SDL_GetPowerInfo_Impl implementations[] = {
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
... with Watcom:
./src/power/SDL_power.c(85): Error! E1112: Initializer list cannot be empty
Creating a full-screen SDL renderer on Windows will keep the screensaver
suspended by DirectX, as is default for full-screen DX applications. However,
for applications that render in windowed-mode, the screensaver will
still kick in, even if SDL_DisableScreenSaver() is called or
SDL_HINT_VIDEO_ALLOW_SCREENSAVER is set to 0 (default). Implementing
a SuspendScreenSaver() function for Win32 fixes this behavior.
This means that if you have two devices named "Soundblaster Pro" in your
machine, one will be reported as "Soundblaster Pro" and the other as
"Soundblaster Pro (2)".
This makes it so you can't into a position where one of your devices can't
be opened because another is sitting on the same name.
duckgrease
SDL_RenderCopyEx blits wrong image (in some cases it's bunch of alternating horizontal lines, some cases it's image from the wrong coordinate, and in some cases it's just a bunch of garbled pixels), when the following conditions are met:
- Use software renderer.
- Enable either horizontal or vertical flip.
- source and destination rectangles must have same width and height, and must be smaller than the size of the texture.
- source rectangle's X and Y coordinates must be 0.
Icenowy Zheng
One front buffer is locked in GLES_SetupCrtc() and overrides the next_bo just locked in KMSDRM_GLES_SwapWindow, then the next_bo gets lost and is not released even when quitting the video.
It may leads to problems with GLES drivers that doesn't clean up GBM correctly if there's any bo left (e.g. the Mali Utgard r6p2 blob). In the case of Mali Utgard r6p2 blob, the DRM device file is still hold by the blob, and if you try to SDL_Quit to let another program to run (this is done by EmulationStation), the new program will fail to open DRM device.
This fixes issues for applications that have a large number of shared libraries
For more information, see https://github.com/KeepSafe/ReLinker for ReLinker's repository.
Sylvain
I did various benches. with clang 6.0.0 on linux, and ndk-r16b on android (NDK_TOOLCHAIN_VERSION=clang).
- still see a x10 speed factor.
- with duff_loops, it does not use vectorisation (but doesn't seem to be a problem).
on linux my patch is already at full speed on -O2, whereas the duff_loops need -O3 (200 ms at -03, and 300ms at -02).
I realized that on Android, I had a slight variation which fits best.
both on linux with -O2 and -O3, and on android with 02/03 and armeabi-v7a/arm64.
Here's the patch.
suffix to the temp Pixel local in the DUFFS_LOOP.
SDL_blit.h (ASSEMBLE_RGB): add _ prefix to temp Pixel locals to avoid
any possible shadowings.
The warnings were like the following:
In file included from src/video/SDL_blit_N.c:26:0:
src/video/SDL_blit_N.c: In function 'BlitNtoNKeyCopyAlpha':
src/video/SDL_blit_N.c:2421:24: warning: declaration of 'Pixel' shadows a previous local [-Wshadow]
Uint32 Pixel = ((*src32 & rgbmask) == ckey) ? *dst32 : *src32;
^
src/video/SDL_blit.h:475:21: note: in definition of macro 'DUFFS_LOOP8'
case 0: do { pixel_copy_increment; /* fallthrough */ \
^
src/video/SDL_blit_N.c:2419:13: note: in expansion of macro 'DUFFS_LOOP'
DUFFS_LOOP(
^
src/video/SDL_blit_N.c:2399:12: warning: shadowed declaration is here [-Wshadow]
Uint32 Pixel;
^
Author: Anthony Pesch <inolen@gmail.com>
Date: Fri May 4 20:21:21 2018 -0400
Added SDL_AUDIO_ALLOW_SAMPLES_CHANGE flag enabling users of SDL_OpenAudioDevice to get
the sample size of the actual hardware buffer vs having a stream created to handle the
delta
C.W. Betts
This cleans up the Xcode project by setting the Xcode groups to the corresponding directories. This also removes the Resources folder in OS X's Products group and adds the CoreBluetooth framework to the iOS tests (this is needed due to the addition of hidapi.
The code is now reliant on SDL_PrivateJoystickAdded() and SDL_PrivateJoystickRemoved() being called correctly when devices are added or removed on Windows
"In release 2.0.6, when Linux evdev keyboard support has been moved to a
separate source file, a feature was added to disable normal keyboard event
processing to prevent "spilling" keystrokes to background virtual console.
This feature has one unpleasant side effect: if application fails to call
`SDL_Exit` before termination or crashes with fatal signal, console is left
in unusable state with keyboard not working and no possibility to switch
virtual console. If user has a chance, he can login remotely and restore
keyboard with `kbd_mode`, otherwise the only option is to reboot the machine.
This patch fixes that problem by intercepting fatal signals (with `sigaction`)
and process termination (with `atexit`), to restore keyboard state, if it
wasn't properly restored with `SDL_Exit`.
The function registered with `atexit` also restores original signal handlers,
to prevent leaving invalid handlers after SDL library is unloaded, if it was
loaded dynamically with `dlopen`.
No signal handlers or `atexit` function are installed if SDL boolean hint
`SDL_HINT_NO_SIGNAL_HANDLERS` is `SDL_TRUE`.
Additionally, if environment variable `SDL_INPUT_LINUX_KEEP_KBD` exists,
keyboard initialization function completely skips disabling keyboard. This
can be useful for debugging."
Fixes Bugzilla #4193.
This would cause problems in various ways, but specifically triggers an
assert when you close a WASAPI capture device in an app running over RDP.
Related to (but not the actual bug) in Bugzilla #3924.
SDL_UDEV_Scan must be called during SDL_SYS_HapticInit to ensure devices
outside of the 0-31 range are added to the list of haptic devices.
Fixes Bugzilla #3923.
First: disable d'n'd events by default; most apps don't need these at all, and
if an app doesn't explicitly handle these, each drop on the window will cause
a memory leak if the events are enabled. This follows the guidelines we have
for SDL_TEXTINPUT events already.
Second: when events are enabled or disabled, signal the video layer, as it
might be able to inform the OS, causing UI changes or optimizations (for
example, dropping a file icon on a Cocoa app that isn't accepting drops will
cause macOS to show a rejection animation instead of the drop operation just
vanishing into the ether, X11 might show a different cursor when dragging
onto an accepting window, etc).
Third: fill in the drop event details in the test library and enable the
events in testwm.c for making sure this all works as expected.
Parse out a copy of the varargs ourselves to get to the reply portion, since
the original passed to D-Bus might modify or not modify the caller's copy,
depending on system ABI.
At the HG state abdd17144682, 64-bit assemblies are using SSE2-based resampler, produces junk sound when converting the S32 -> Float32 -> S16 chain. The `NEED_SCALAR_CONVERTER_FALLBACKS` thing works perfectly.
If I will find a reason that caused this mistake, I'll send a patch by myself.
Now you don't need the latest Wayland installed to build with
newer protocols supported, as they'll build correctly; even if
your system can't use them, we can make intelligent decisions
at runtime about what's available on the current machine anyhow.
This also simplifies some logic and possible failure cases in
the configure and CMake scripts.
Fixes Bugzilla #4207.
This is just in parity with the existing zxdg-shell-unstable-v6 code. Making
the Wayland target robust (and uh, with title bars) is going to take a lot
of work on top of this.
From Tom Black:
I'm having problems initializing the sensor module. I'm compiling with a standard ./configure && make && sudo make install, and the module says it's enabled, but SDL_Init(SDL_INIT_EVERYTHING) is failing with SDL_GetError() returning "SDL not built with sensor support".
Author: Micha? Janiszewski <janisozaur+signed@gmail.com>
Date: Fri Sep 28 20:38:04 2018 +0200
CMake: fix building tests on Linux
In case where libunwind.h has been found, it will be used by compiler,
but linker wasn't updated to reflect use of this new library.
it used to place zeroes between the sign and the number. (space-padding
from within SDL_PrintString() seems OK: spaces are added before sign.)
also fixed the maxlen handling if the number has a sign.
add HAVE_ENDPOINTVOLUME_H, HAVE_MMDEVICEAPI_H and HAVE_AUDIOCLIENT_H
in SDL_config.h.in, SDL_config.h.cmake, SDL_config_windows.h, and in
SDL_config_winrt.h.
Sylvain
Patch a few warnings when using:
-Wmissing-prototypes -Wdocumentation -Wdocumentation-unknown-command
They are automatically enabled with -Wall
- remove force-enabling of pad_zeroes for %u for compatibility
(was added in https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/701f4a25df89)
- ignore pad_zeroes for %s and %S
- ignore pad_zeroes for %d, %i and %u if a precision is given
Alexei
On WM_WINDOWPOSCHANGED event, WIN_UpdateClipCursor() is called. SDL_WINDOW_INPUT_FOCUS is set even when the mouse pointer is not inside the SDL window and therefore ClipCursor(&rect) is called. When dragging the window and rect.bottom=800 (i.e. the bottom edge of the screen) the SDL window is clipped to the bottom of the screen and it is not possible to move it back to the center of the screen.
Anthony @ POW Games
SDL_CreateTextureFromSurface makes an internal call to SDL_GetColorKey which can return an error and spams the error log with "Surface doesn't have a colorkey" even though the original function didn't return an error.
Wayde Reitsma
After attempting to use SDL2 in the way described in this bug, I found the main issue was the includes not being added to the compiler command.
I found the issue was that the target_include_directories commands for the SDL2, SDL2-static and SDL2main targets only sets the public includes for installations using the INSTALL_INTERFACE generator expression.
I have written a patch to CMakeLists.txt that fixes this issue by adding another item to the target_include_directories commands, utilizing the BUILD_INTERFACE generator expression to correctly add the include directory during builds.
src/joystick/hidapi/SDL_hidapijoystick.c: In function 'HIDAPI_InitializeDiscovery':
src/joystick/hidapi/SDL_hidapijoystick.c:281: error: 'true' undeclared (first use in this function)
src/joystick/hidapi/SDL_hidapijoystick.c:281: error: (Each undeclared identifier is reported only once
src/joystick/hidapi/SDL_hidapijoystick.c:281: error: for each function it appears in.)
src/joystick/hidapi/SDL_hidapijoystick.c: In function 'HIDAPI_UpdateDiscovery':
src/joystick/hidapi/SDL_hidapijoystick.c:339: error: 'true' undeclared (first use in this function)
src/joystick/hidapi/SDL_hidapijoystick.c:341: error: ISO C90 forbids mixed declarations and code
The previous code attempted to use set_buffer_size / set_period_size
discretely, favoring the parameters which generated a buffer size that was
exactly 2x the requested buffer size. This solution ultimately prioritizes
only the buffer size, which comes at a large performance cost on some machines
where this results in an excessive number of periods. In my case, for a 4096
sample buffer, this configured the device to use 37 periods with a period size
of 221 samples and a buffer size of 8192 samples. With 37 periods, the SDL
Audio thread was consuming 25% of the CPU.
This code has been refactored to use set_period_size and set_buffer_size
together. set_period_size is called first to attempt to set the period to
exactly match the requested buffer size, and set_buffer_size is called second
to further refine the parameters to attempt to use only 2 periods. The
fundamental change here is that the period size / count won't go to extreme
values if the buffer size can't be exactly matched, the buffer size should
instead just increase to the next closest multiple of the target period size
that is supported. After changing this, for a 4096 sample buffer, the device
is configured to use 3 periods with a period size of 4096 samples and a buffer
size of 12288 samples. With only 3 periods, the SDL Audio thread doesn't even
show up when profiling.
Fixes Bugzilla #4156.
Fixes CMake not being able to find X11 on FreeBSD (which generally has the
headers in /usr/local/include/X11).
List of other popular places borrowed from CMake's FindX11 module.
This worked on the configure script because of magic in the AC_PATH_X macro.
Fixes Bugzilla #4815.
"Applications (such as SDL's testgesture) do "event.tfinger.x * window_width"
to find window coord. Currently the X11 XInput2 backend expects application
to do "event.tfinger.x * (window_width-1)" instead.
X11 XInput2 touch events are normalized so x is 1.0 at "width - 1" but other
SDL backends appear to have x be 1.0 at "width". Same issue for touch event
y with regards to height."
Fixes Bugzilla #4183.
If we change the current context behind the app's back, those tracking
the current context to minimize context changes are going to get
confused.
This brings the EGL backend in line with the GLX one.
Fixes Bugzilla #4199.
This was reproducible by running an SDL app on the console from an ssh login. In this case the terminal wasn't owned by the user running the app, so we were using the default keymap, which didn't have state transitions defined for ctrl and alt, so once we entered that state keypresses would no longer transition out of that state, nor would they generate text.
As a workaround, we'll just reset to the default shift state if that happens, which means we'll get text for keys pressed while ctrl is held down, but I don't think that's a big problem.
Note that in this case we also can't mute the keyboard, so the keypresses go to the console, which probably isn't what you want...
SDL_ExitProcess(), SDL_AbortAssertion() and SDLTest_BailOut().
(Commit 303c1e0fb0cf for bug #4100 removed SDL_NORETURN from
SDL_ExitProcess() and SDL_AbortAssertion() in order to avoid
warnings from windows builds, but that's temporary I guess..)
These are entirely untested
Several USB ids refer to multiple packaged products. In those cases I tried to use the most common name, or a general name (e.g. PS3 Controller), or a completely generic name (e.g. USB gamepad) if it wasn't clear what type of controller it was.
Patches welcome!
Expand SDLActivity::SDLSurface::surfaceChanged() callback to grab the panel width and height at the same time and pass that along to the native code. Only works on API 17+. Duplicates surface dimensions whenever it fails.
Add Android_DeviceWidth/Android_DeviceHeight globals to native code.
Disambiguate Android_ScreenWidth/Android_ScreenHeight -> Android_SurfaceWidth/Android_SurfaceHeight
Use device width/height for all display mode settings.
This means we have to consider SDL_WINDOW_MINIMIZED a window creation flag, but on non-windows platforms we just remove it and let the normal FinishWindowCreation re-apply and do the minimize as I have no idea what is right on them or if anything should change.
CR: Phil
Martin ?irokov
Launching an SDL application with SDL_AUDIODRIVER=jack, and then calling SDL_OpenAudioDevice() with whatever parameters fails with an error like this one:
SDL_OpenAudioDevice: Couldn't connect JACK ports: SDL:sdl_jack_output_0 => system:midi_playback_1
This happens because JACK_OpenDevice in src/audio/jack/SDL_jackaudio.c blindly tries to connect to all input ports without checking whether they are for audio or midi.
The fix is to check port types and ignore all non audio ports. Also I removed devports field from struct SDL_PrivateAudioData, because it's never really used and removing unused ports from it would be PITA.
Jona
The following explains why this bug was happening:
This crash was caused because the audio session was being set as active [session setActive:YES error:&err] when the audio device was actually being CLOSED. Certain cases the audio session being set to active would fail and the method would return right away. Because of the way the error was handled we never removed the SDLInterruptionListener thus leaking it. Later when an interruption was received the THIS_ object would contain a pointer to an already released device causing the crash.
The fix:
When only one device remained open and it was being closed we needed to set the audio session as NOT active and completely ignore the returned error to successfully release the SDLInterruptionListener. I think the user assumed that the open_playback_devices and open_capture_devices would equal 0 when all of them where closed but the truth is that at the end of the closing process that the open devices count is decremented.
(It gets upset at the -2147483648, thinking this should be an unsigned value
because 2147483648 is too large for an int32, so the negative sign upsets the
compiler.)
The concern is that a massive int sample, like 0x7FFFFFFF, won't fit in a
float32, which doesn't have enough bits to hold a whole number this large,
just to divide it to get a value between 0 and 1.
Previously we would convert to double, to get more bits, do the division, and
cast back to a float, but this is expensive.
Casting to double is more accurate, but it's 2x to 3x slower. Shifting out
the least significant byte of an int32, so it'll definitely fit in a float,
and dividing by 0x7FFFFF is still accurate to about 5 decimal places, and the
difference doesn't appear to be perceptable.
Fixes problems launching Firewatch on Linux (which statically links SDL but
also dynamically loads a system-wide copy from a plugin shared library) with
a newer SDL build.
The change makes sure that SDL_vsnprintf() nul terminates if it is
using _vsnprintf() for the job.
I made this patch for Watcom, whose _vsnprintf() doesn't guarantee
nul termination. The preprocessor check can be extended to windows
in general too, if required.
Closes bug #3769.
Daniel Gibson
Sorry, but it seems like Microsoft didn't fix the issue properly.
I just updated my Win10 machine, it now is Version 1803, Build 17134.1
I tested with SDL2 2.0.7 (my workaround was released with 2.0.8) and still got
lots of events that directly undid the prior "real" events - just like before.
(See simple testcase in attachement)
By default it sets SDL_HINT_MOUSE_RELATIVE_MODE_WARP - which triggered (and on my machine still triggers) the buggy behavior. You can start it with -raw, then it'll not set that hint and the events will be as expected.
The easiest way to see the difference is looking at the window title, which shows accumulated X and Y values: If you just move your mouse to the right, in -raw mode the number just increases. In non-raw mode (using mouse warping) it stays around 0.
I also had a WinAPI-only testcase: https://gist.github.com/DanielGibson/b5b033c67b9137f0280af9fc53352c68
It just calls SetCursorPos(320,240); on each WM_MOUSEMOVE event, and it also
logs all those events to a mouseevents.log textfile.
This log indeed looks a bit different since the latest Win10 update: It seems like all those events with x=320 y=240 do arrive - but only after I stopped moving the mouse - even though the cursor seems to be moved back every frame (or so).
So moving the mouse to the right gives X coordinates like
330, 325, 333, 340, 330, ...
and then when stopping movement I get lots of events with X coordinate 320
Olli-Samuli Lehmus
If one creates a window with the SDL_WINDOW_FULLSCREEN_DESKTOP flag, and creates a render target with SDL_SetHint(SDL_HINT_RENDER_SCALE_QUALITY, "linear"), and afterwards sets SDL_SetHint(SDL_HINT_RENDER_SCALE_QUALITY, "nearest"), after minimizing the window, the scale quality hint is lost on the render target. Textures however do keep their interpolation modes.
lectem
The SDL_syswm.h header includes the windows.h header after including begin_code.h which changes the structure packing alignment.
It seems this is not safe as suggested by the following warning :
warning C4121: 'JOBOBJECT_IO_RATE_CONTROL_INFORMATION_NATIVE_V2': alignment of a member was sensitive to packing
Zack Middleton
Running top-level SDL configure on macOS 10.11 resulted in the errors below because automake removed the brackets about the tests.
./configure: line 15756: : command not found
./configure: line 15759: -Iinclude -I/Users/zack/SDL/include -idirafter /Users/zack/SDL/src/video/khronos : No such file or directory
./configure: line 15763: : command not found
Azamat H. Hackimov
When you try use SDL2 2.0.8 in CMake project in Linux, it complains about trailing spaces in sdl2.pc:
CMake Error at CMakeLists.txt:147 (add_executable):
Target "TestSimpleMain" links to item "-L/usr/lib64 -lSDL2 " which has
leading or trailing whitespace. This is now an error according to policy
CMP0004.
Christian Herzig
pthread_mutex_trylock() and by the way, pthread_mutex_lock() do not set errno.
Pthread-methods directly return error code as int. See related man-pages for
details.
Michael Sartain
This is a quick pass at adding Linux RealtimeKit thread priority support to SDL.
It allows me to bump the thread priority to high without root privileges or setting any caps, etc.
rtkit readme here:
http://git.0pointer.net/rtkit.git/tree/README
Previously the include path was {INSTALL_PREFIX}/include,
it is now {INSTALL_PREFIX}/include/SDL2 to be consistent with
the other build and package configuration systems.
Fixes#4128.
Simon Hug
I just wanted to fix a simple compiler warning in SDL_ShowMessageBox on Windows (which Sam fixed recently) and ended up finding some issues.
Attached patch fixes these issues:
- Because Windows only reports the lower 16 bits of the control identifier that was pushed, the button IDs used by SDL (C type int, most likely 32 bits) can get cut off.
- The documentation states (somewhat ambiguously) that the button ID will be -1 if the dialog was closed, but the current code sets 0. For SDL 2.1, I think this should be a return code of SDL_ShowMessageBox itself. That will free up the button ID and it seems a more appropriate place for signaling this event.
- Ampersands in controls will create mnemonics on Windows (underlined letters that, if combined with the Alt key, will push the button). I was thinking of adding a hint or flag to let the users enable it, but that might have unexpected results.
- When the size of the text gets calculated, it doesn't use the same parameters as the static control. This can cut off text or wrap it weirdly.
- On Windows, the Tab key is used to switch between control groups and sometimes between buttons in dialogs. This didn't seem to work correctly.
Attached patch also adds:
- Icons. Just the system ones that can be loaded with the ordinals IDI_ERROR, IDI_WARNING and IDI_INFORMATION.
- A button limit of 2^16 - 101.
- Some more specific error messages, but they never reach the user because how SDL_ShowMessageBox handles them if an implementation returns with an error.
This is commented out in SDLActivity.java, with the note #CURSORIMPLEENTATION because it requires API 24, which is higher than the minimum required SDK
Ozkan Sezer
The following patch defines _WIN32_WINNT_WIN7 if it is not already
defined in core/windows/SDL_windows.c, similar to what is already
there for _WIN32_WINNT_VISTA.
Felix Geyer
Forwarding from https://bugs.debian.org/892087 quoting verbatim:
The SDL2 header SDL_cpuinfo.h generates gcc warnings if the program using
it compiles with the -Wundef warning. (In particular, this means that QEMU
builds using it fail on at least sparc hosts, since QEMU dev builds
use both -Wundef and -Werror.).
/usr/include/SDL2/SDL_cpuinfo.h:63:5: warning: "HAVE_IMMINTRIN_H" is not defined, evaluates to 0 [-Wundef]
#if HAVE_IMMINTRIN_H && !defined(SDL_DISABLE_IMMINTRIN_H)
Eric Wasylishen
This bug was reintroduced by https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/fcf24b38a28a
The steps to reproduce are the same: run the "testrelative" SDL demo with "--info all",
connect a USB mouse with a scroll wheel, and roll the scroll wheel one "notch". You'll get log output like:
testdraw2[1644:67222] INFO: SDL EVENT: Mouse: wheel scrolled 0 in x and 0 in y (reversed: 1) in window 1
As far as I can tell macOS doesn't have an API for getting the number of "wheel notches"; I get a deltaY of 0.100006 for one "notch", and it's heavily accelerated (if you roll the wheel quickly you'll get large deltas). So NSEvent's deltaY is only meant to be used for scrolling a scroll view, with the given distance in points, not something like selecting an item in a game.
Here's a temporary patch that at restores the foor/ceil in Cocoa_HandleMouseWheel.
Not ideal, but at least it restores the ability to scroll one notch of a mousewheel.
Ozkan Sezer 2018-03-02 20:02:37 UTC
http://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/d702b0c54e52 resulted in an error and
two warnings when compiled with mingw.
1. Error from SDL_windowstaskdialog.h:
In file included from src/video/windows/SDL_windowsmessagebox.c:29:0:
src/video/windows/SDL_windowstaskdialog.h:23:54: error: expected ')' before 'HWND'
This is fixed by removing unnecessary annotations:
2. Warning from SDL_assert.c:
src/SDL_assert.c: In function 'SDL_ExitProcess':
src/SDL_assert.c:138:1: warning: 'noreturn' function does return
Indeed ExitProcess() is prototyped with DECLSPEC_NORETURN, but
TerminateProcess() is not. This can be rectified by adding an
exit() call in there. Do NOTE, however, that requires building
with a libc:
3. Warning from SDL_windowsmessagebox.c:
src/video/windows/SDL_windowsmessagebox.c: In function 'WIN_ShowMessageBox':
src/video/windows/SDL_windowsmessagebox.c:513:9: warning: 'nCancelButton' may be used uninitialized in this function
My lazy solution was manually initializing nCancelButton to 0.
This lets the message box have an icon. Unless the app has opted-in to using
the v6 common controls, though, this will fall back to the usual SDL message
boxes.
"What I have done is use TerminateProcess rather than ExitProcess.
ExitProcess will cause Microsoft's leak detection to continue, TerminateProcess
won't. It is also technically wrong to use ExitProcess in the case of aborting
the application.
Jack Powell
Twitter @jack9267"
This tries to load vulkan.framework or libvulkan.1.dylib before MoltenVK.framework
or libMoltenVK.dylib. In the previous version, layers would not work for applications
run-time loading the default library.
Eric Wasylishen
Patch to support building the tests with cmake.
Disabled by default, use: "cmake .. -DSDL_TEST=YES" to enable the tests.
Tested on macOS 10.13 with the ninja, makefile, and Xcode generators, and Windows 10 with the Visual Studio 2017 generator.
Manuel Sabogal
If SDL is compiled with the Audio subsystem disabled there are some undefined references to the functions ANDROIDAUDIO_ResumeDevices and ANDROIDAUDIO_PauseDevices in the file src/video/android/SDL_androidevents.c.
Eric Wasylishen
The following patch adds Metal.framework to the "link binary with libraries" section of each test program, with "status" set to "optional", which fixes link errors on all of the test programs. I'm not sure if this is a correct fix - the fact that this was necessary might indicate the static SDL2.a library has a hard dependency on Metal.framework (?) - but it gets the test programs working in Xcode again.
It also adds testyuv_cvt.c to the testoverlay2 target, fixing a link error.
With the previous change, I get:
1> Creating library C:\projects\SDL\VisualC\Win32\Debug\SDL2.lib and object C:\projects\SDL\VisualC\Win32\Debug\SDL2.exp
1>LINK : error LNK2001: unresolved external symbol __DllMainCRTStartup@12
Andreas Falkenhahn
In src/SDL.c there is this code:
_DllMainCRTStartup(HANDLE hModule,
...
The comment says that this is needed on Watcom C for some reason but why is it included then when building with Visual C as well? Shouldn't it be only included when compiling on Watcom C then?
I'm asking because this code caused me a lot of headaches because I'm building a DLL that contains SDL and I link using /MT and the _DllMainCRTStartup() symbol obviously led to lots of trouble but it wasn't clear to me where the problem was because all I got from the linker was:
LNK2019: unresolved external symbol _main referenced in function ___tmainCRTStartup
So I had to got through each and every object to see what the culprit was. See here for the full story:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/25067151/lnk2019-unresolved-external-symbol-main-referenced-in-function-tmaincrtstar/48177067#48177067
So if it isn't necessary on Visual C, please just leave that symbol out on Visual C so that it no longer leads to any trouble. Thanks.
Most pthread functions return 0 on success and non-zero on error, but those
errors might be positive or negative, so checking for return values in the
Unix style, where errors are less than zero, is a bug.
Fixes Bugzilla #4039.
Callum McGing
This patch allows the user to disable the behaviour that blocks the compositor through a new hint: SDL_VIDEO_X11_NET_WM_BYPASS_COMPOSITOR. This allows tools or other windowed applications to behave properly under KWin.
cjacker
After updating from 2.0.5 to 2.0.7, Ibus not work anymore(fcitx still works).
Compare with 2.0.5, there are two issues in SDL_ibus.c.
1, SetupConnection always return SDL_FALSE in 2.0.7.
2, 'SetCapabilities' method should be called on 'ibus_conn'.
Patch attached.
Alexander Larsson
dbus_shutdown() is a debug feature which closes all global resources in the dbus library. Calling this should be done by the app, not a library, because if there are multiple users of dbus in the process then SDL could shut it down even though another part is using it.
For example, i had an issue with this in mGBA, which uses both Qt and SDL, both using libdbus. I had a session bus, but no system bus (this was in a flatpak sandbox), and when SDL_DBus_Init() failed to init the system bus it called dbus_shudown() and continued on. This caused issues for Qt when running due to its session bus connections having disappeared beneath it.
Ozkan Sezer
Configury adds Metal.framework to linkage even if it is not available.
My solution is setting enable_render_metal to no when Metal.framework
is not found
"*(void**)pfn = LoadAddress()" would cast the NULL pointer in pfn to a
void**, and then dereference it, which wasn't what we wanted. Replaced with
a clearer cast operation.
Viacheslav Slavinsky
SDL_rpivideo driver has 60 frames per second hardcoded in it, this is a problem for games that need to keep pace using VSYNC. I believe that I have found a solution to this. It is based on code in tvservice.c in rpi userland:
a1b89e91f3/host_applications/linux/apps/tvservice/tvservice.c (L433)
ayer.3d
I have a DualShock 4 v2 controller with a GUID that's not in the database. There is an existing GUID that is almost identical, with the only difference that I can tell being the reported version string (mine being 8001, database is 8100).
Existing GUID: 050000004c050000cc09000000810000
New GUID: 050000004c050000cc09000001800000
When connected via USB, the GUID matches an existing entry: 030000004c050000cc09000011810000
This is meant to be the desktop-enhanced version of wl_shell. Right now we
just match what the existing wl_shell code does, but there are other areas of
functionality available to us now, that we can fill in later.
This uses the "unstable" API, since this is what ships in Ubuntu 17.10 (as
part of Wayland 1.10), but Wayland 1.12 promotes this to stable with extremely
minor changes. We will add support for the stable version when it makes sense
to do so.
This variable can be set to the following values:
"0" - The indicator bar is not hidden (default for windowed applications)
"1" - The indicator bar is hidden and is shown when the screen is touched (useful for movie playback applications)
"2" - The indicator bar is dim and the first swipe makes it visible and the second swipe performs the "home" action (default for fullscreen applications)
SDL now builds with gcc 7.2 with the following command line options:
-Wall -pedantic-errors -Wno-deprecated-declarations -Wno-overlength-strings --std=c99
Sylvain
armeabi is almost deprecated for android-ndk higher that r13b.
either it doesn't compile (ICE), or it executes wrongly (using long long for instance).
android people advices to use armeabi-v7a (or use r13b).
Anthony
This worked in 2.0.5 as normal, but stopped working in 2.0.7. The monitor's resolution doesn't change, a window is created in full screen mode at the virtual desktop resolution instead.
The EGL_GL_COLORSPACE_KHR is an attribute for eglCreate*Surface.
As written in EGL_KHR_gl_colorspace documentation:
Accepted as an attribute name by eglCreateWindowSurface,
eglCreatePbufferSurface and eglCreatePixmapSurface
EGL_GL_COLORSPACE_KHR 0x309D
(...)
A future SDL release will change the borderless window to act more like a normal window that happens to have no chrome, to support windows that draw their own chrome. In the meantime, those applications should set the "SDL_BORDERLESS_WINDOWED_STYLE" hint.
Ismael Ferreras Morezuelas (Swyter)
As a new year gift I have implemented the Windows version of SDL_GetWindowBordersSize(). I needed it for auto-selecting a cozy window size for the game I'm currently working on and noticed that it only worked under X11, so I thought it could be a good excuse to contribute back more stuff. The Mercurial patch is attached as a .diff file. Let me know what you think.
Happy 2018 to all the SDL2 devs and users!
--
PS: Keep in mind that Windows 10 includes the 8px invisible grip borders as part of the frame. There's a way of detecting if Aero/DWM is being used and ask only for the visible rect, but I believe that GetWindowRect() is doing that for a reason and working as intended, so I haven't changed it. (See [2])
References:
[1]: http://www.firststeps.ru/mfc/winapi/r.php?72
[2]: https://stackoverflow.com/a/34143777/674685
[3]: https://stackoverflow.com/a/431548/674685
[4]: https://wiki.libsdl.org/SDL_GetWindowBordersSize
- Use a single buffer for various non-changing constants accessed by the GPU, instead of multiple buffers.
- Do the half-pixel offset for points and lines using a transform matrix so we don't need a malloc when rendering.
- Don't add a half-pixel offset for other primitives and textures. This matches D3D and GL render behaviour.
- Remove the half-texel texture coordinate offset since it's not needed now that there's no more half-pixel position offset when rendering a texture.
- Don't try to set texture usage on iOS 8 since it doesn't exist there.
"GetVersionExA is deprecated in windows 8.1 and above's SDK, causing a warning
when building against the win10 SDK. Attached patch cleans up the usage for a
warning-free build.
GetVersionExA was being used to test to see if SDL was running on win9x or
winnt. A quick chat with Ryan on twitter suggested that SDL doesn't
officially support win9x anymore, so the call to this can be outright removed.
As an aside, replacing the call to GetVersionExA with VerifyVersionInfoA (the
recommended path) would have been pointless, as VerifyVersionInfoA only
supports VER_PLATFORM_WIN32_NT and doesn't officially support any other value
for dwPlatformId currently. (And it's probable that win9x SDKs didn't have
VerifyVersionInfo* in them anyway.)"
Fixes Bugzilla #4019.
Laurent Merckx
I have a problem with the SDL_ShowCursor method on Raspberry.
Depending on the context, my application hides or show the mouse cursor with SDL_ShowCursor.
But when calling SDL_ShowCursor(true), the cursor is displayed at 0,0 (and not at last position).
After debugging sources by myself, it seems that the problem is in SDL_rpimouse.c - RPI_ShowCursor:
vc_dispmanx_rect_set( &dst_rect, 0, 0, curdata->w, curdata->h);
should be
vc_dispmanx_rect_set( &dst_rect, mouse->x, mouse->y, curdata->w, curdata->h);
For me, it solves the problem.
tomwardio
HAVE_POLL is correctly defined in SDL_config.h when running configure. However, in the only place where it's used, it's undefined at the start of the file.
Dominik Reichardt
As discussed in 2012 the iOS onscreen keyboard hides when you hit RETURN (see https://discourse.libsdl.org/t/on-screen-keyboard-change/19216).
IMO this is a bad idea to not be able to influence this behavior and just recently this was fixed for Android by adding the hint SDL_HINT_ANDROID_RETURN_HIDES_IME in changeset 11768 6ce3bb5e38a5.
Eric wing
There is a tiny bug in the new overscan code for the SDL_renderer.
In SDL_renderer.c, line 1265, the if check for SDL_strcasecmp with "direct3d" needs to be inverted.
Instead of:
if(SDL_strcasecmp("direct3d", SDL_GetCurrentVideoDriver())) {
It should be:
if(0 == SDL_strcasecmp("direct3d", SDL_GetCurrentVideoDriver())) {
This bug causes the "overscan" mode to pretty much be completely ignored in all cases and all things remain letterboxed (as before the feature).
bastien.bouclet
According to this GCC bug report, altivec.h requires building with the gnu extensions: https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=78263.
As an application developer, I don't want SDL to force me to enable the gnu extensions.
Elis?e Maurer
The attached minimal program sets the SDL_HINT_MOUSE_RELATIVE_MODE_WARP to 1, enables relative mouse mode then logs all SDL_MOUSEMOTION xrel values as they happen.
When moving the mouse exclusively to the right:
* On a Windows 10 installation before Fall Creators update (for instance, Version 10.0.15063 Build 15063), only positive values are reported, as expected
* On a Windows 10 installation after Fall Creators update (for instance, Version 10.0.16299 Update 16299), a mix of positive and negative values are reported.
3 different people have reproduced this bug and have confirmed it started to happen after the Fall Creators update was installed. It happens with SDL 2.0.7 as well as latest default branch as of today.
It seems like some obscure (maybe unintended) Windows behavior change? Haven't been able to pin it down more yet.
(To force-upgrade a Windows installation to the Fall Creators update, you can use the update assistant at https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/software-download/windows10)
Eric Wasylishen
Broken GetCursorPos / SetCursorPos based games on Win 10 fall creators are not limited to SDL.. I just tested winquake.exe (original 1997 exe) and it now has "jumps" in the mouse input if you try to look around in a circle. It uses GetCursorPos/SetCursorPos by default. Switching WinQuake to use directinput (-dinput flag) seems to get rid of the jumps.
Daniel Gibson
A friend tested on Win10 1607 (which is before the Fall Creators Update) and the the bug doesn't occur there, so the regression that SetCursorPos() doesn't reliably generate mouse events was indeed introduced with that update.
I even reproduced it in a minimal WinAPI-only application (https://gist.github.com/DanielGibson/b5b033c67b9137f0280af9fc53352c68), the weird thing is that if you don't do anything each "frame" (i.e. the mainloop only polls the events and does nothing else), there are a lot of mouse events with the coordinates you passed to SetCursorPos(), but when sleeping for 10ms in each iteration of the mainloop, those events basically don't happen anymore. Which is bad, because in games the each iteration of the mainloop usually takes 16ms..
I have a patch now that I find acceptable.
It checks for the windows version with RtlGetVersion() (https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/hardware/ff561910.aspx) and only if it's >= Win10 build 16299, enables the workaround.
All code is in video/windows/SDL_windowsevents.c
and the workaround is, that for each WM_MOUSEMOVE event, "if(isWin10FCUorNewer && mouseID != SDL_TOUCH_MOUSEID && mouse->relative_mode_warp)", an addition mouse move event is generated with the coordinates of the center of the screen
(SDL_SendMouseMotion(data->window, mouseID, 0, center_x, center_y);) - which is exactly what would happen if windows generated those reliably itself.
This will cause SDL_PrivateSendMouseMotion() to set mouse->last_x = center_x; and mouse->last_y = center_y; so the next mouse relative mouse event will be calculated correctly.
If Microsoft ever fixes this bug, the IsWin10FCUorNewer() function would have to
be adjusted to also check for a maximum version, so the workaround is then disabled again.
Yuri K. Schlesner
When using texture filtering, there are filtering artifacts visible on the edges of scaled textures, where the texture filtering pulls in texels from the other side of the texture. Using clamping texture modes wouldn't completely fix this since source rectangles don't need to cover the whole texture. (See screenshot attached in next post.)
The opengl driver uses clamping on textures and so avoid this at least in the cases where the source rect is the whole texture. The direct3d driver does not and so has problems in every case. I'm not sure if it can actually completely be fixed, but at least enabling clamping for direct3d would be one step in the right direction.
This works better for games where there may be a bunch of simulation logic that needs to be run before the next rendering pass, and prevents blocking if the next drawable is busy.
This isn't complete, but is enough to run testsprite2. It's currently
Mac-only; with a little work to figure out how to properly glue in a Metal
layer to a UIView, this will likely work on iOS, too.
This is only wired up to the configure script right now, and disabled by
default. CMake and Xcode still need their bits filled in as appropriate.
XAudio2 doesn't have capture support, so WASAPI was to replace it; the holdout
was WinRT, which still needed it as its primary audio target until the WASAPI
code code be made to work.
The support matrix now looks like:
WinXP: directsound by default, winmm as a fallback for buggy drivers.
Vista+: WASAPI (directsound and winmm as fallbacks for debugging).
WinRT: WASAPI
Andrey
Seems latest google angle library successfully built & tested under macOS'es.
https://github.com/google/angle
We need to use GLES2 to implement true cross-platform code.
tomwardio
Proposed patch loads eglCreatePbufferSurface in same manner as other 1.1 functors. This allows custom video drivers to create pbuffer surfaces.
Manuel Alfayate Corchete
This fixes a problem with KMSDRM on some graphics hardware where only bigger cursor sizes are supported, such as current Intel gfx. (The kernel-side driver is what limits this: had to look for failing IOCTLs...)
That caused SDL_SetCursor() to fail silently, and we were left with a missing cursor without further explanation.
With this patch, different "standard" sizes are tried and a bigger one is used (with an intermediate and clean buffer only used to write the new cursor to the BO where it will live after) if we get, let's say, 16x16 which is pretty common but our hardware does not support that.
Vitaly Novichkov
Once I ran build of my codecs collection on AppVeyor where my CMake script downloads latest SDL2 from HG repo, failed to link because of math functions conflict:
https://ci.appveyor.com/project/Wohlstand/audiocodecs/build/1.0.44
The revision is b9ff5f8b2303
There are both vanilla MinGW and MinGW-w64 are failed to build.
```
[100%] Linking C shared library libSDL2.dll
c:/mingw/bin/../lib/gcc/mingw32/5.3.0/../../../libmingwex.a(scalbn.o):(.text+0x0): multiple definition of `scalbln'
CMakeFiles\SDL2.dir/objects.a(s_scalbn.c.obj):C:/projects/audiocodecs/build-MinGW-Release-Win32/external/SDL2/src/SDL2HG/src/libm/s_scalbn.c:30: first defined here
C Snover
SDL_AddDisplayMode returns an SDL_bool corresponding to whether or not the given display mode was added or not. It will return SDL_FALSE if a matching display mode already exists in the display's list of display modes, which causes ownership of the mode driverdata to remain with the caller. Some video drivers ignore the return value of SDL_AddDisplayMode, so leak the driverdata memory when SDL_AddDisplayMode returns SDL_FALSE.
Mate Nagy
There is a typo in CMakeLists.txt that makes CMake exit with failure.
Change that causes the problem: (Notice the double ending brackets)
${SDL2_SOURCE_DIR}/src/video/*.c)
+ ${SDL2_SOURCE_DIR}/src/video/yuv2rgb/*.c)
Fix:
Just remove the first ending bracket resulting in:
${SDL2_SOURCE_DIR}/src/video/*.c
${SDL2_SOURCE_DIR}/src/video/yuv2rgb/*.c)
raist66676
Here is the bug in latest SDL 2.0.8 development repo. It is obvious and simple to fix by correcting typos on six lines of code.
In src/video/SDL_yuv.c on lines 217, 249, 280, 321, 353, and 384 the wrong conversion functions are called for SDL_PIXELFORMAT_ABGR8888 and SDL_PIXELFORMAT_BGR888. Instead of ABGR functions, BGRA functions are called. These are typos.
New functions get and set the YUV colorspace conversion mode:
SDL_SetYUVConversionMode()
SDL_GetYUVConversionMode()
SDL_GetYUVConversionModeForResolution()
SDL_ConvertPixels() converts between all supported RGB and YUV formats, with SSE acceleration for converting from planar YUV formats (YV12, NV12, etc) to common RGB/RGBA formats.
Added a new test program, testyuv, to verify correctness and speed of YUV conversion functionality.
tomwardio
Remove static int vm_error and vm_event, use local variables instead.
This fixes unused variable errors when compiling with SDL_VIDEO_DRIVER_X11_XINERAMA undefined.
src/video/x11/SDL_x11modes.c:505:22: error: unused variable 'vm_error' [-Werror,-Wunused-variable]
src/video/x11/SDL_x11modes.c:505:12: error: unused variable 'vm_event' [-Werror,-Wunused-variable]
tomwardio
Add support to be able to set EGL_SURFACE_TYPE bits when creating an EGL config. This is usefule when wanting to create pixel buffer surfaces in custom video drivers.
Alexander Orefkov
In src\joystick\android\SDL_sysjoystick.c in SDL_SYS_JoystickDetect when SDL_GetTicks return number grater 2147483648 (after 24.85 days uptime) SDL_TICKS_PASSED(SDL_GetTicks(), timeout) return FALSE and Android_JNI_PollInputDevices is never calling.
And in JoystickByDeviceId - when search for newly added joystic - after SDL_SYS_JoystickDetect item not reinitilized, and always stay NULL, cause return NULL instead of added joystick.
Sylvain
A listener thread has been added to know when the native thread would end.
But now, it is more easy to only check that after the main function has returned. It's one thread less.
e_pluschauskas
I noticed that after updating SDL to 2.0.6 my application now exports SDL_main.
At GitHub SDL mirror (branch 2.0.5) SDL_main prototyped as
extern C_LINKAGE int SDL_main(int argc, char *argv[]);
but at branch 2.0.6 prototype is
extern C_LINKAGE DECLSPEC int SDL_main(int argc, char *argv[]);
Changing the background color causes the titlebar to blend against it on
modern macOS releases, making all SDL windows look wrong by default. This was
set to make the window not flash white before a GL context is ready, but we
can accomplish this in our window's view's drawRect implementation, too.
Also added native code to the Android gradle project, which allows using gradle or Android Studio to build the entire SDL application without a separate ndk-build step.
Manuel
I noticed that, at least on Intel GPU hardware, passing SDL_RENDERER_PRESENTVSYNC would result on a static console instead of the program graphics.
That was due to the fact that calling drmModePageFlip() only works if we have previously set up CRTC to one of the GBM buffers with a drmModeSetCrtc() call, so now it's done and things work as expected.
The KMSDRM_GLES_SetupCrtc() call is done only one time, only when needed (when egl_swapinterval is not 0: when it's 0, there's no need for it because we flip by calling drmModePageFlip() anyway).
The place where KMSDRM_GLES_SetupCrtc() call is done may look strange, but it's right: it needs EGL completely ready because it needs to call eglSwapBuffers() internally to work (see more comments about it in the code).
Simon Hug
Patch that adds [-1, 1] clamping to the scalar audio type conversions.
This may come from the SDL_Convert_F32_to_X_Scalar functions. They don't clamp the float value to [-1, 1] and when they cast it to the target integer it may be too large or too small for the type and get truncated, causing horrible noise.
The attached patch throws clamping in, but I don't know if that's the preferred way to fix this. For x86 (without SSE) the compiler (I tested MSVC) seems to throw a horrible amount of x87 code in it. It's a bit better with SSE, but probably still quite the performance hit. And SSE2 uses a branchless approach with maxss and minss.
Carlos
Angle supports GLES3 but when using these functions (SDL_CreateWindow and SDL_CreateRenderer), defaults again to GLES2.0.
A current workaround (hack) to retrieve a GLES3.0 context with Angle is:
1) set
SDL_GL_SetAttribute(SDL_GL_CONTEXT_MAJOR_VERSION, 3);
SDL_GL_SetAttribute(SDL_GL_CONTEXT_MINOR_VERSION, 0);
after InitSDL AND after calling SDL_CreateWindow (before SDL_CreateRenderer)
2) Comment lines 2032-2044 in SDL_render_gles2.c, funtion GLES2_CreateRenderer
window_flags = SDL_GetWindowFlags(window);
if (!(window_flags & SDL_WINDOW_OPENGL) ||
profile_mask != SDL_GL_CONTEXT_PROFILE_ES || major != RENDERER_CONTEXT_MAJOR || minor != RENDERER_CONTEXT_MINOR) {
changed_window = SDL_TRUE;
SDL_GL_SetAttribute(SDL_GL_CONTEXT_PROFILE_MASK, SDL_GL_CONTEXT_PROFILE_ES);
SDL_GL_SetAttribute(SDL_GL_CONTEXT_MAJOR_VERSION, RENDERER_CONTEXT_MAJOR);
SDL_GL_SetAttribute(SDL_GL_CONTEXT_MINOR_VERSION, RENDERER_CONTEXT_MINOR);
if (SDL_RecreateWindow(window, window_flags | SDL_WINDOW_OPENGL) < 0) {
goto error;
}
}
This retrives a GLES3 context as confirmed using glGetString(GL_VERSION). This should be fixed by modifying a few if's.
Ozkan Sezer
In my cross-build environment with cmake-2.8.12.1, cmake does not add
SDL_coreaudio.m to its makefiles and the result is a failure. The fix
is simple: set the language to C for it as it is done at other places
in CMakeLists.txt.
Ozkan Sezer
Since changeset 11607:60cd425a2f14, I am getting the following
error upon quit. Running testsprite2, clicking the mouse, and
quiting it is enough to trigger it. This is on my old Fedora9
x86-Linux:
X Error of failed request: BadCursor (invalid Cursor parameter)
Major opcode of failed request: 2 (X_ChangeWindowAttributes)
Resource id in failed request: 0xb057340
Serial number of failed request: 905
Current serial number in output stream: 906
Reverting https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/60cd425a2f14 removes
the error.
The audioqueue thread needs to keep running, and processing the CFRunLoop
until the AudioQueue is disposed of, otherwise CoreAudio will hang waiting for
final data to feed the device.
At least, I think this is how it all works. It definitely fixes the bug here!
Since AudioQueueDispose() calls AudioQueueStop() internally, there's no need
for our thread to handle this, either, which is good because the AudioQueue
would be disposed by this point. So now the AudioQueue is disposed first, and
then our thread is joined, and everything works out okay.
Just in case, we mark the device "paused" before setting everything in motion,
so any further callbacks from CoreAudio will write silence and not fire the
app's audio callback again.
Fixes Bugzilla #3868.
Steve Robinson
In my project, the 'uninstall' target is already created by the glew library. I get this error when SDL2 tries to create it:
CMake Error at _build/3rdparty/SDL2/SDL2-2.0.6/CMakeLists.txt:1816 (add_custom_target):
add_custom_target cannot create target "uninstall" because another target
with the same name already exists. The existing target is a custom target
created in source directory
"D:/Code/sdl2-tutorial/_build/3rdparty/glew/glew-2.1.0/build/cmake". See
documentation for policy CMP0002 for more details.
To fix it, go to the bottom of the SDL2 CMakeLists.txt file. Add an if statement to check for the existence of the target before creating it. The end result looks like this:
if(NOT TARGET uninstall)
configure_file(
"${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/cmake_uninstall.cmake.in"
"${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/cmake_uninstall.cmake"
IMMEDIATE @ONLY)
add_custom_target(uninstall
COMMAND ${CMAKE_COMMAND} -P ${CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR}/cmake_uninstall.cmake)
endif()
This is how the glew library deals with this possibility in their CMakeLists.txt file.
Steve Robinson
When I try to build the 'uninstall' target in CMake when SDL2 is added to a subdirectory of my project, I get this error:
1>CMake Error at cmake_uninstall.cmake:2 (message):
1> Cannot find install manifest:
1> "D:/Code/sdl2-tutorial/_build/3rdparty/SDL2/SDL2-2.0.6/install_manifest.txt"
The install_manifest.txt is actually in the top-level binary directory, not the project-specific binary directory.
To fix it, change all instances of:
CMAKE_CURRENT_BINARY_DIR
To:
CMAKE_BINARY_DIR
In:
cmake_uninstall.cmake.in
Trent Gamblin
The documentation for SDL_TouchFingerEvent says that the x and y coordinates are normalised between 0-1. I've found that to be true on Windows, Android and iOS but on X11 they are in pixel coordinates. This patch fixes the issue. This was the cleanest way I could do it with what was available without changing things around a lot but you may know a better way.
(I thought padding size ranged from 5 frames to ~30 frames (based around
RESAMPLER_ZERO_CROSSINGS, which is 5), but it's actually between 512 and
several thousands (based on RESAMPLER_SAMPLES_PER_ZERO_CROSSING)). It gets
big fast when downsampling.
Manuel
I would like this small patch merged that adds support for my GreenAsia Inc. PSX to USB converter, so SDL_IsGameController() returns true when using this adaptor.
It's interesting because PSX/PS2 controllers connected using this model won't be detected as gamecontrollers otherwise, only as joysticks.
Sylvain
There are various YUV-RGB conversion coefficients, according to https://www.fourcc.org/fccyvrgb.php
I choose the first (from Video Demystified, with integer multiplication),
but the current SDL2 Dither functions use in fact the next one, which follows a specifications called CCIR 601.
Here's a patch to use the second ones and with previous warning corrections.
There are less multiplications involved because Chroma coefficient is 1.
Also, doing float multiplication is as efficient with vectorization.
In the end, the YUV decoding is faster: ~165 ms vs my previous 195 ms.
Moreover, if SDL2 is compiled with -march=native, then YUV decoding time drops to ~130ms, while older ones remains around ~220 ms.
For information, from jpeg-9 source code:
jpeg-9/jccolor.c
* YCbCr is defined per CCIR 601-1, except that Cb and Cr are
* normalized to the range 0..MAXJSAMPLE rather than -0.5 .. 0.5.
* The conversion equations to be implemented are therefore
* Y = 0.29900 * R + 0.58700 * G + 0.11400 * B
* Cb = -0.16874 * R - 0.33126 * G + 0.50000 * B + CENTERJSAMPLE
* Cr = 0.50000 * R - 0.41869 * G - 0.08131 * B + CENTERJSAMPLE
jpeg-9/jdcolor.c
* YCbCr is defined per CCIR 601-1, except that Cb and Cr are
* normalized to the range 0..MAXJSAMPLE rather than -0.5 .. 0.5.
* The conversion equations to be implemented are therefore
*
* R = Y + 1.40200 * Cr
* G = Y - 0.34414 * Cb - 0.71414 * Cr
* B = Y + 1.77200 * Cb
Sylvain
Few issues with YUV on SDL2 when using odd dimensions, and missing conversions from/back to YUV formats.
1) The big part is that SDL_ConvertPixels() does not convert to/from YUV in most cases. This now works with any format and also with odd dimensions,
by adding two internal functions SDL_ConvertPixels_YUV_to_ARGB8888 and SDL_ConvertPixels_ARGB8888_to_YUV (could it be XRGB888 ?).
The target format is hard coded to ARGB888 (which is the default in the internal of the software renderer).
In case of different YUV conversion, it will do an intermediate conversion to a ARGB8888 buffer.
SDL_ConvertPixels_YUV_to_ARGB8888 is somehow redundant with all the "Color*Dither*Mod*".
But it allows some completeness of SDL_ConvertPixels to handle all YUV format.
It also works with odd dimensions.
Moreover, I did some benchmark(SDL_ConvertPixel vs Color32DitherYV12Mod1X and Color32DitherYUY2Mod1X).
gcc-6.3 and clang-4.0. gcc performs better than clang. And, with gcc, SDL_ConvertPixels() performs better (20%) than the two C function Color32Dither*().
For instance, to convert 10 times a 3888x2592 image, it takes ~195 ms with SDL_ConvertPixels and ~235 ms with Color32Dither*().
Especially because of gcc vectorize feature that optimises all conversion loops (-ftree-loop-vectorize).
Nb: I put no image pitch for the YUV buffers. because it complexify a little bit the code and the API :
There would be some ambiguity when setting the pitch exactly to image width:
would it a be pitch of image width (for luma and chroma). or just contiguous data ? (could set pitch=0 for the later).
2) Small issues with odd dimensions:
If width "w" is odd, luma plane width is still "w" whereas chroma planes will be "(w + 1)/2". Almost the same for odd h.
Solution is to strategically substitute "w" by "(w+1)/2" at the good places ...
- In the repository, SDL_ConvertPixels() handles YUV only if yuv source format is exactly the same as YUV destination format.
It basically does a memcpy of pixels, but it's done incorrectly when width or height is odd (wrong size of chroma planes). This is fixed.
- SDL Renderers don't support odd width/height for YUV textures.
This is fixed for software, opengl, opengles2. (opengles 1 does not support it and fallback to software rendering).
This is *not* fixed for D3D and D3D11 ... (and others, psp ?)
Only *two* Dither function are fixed ... not sure if others are really used.
- This is not possible to create a NV12/NV12 texture with the software renderer, whereas other renderers allow it.
This is fixed, by using SDL_ConvertPixels underneath.
- It was not possible to SDL_UpdateTexture() of format NV12/NV21 with the software renderer. this is fixed.
Here's also two testcases:
- that do all combination of conversion.
- to test partial UpdateTexture
Steve Robinson
In my existing CMake project, I use add_subdirectory to add the source for SDL2. This worked fine in 2.0.5, but now in 2.0.6 when I build the INSTALL CMake target, I get this error:
file INSTALL cannot find "D:/path/to/SDL2Config.cmake".
Call Stack (most recent call first):
3rdparty/SDL2/cmake_install.cmake:32 (include)
3rdparty/cmake_install.cmake:36 (include)
cmake_install.cmake:32 (include)
To fix this, I changed line 1770 from this:
${CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR}/SDL2Config.cmake
To this:
${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/SDL2Config.cmake
Aaron
As of 2.0.6, all of my games are failing with the following error:
process 31778: arguments to dbus_type_is_basic() were incorrect, assertion "dbus_type_is_valid (typecode) || typecode == DBUS_TYPE_INVALID" failed in file dbus-signature.c line 322.
This is normally a bug in some application using the D-Bus library.
D-Bus not built with -rdynamic so unable to print a backtrace
(patch by Ozkan Sezer)
Evgeny Kapun
Commit 490bb5b49f11 [1], which was a fix for bug #3790, introduced a new bug: now, calling SDL_FreeSurface(surface) deallocates surface->map even if there are other references to the surface. This is bad, because some functions (such as SDL_ConvertSurface) assume that surface->map is not NULL.
Michal
the numbering of the bulletpoints in:
docs/README-ios.md
has been mangled with:
changeset 11365 efd3bc8e5a9b
fix:
12 2. Open SDL.xcodeproj (located in Xcode-iOS/SDL) in Xcode.
13 4. Select your desired target, and hit build.
remove:
28 1. Follow step 1 above.
adapt:
29 2. cd (PATH WHERE THE SDL CODE IS)/build-scripts
30 3. ./iosbuild.sh
Robert Turner
SDL_windowsevents.c contains code to retrieve the x and y coordinate for a requested hit test. It does this as follows:
POINT winpoint = { (int) LOWORD(lParam), (int) HIWORD(lParam) };
LOWORD(lParam) does not correctly mask off high bits that are set if the point is on a second (or third, etc.) monitor. This effectively offsets the x-coordinate by a large value.
MSDN documentation suggests that LOWORD() and HIWORD() are the wrong macros for the task, instead suggesting we should be doing something like the following:
POINT winpoint = { GET_X_LPARAM(lParam), GET_Y_LPARAM(lParam) };
Testing this change on my Windows 10 machine with 2 monitors gives the correct results.
Ozkan Sezer
EMX declares _beginthread() / _endthread() in stdlib.h, not process.h.
The attached patch updates the OS/2 case of SDL_thread.h for it. (It
also tidies the unreadable whitespace in win32 case.)
- Fixing rendering borderless window. Need to force windows to send a WM_NCCALCSIZE then return 0 for non-client area size.
- Adding WS_CAPTION | WS_SYSMENU | WS_MINIMIZEBOX to borderless windows, for reasons noted in comments.
- Fix SetupWindowData() setting SDL_WINDOW_BORDERLESS. This was being cleared at window creation, causing hanlding for the first WM_NCCALCSIZE message to fail
Mark Callow
Xcode 9 emits a warning to validate project settings. The changes it proposes are
1. [iOS] Update the iOS deployment target to 8.0 since Xcode does
not support anything older.
2. [macOS] Target 'Framework' - Automatically Select Archectures.
3. [iOS & macOS] Turns on a bunch more compile warnings, a *lot* more on iOS.
4. [iOS & macOS] Turn on "Missing Localizability".
I want to confirm if it is ok to accept these changes and submit updated project files.
Since Alex Szpakowski has just removed iOS 7 guard ifdef's, I'm guessing 1 isn't a problem.
2 is probably ok for anyone building themselves. I wonder if it may cause problems for building distribution binaries.
3 shouldn't be a problem either provided any newly emitted warnings are fixed.
4 I am unfamiliar with. The description says "This will turn on the static analyzer to check for "Missing Localizability", because this project is localized for multiple languages." I suppose this may cause new warnings.
Previously, the padding was silence, which was a problem when streaming since
you would sample a little bit of this silence between each buffer.
We still need a means to get padding data for the right hand side, but this
patch makes the resampler output more correct.
Note that apps submitted to the iOS App Store *must* use a modern iOS SDK (currently iOS 10 is probably the minimum), however the SDK used to build is separate from the minimum iOS version an app supports at runtime.
Anthony
This is what's making the software renderer crash with rotated destination rectangles of w or h = 0:
SDL_SetHint(SDL_HINT_RENDER_SCALE_QUALITY, "2");
This time it's using real math from a real whitepaper instead of my previous
amateur, fast-but-low-quality attempt. The new resampler does "bandlimited
interpolation," as described here: https://ccrma.stanford.edu/~jos/resample/
The output appears to sound cleaner, especially at high frequencies, and of
course works with non-power-of-two rate conversions.
There are some obvious optimizations to be done to this still, and there is
other fallout: this doesn't resample a buffer in-place, the 2-channels-Sint16
fast path is gone because this resampler does a _lot_ of floating point math.
There is a nasty hack to make it work with SDL_AudioCVT.
It's possible these issues are solvable, but they aren't solved as of yet.
Still, I hope this effort is slouching in the right direction.
Ozkan Sezer
The patch below changes HAVE_COPYSIGN macro in SDL_config_windows.h to
HAVE__COPYSIGN, so that _copysign() can be used in SDL_stdlib.h which
is available in many more windows-targeting toolchains such as MinGW,
MSVC >= 6, etc, and not just MSVC >= 2013. SDL_stdlib.c already has a
specific check for HAVE__COPYSIGN, so I believe this is reasonable.
This would cause playback problems in certain situations, such as on the
Raspberry Pi. The device that the wait was added for seems to not benefit from
it in modern times, and standard desktop Linux seems to do the right thing
when a USB device is unplugged now, without this patch.
Fixes Bugzilla #3599.
Andreas Falkenhahn
My app opens a 640x480 window. When I click on the window's maximize button, the window correctly fills the entire screen and loses its borders. But clicking on the restore button now doesn't restore the window to its original 640x480 size. Instead, the window size is identical to the screen size now. The only difference to the previous state is that the window now has borders again but it isn't restored to 640x480.
bastien.bouclet
The window is now resized to its specified size, but it moves to the top left corner of the screen. That is unexpected because neither the user nor the program moved it there. Test program attached (the same one as before).
Simon Hug
When RWops seeks with fseek or fseeko it uses the types long or off_t which can be 32 bits on some platforms. stdio_seek does not check if the 64-bit integer for the offset fits into a 32-bit integer. Offsets equal or larger than 2 GiB will have implementation-defined behavior and failure states would be very confusing to debug.
The attached patch adds range checking by using the macros from limits.h for long type and some bit shifting for off_t because POSIX couldn't be bothered to specify min and max macros.
It also defines HAVE_FSEEKI64 in SDL_config_windows.h so that the Windows function gets picked up automatically with the default config.
And there's an additional error message for when ftell fails.
Andreas Falkenhahn
When compiling SDL for the Raspberry Pi, I have to use the --host parameter to enable compilation of the native Raspberry Pi video driver, like so:
--host=arm-raspberry-linux-gnueabihf
It took me a while to figure out that this was necessary in order to have the native Raspberry Pi video driver compiled in. I think it would be better if there was an option like --enable-video-rpi that could be passed to configure and that would also show up when saying configure --help. Currently, it?s rather difficult to figure out that you have to use the --host parameter with arm-raspberry-linux-gnueabihf in order to get Raspberry Pi video support. It?s also somewhat inconsistent because most other video drivers can in fact be enabled/disabled through specific configure parameters but there is no such parameter for the native Raspberry Pi video driver.
Simon Hug
These are the remaining compiler warnings I see in the current tip cb049cae7c3c.
- SDL_test_log.c defines _CRT_SECURE_NO_WARNINGS without checking if it was already set.
- SDL_windowskeyboard.c converts integers to pointers without going over the (U)INT_PTR types. That bothers MSVC.
Now we try the new (hardware-specific) pathnames first, and if those fail to
load, we'll try the more generic names that earlier versions of Raspbian used.
Fixes Bugzilla #3800.
Ozkan Sezer
HAVE_LIBSAMPLERATE_H is depending on HAVE_LIBC in current config.h.in:
it shouldn't be. HAVE_LIBUDEV_H, HAVE_DBUS_DBUS_H, HAVE_IBUS_IBUS_H,
HAVE_FCITX_FRONTEND_H, and HAVE_ALTIVEC_H have the same situation too.
I suggest something like the following, which moves them out of the
HAVE_LIBC confinement and also moves the windows dx header stuff along
side them. (Not ideal, but a bit cleaner I think.)
Ozkan Sezer
Cmake checks for float.h, but configure does not: the attached patch
adds float.h to checked headers in configury, and it adds the missing
HAVE_FLOAT_H macro to SDL_config.h.cmake and SDL_config.h.in.
In SDL_config_macosx.h and SDL_config_windows.h, defined HAVE_FLOAT_H
as 1, where I know that it's true.
Mart?n Golini
I'm having a very slow initialization of the video subsystem that locks the window creation for about 500 ms ( tested in at least 4 different systems ). What i found is that X11_InitModes_XRandR is using XRRGetScreenResources, that explicitly ask to poll the hardware for changes. This is not really necessary since if the data is already available you can use XRRGetScreenResourcesCurrent.
I attached a tentative patch that fix this issue. With the patch there's no lock when the subsystem is initialized and the window creation is instant in my applications. The patch only uses XRRGetScreenResourcesCurrent in X11_InitModes_XRandR but it could be potentially used in X11_GetDisplayModes and X11_SetDisplayMode.
bastien.bouclet
When creating two surfaces and blitting them onto the other, SDL's internal reference counting fails, and one of the surfaces is not freed when calling SDL_FreeSurface.
Example code :
SDL_Surface *s1 = SDL_CreateRGBSurfaceWithFormat(0, 640, 480, 32, SDL_PIXELFORMAT_ARGB8888);
SDL_Surface *s2 = SDL_CreateRGBSurfaceWithFormat(0, 640, 480, 32, SDL_PIXELFORMAT_ARGB8888);
SDL_BlitSurface(s1, NULL, s2, NULL);
SDL_BlitSurface(s2, NULL, s1, NULL);
SDL_FreeSurface(s2);
SDL_FreeSurface(s1);
With this example, s1 is not freed after calling SDL_FreeSurface, its refcount attribute is still positive.
This also seems to fix the follow-up issue in bug #3719, whereby the initial fix caused the SDL window to move, after transitioning from fullscreen to windowed-mode
This is necessary because the Raspberry Pi is a strange beast, that believes
it has OpenGL support (through glX?) but generally has GLES2 support.
So when using the raspberry video target, we need to force this to default
to a GLES2 context, or by default SDL_CreateWindow() will fail, deep down
when it tries to load the proper GL library.
Fixes testsprite2 (and basically everything else that wasn't testgles2) when
run on a Raspberry Pi without a X server.
Please note that other targets might also need this filled in, the Raspberry
Pi is just the most prominent and readily-available System-On-A-Chip style
thing on my desk. :)
Romain Tisserand
Using KMS/DRM driver from WIP SDL2.0.6 on Linux/ARM SoC RockChip RK3328 (ARM Mali 450 MP2 GPU).
The current code is using GBM_BO_FORMAT_XRGB8888 as GBM buffer format specifier.
The Mali driver (it has been confirmed some other vendor implementations too) expects GBM_FORMAT_XRGB8888.
The Mesa implementation is actually handling both values as the same, but it's not implemented like this into every gbm.h vendor header.
https://github.com/ideak/mesa/blob/master/src/gbm/backends/dri/gbm_dri.c
So with stock SDL2 on my card (Mali vendor implementation), it does not work, eglCreateWindowSurface fails, and gbm_is_format_supported fails too (with the BO variant).
It runs fine with GBM_FORMAT_XRGB8888.
Here is a link of the gbm.h from Mali user-space driver :
https://github.com/rockchip-linux/libmali/blob/rockchip/include/gbm.h
This is necessary because we need to see if GLES compat extensions exist.
All of this code (including ShouldUseTextureFramebuffer()) should be
revisited after 2.0.6 ships; ideally we don't make throwaway contexts if
we can avoid it...but maybe we can't. I hear Vulkan is pretty cool.
Fixes Bugzilla #3725.
Sylvain
Some API 16 methods are used (InputDevice: getDescriptor(), getVibrator()), so we need to compile at least with SDK API 16. Hence default.properties and project.properties have been modified to use android-16.
There are also some modification to SDLActivity.java not to use getVibrator() if we run under API 16. And not to check to presence of hasVibrator() if we are under API 11.
-some hard-coded constant can be expandend.
- rename a local variable (hasVibrator to hasVibratorService)
benjamin.feng
Probable underlying cause: https://bugzilla.libsdl.org/show_bug.cgi?id=3124#c5
"If you download and build the HID Calibrator sample you can see that these are totally legitimate HID devices (except for inverting the Y-axis of joysticks, which is contrary to the HID specification but does make them more compatible with games compiled expecting XBOX controllers)."
Sylvain
Since https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/6546daa45a02
SDL_android_main.c is empty and then produce a warning
nativeInit does not exist and dont need to be mark undefined
Colin Barrett
Using the pre-built x86 devel libs from here:
https://www.libsdl.org/release/SDL2-devel-2.0.5-VC.zip
If I have:
SDL_GL_SetAttribute(SDL_GL_CONTEXT_PROFILE_MASK, SDL_GL_CONTEXT_PROFILE_ES);
SDL_GL_SetAttribute(SDL_GL_CONTEXT_MAJOR_VERSION, 2);
SDL_GL_SetAttribute(SDL_GL_CONTEXT_MINOR_VERSION, 0);
SDL_GL_SetAttribute(SDL_GL_CONTEXT_FLAGS, SDL_GL_CONTEXT_DEBUG_FLAG);
and I'm using ANGLE/(a GL driver that doesn't provide an ES2 context) such that SDL_EGL_CreateContext is called by SDL_GL_CreateContext, I get the error "Could not create EGL context (context attributes are not supported)" and no context is created.
Looking at the code in SDL_EGL_CreateContext - if gl_config.flags is non-zero, it looks like the code in the section guarded with "#ifdef EGL_KHR_create_context" should be executed - but it apparently isn't.
Is it possible this section hasn't been compiled into the pre-built libraries? If I build SDL2.dll myself using the Visual C++ solution (VS2015 Community Update 3) then the call succeeds as I expect
bastien.bouclet
When exiting a "fullscreen space" on OS X, windows don't go to their defined "windowed mode size", but go back to their previous size.
Steps to reproduce:
1. Create a windowed mode SDL window
2. Toggle it to fullscreen with the SDL_WINDOW_FULLSCREEN_DESKTOP flag
3. While in fullscreen, change the windowed mode size using SDL_SetWindowSize
4. Toggle the window back to windowed mode
Expected result:
- The window has the size specified during step 3.
Actual result:
- The window has the size specified when creating the window in step 1.
Attached is a minimal reproduction test case.
The attached test case works as expected on X11 and Windows.
Ozkan Sezer
fix windows build after revision 11382: commit 2026e42e377a renamed
_SDL_msctf_h to SDL_msctf_h_ . SDL_windowskeyboard.c relies on that
macro, so update it accordingly.
Ozkan Sezer
Since the Vulkan merge, building against a Mac OS X SDM older than
10.11 fails in SDL_cocoametalview.m because Metal.framework is not
present. There is no conditional compiling in SDL_cocoametalview.m
either, so --disable-video-vulkan doesn't help with anything. (The
configury doesn't check darwin for x86_64 either, but it's another
story.)
I cross-build against 10.8 SDK on linux using clang-3.4.2 and this
is a problem for me. Will this be fixed?
Simon Hug
This issue actually raises the question if this API change (requirement of initialized audio subsystem) is breaking backwards compatibility. I don't see the documentation saying it is needed in 2.0.5.
"Major changes, roughly in order of appearance:
- Use float math everywhere, instead of promoting to double and casting back
all the time.
- Conserve sound energy when downmixing any channel into two other channels.
- Add a QuadToStereo filter. (The previous technique of reusing StereoToMono
never worked, since it assumed an incorrect channel layout for 4.0.)
- Add a 71to51 filter. This removes just under half of the cases the previous
code would silently break in.
- Add a QuadTo51 filter. More silent breakage fixed.
- Add a 51to71 filter, removing another almost-half of the silently broken
cases.
- Add 8 to the list of values SDL_SupportedChannelCount will accept.
- Change SDL_BuildAudioCVT's channel-related logic to handle every case, and
to actually fail if it fails instead of silently corrupting sound data and/or
crashing down the road."
(Note that SDL doesn't otherwise support 7.1 audio yet, but hopefully it will
soon and the 7.1 converters are an important piece of that. --ryan.)
Fixes Bugzilla #3727.
David Brady
When I attempted to make a mapping file for Android gamepads, I quickly discovered that most of the ones that I have here show up as the same device (Broadcom Bluetooth HID), meaning that it was impossible to make mappings on Android, since every device looked the same.
This patch will check for the existence of the getDescriptor function added in Jelly Bean, and use it if it's there. The Android Dashboard says that the majority of Android phones should support this function, and doing it this way will not force us to bump up our API version.
chw
Control key sequences from hardware keyboards (wireless/USB/bluetooth) get not properly reported on Android devices.
The attached patch uses the idea from http://stackoverflow.com/questions/12337117/capture-all-ctrl-under-android to make control key sequences appear as normal SDL_KEYDOWN events instead of cooked text input.
Clayton Craft
The default path used by directfb for libGL is different than the default path used by x11 in SDL2:
./src/video/directfb/SDL_DirectFB_opengl.c:
path = "libGL.so";
./src/video/x11/SDL_x11opengl.c:
#define DEFAULT_OPENGL "libGL.so.1"
On at least one distro (Alpine Linux), libGL.so is not created (or more accurately the symlink to libGL.so.1 is not created). For consistency, the 'path' variable in SDL_DirectFB_opengl.c should patch the DEFAULT_OPENGL in SDL_x11opengl.c ("libGL.so.1")
Ozkan Sezer
Revision 288 (http://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/2f5a6062db86) excluded the
Watcom compiler from forcing 4 byte structure packing in begin_code.h.
However, it missed updating close_code.h, which now has an unbalanced
#pragma pack(pop) if the compiler is Watcom. The issue seems to have
crawled into SDL2, too.
Error message was:
[mvk-info] MoltenVK version 0.18.2. Vulkan version 1.0.51.
[***MoltenVK ERROR***] VK_ERROR_INITIALIZATION_FAILED: On-screen rendering requires a view that is backed by a layer of type CAMetalLayer.
2017-08-28 02:17:29.579 testvulkan[95627:1716939] ERROR: SDL_Vulkan_CreateSurface(): vkCreateMacOSSurfaceMVK failed: VK_ERROR_INITIALIZATION_FAILED
David Ludwig
I've created a new set of patches. I am happy to create more, if it would help.
One version only copies 'size'.
A second version copies both 'size' and 'silence'. When looking over the documentation for SDL_OpenAudio in SDL_audio.h, it mentioned that both 'size' and 'silence' were things that SDL_OpenAudio would calculate.
Regarding *both* patches, I did notice that SDL 1.2 appears to have always modified desired's size and silence fields. The SDL wiki, at https://wiki.libsdl.org/SDL_OpenAudio#Remarks , does note:
Carlos
We would like to add a switch (define) that allows us to compile Angle statically with SDL. That is, getting rid of the OpenGL DLL. Usually you need OpenGL to be loaded dynamically as DLL because implementation is provided by the system but no need with Angle.
Only 2 files need modification and it shouldn't affect current behaivor:
include/SDL_egl.h and src/video/SDL_egl.c, as in here
https://github.com/native-toolkit/sdl/pull/10/files
The flag name could be SDL_VIDEO_STATIC_ANGLE (instead of NATIVE_TOOLKIT_STATIC_ANGLE) as discussed here https://github.com/native-toolkit/sdl/pull/10
We have tested this with both Windows and UWP, using NME engine (https://github.com/haxenme/nme).
Releated issue: https://bugzilla.libsdl.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1820
Sylvain
Hi! here's a patch for that with two class loaded regarding API level.
Test both case : before API 11 and after.
I also remove now unused GetSystemServiceFromUIThread() and minor clean-up (haptic warning prototype).
Sylvain
Small patch for this issue. I tested it and it seems to work.
- it can send several backspaces (instead of only 1).
- it calls directly "sendKeyEvent()" instead of "super.sendKeyEvent()".
otherwise, it would go through the android internals, calling again "onKey()".
and then the "backspace" would arrive after the next "commitText()".
sfalexrog
Android haptic code was not added to CMakeLists.txt, leading to build failures when targeting Android platform.
Attached patch adds Android haptic driver to source sets and adds configuration parameter to SDL_config.h.cmake.
Tom Seddon
0f0ad62237 (git head at the time of writing); Visual Studio 2015, toolset v140, Platform 10.0.14393.0, building for x64
Windows non-MinGW cmake build sets defines implying wcslcpy and wcslcat are available, but Windows doesn't have these functions.
Ryan C. Gordon
That's weird, these are the exact two functions that Emscripten incorrectly believed it had until we upgraded the buildbot's emsdk install.
Not sure what's up with this, but it's possibly not a MingW-specific thing!
This fixes a strange corner case (notes appended below), and should be
safe to do anyhow.
Fixes Bugzilla #3674.
"I did more tests.
It appears the bug only happens if there is
another window on the screen that has "always
on top" property. For me it is xawtv - it is
always opened in a screen corner. Closing
xawtv or removing "always on top" property
from it makes the problem to go away.
Plus, it doesn't appear like the buttons are
not delivered at all. It appears that instead
the button presses are delivered on some mouse
positions, but not delivered when you move the
mouse to other part of the window... So this is
really weird and is likely somewhere deep in the
Xorg.
Maybe somehow it happens that the cursor is
actually above the xawtv window, but, because
my app uses grab, it is not visible there, and
in that case the events are not delivered to
my app?
But with my patch the button events are
always delivered flawlessly, it seems.
Hmm, and that indeed seems to explain my problem:
if the mask is set properly and my app uses
grab, then, even if the mouse is above some
other window, the events would still be delivered
to the grabbing app, which is what actually wanted
because my app uses relative mouse mode, so it
doesn't know the pointer can cross some other window
(my app draws the pointer itself).
So my current theory is that my patch only enforces
the mouse grab, which otherwise can be tricked by
some other window preventing the button events
delivery (but motion events are still delivered
via xinput2, which makes it all look very obscure)."
This patch was originally written by Marc Di Luzio for glX and enhanced by
Maximilian Malek for WGL, etc. Thanks to both of you!
Fixes Bugzilla #3643.
Fixes Bugzilla #3735.
macOS currently needs this if you build with X11 support. iOS doesn't
(currently), but it doesn't hurt to compile it in case we do something
Unixy on that platform later on.
Pegasus Epsilon
With the system dialog font set to Arial or Tahoma or another variable-width font, everything works just as expected. When using a fixed-width font, like Courier or DejaVu Sans Mono, the text gets cut off. Example screenshots attached.
Charles Huber
The event timestamp members should be documented to indicate their meaning and units.
Currently the timestamps are populated using SDL_GetTicks() in SDL_PushEvent() in SDL_events.c.
Martijn Courteaux
I implemented precise scrolling events. I have been through all the folders in /src/video/[platform] to implement where possible. This works on OS X, but I can't speak for others. Build farm will figure that out, I guess. I think this patch should introduce precise scrolling on OS X, Wayland, Mir, Windows, Android, Nacl, Windows RT.
The way I provide precise scrolling events is by adding two float fields to the SDL_MouseWheelScrollEvent datastructure, called "preciseX" and "preciseY". The old integer fields "x" and "y" are still present. The idea is that every platform specific code normalises the scroll amounts and forwards them to the SDL_SendMouseWheel function. It is this function that will now accumulate these (using a static variable, as I have seen how it was implemented in the Windows specific code) and once we hit a unit size, set the traditional integer "x" and "y" fields.
I believe this is pretty solid way of doing it, although I'm not the expert here.
There is also a fix in the patch for a typo recently introduced, that might need to be taken away by the time anybody merges this in. There is also a file in Nacl which I have stripped a horrible amount of trailing whitespaces. (Leave that part out if you want).
manuel.montezelo
Original bug report (note that it was against 2.0.0, it might have been fixed in between): http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=733015
--------------------------------------------------------
Package: libsdl2-2.0-0
Version: 2.0.0+dfsg1-3
Severity: normal
Tags: patch
I have occasional crashes here caused by the X11 backend of SDL2. It seems to
be caused by the X11_Pending function trying to add a high number (> 1024)
file descriptor to a fd_set before doing a select on it to avoid busy waiting
on X11 events. This causes a buffer overflow because the file descriptor is
larger (or equal) than the limit FD_SETSIZE.
Attached is a possible workaround patch.
Please also keep in mind that fd_set are also used in following files which
may have similar problems.
src/audio/bsd/SDL_bsdaudio.c
src/audio/paudio/SDL_paudio.c
src/audio/qsa/SDL_qsa_audio.c
src/audio/sun/SDL_sunaudio.c
src/joystick/linux/SDL_sysjoystick.c
--------------------------------------------------------
On Tuesday 24 December 2013 00:43:13 Sven Eckelmann wrote:
> I have occasional crashes here caused by the X11 backend of SDL2. It seems
> to be caused by the X11_Pending function trying to add a high number (>
> 1024) file descriptor to a fd_set before doing a select on it to avoid busy
> waiting on X11 events. This causes a buffer overflow because the file
> descriptor is larger (or equal) than the limit FD_SETSIZE.
I personally experienced this problem while hacking on the python bindings
package for SDL2 [1] (while doing make runtest). But it easier to reproduce in
a smaller, synthetic testcase.
Martin Gerhardy
just for easier debugging issues in the own code...
SDL_CreateRenderer should maybe also use this macro
Ryan C. Gordon
I'll go one better: it should have an SDL_assert().
Marcus von Appen
The LT_LDFLAGS in Makefile.in contain the $(DESTDIR) in -rpath, which instructs libtool to take a wrong path into account for linking.
The issue arises, if DESTDIR is passed at build time and installation time.
-rpath only should use $(libdir) for both SDL 1.2 and SDL 2.x.
Leonardo
Structure SDL_gestureTouch gets reallocated for every new added gesture but its never freed.
Proposed patch add the function SDL_GestureQuit() that takes care of doing that and gets called when TouchQuit is called.
Gabriel Jacobo
Thanks for the patch. I think it needs a bit of extra work though, looking at the code in SDL_gesture.c , I see that SDL_numGestureTouches only goes up, I think the right fix here involves adding SDL_GestureDelTouch (hooked into SDL_DelTouch) as well as SDL_GestureQuit (as you posted in your patch).
Rainer Deyke
I've written a small patch that adds a small SDL_DuplicateSurface function to SDL. I've written the function as part of a larger (as yet unfinished) patch, but I think this function is useful enough that it merits inclusion in SDL on its own.
Alvin
I'm interested in this bug as well. I have experienced it when trying to embed an SDL_Window into a FLTK application. To do this, I create a FLTK window (window inside a window - think video player) and then use SDL_CreateWindowFrom() on the inner most window's Xlib Window*. After which, I create a renderer.
In my situation I am using the FLTK GUI toolkit.
What I have experienced is that the SDL_CreateRender() will recreate the window in order to properly setup OpenGL capability. As part of this process, the window is hidden and a call is executed that waits indefinitely for an acknowledgement that the window was indeed unmapped. This is where my program hangs.
Please correct me if I am wrong, but should SDL2 not make Xlib calls that effect the Xlib Window in this situation (e.g. When SDL_CreateWindowFrom() is used)? The toolkit being used typically assumes responsibility and, I presume, tracks all Xlib Windows it creates.
On line src/video/SDL_video.c:1372 the comment associated with setting SDL_WINDOW_FOREIGN reads:
/* Can't destroy and re-create foreign windows, hrm */
Since I do not know the reason for hiding the window in the first place, the attached patch simply does not wait for a response when X11_XWithdrawWindow() and X11_XMapRaised() are issued by X11_HideWindow() and X11_ShowWindow(), respectively. I presume that the GUI toolkit (GTK, FLTK, etc.) has or will consume the acknowledging event as it is managing the Xlib Window (or it thinks it is).
I have tested the patch against hg 5c645d037de2 and I have successfully tested:
* Embedding the SDL_Window inside a FLTK application.
* Calling SDL_SetWindowSize() when FLTK resizes the window (e.g. dragging cursor on the edge of the window).
* Filling the renderer's default target blue and drawing a red fill square at the centre (exciting, I know!)
* Calling SDL_Quit() when the application terminates
I do not receive any Xlib erorr messages (BadWindow, etc.) in any of those situations.
Ozkan Sezer
Attached three patches, so these minor os/2 bits get registered mainstream:
1. SDL_syswm.h: add SDL_SYSWM_OS2 to SDL_SYSWM_TYPE enum
2. SDL_platform.h: recognize __EMX__ too as __OS2__
3. begin_code.h: set SDLCALL as _System for OS/2.
UX-admin
I am compiling with the Sun Studio 12 u2 compiler. There are multiple issues with the build, but this particular issue appears to be that it is illegal to declare a union of a struct of floats and a float. While GCC 4.8.1 does not flag this as an error, Sun Studio is much more standards compliant and strict, halting further compilation with an error.
afwlehmann
Sorry for re-opening, but it turns out that the current interval is indeed not updated. I've just checked the source code of the 2.0.3 release again:
163 if (current->canceled) {
164 interval = 0;
165 } else {
166 interval = current->callback(current->interval, current->param);
167 }
168
169 if (interval > 0) {
170 /* Reschedule this timer */
171 current->interval = interval; // <-- this line is missing
172 current->scheduled = tick + interval;
173 SDL_AddTimerInternal(data, current);
174 } else {
According to the documentation: "The callback function is passed the current timer interval and the user supplied parameter from the SDL_AddTimer() call and returns the next timer interval. If the returned value from the callback is 0, the timer is canceled."
If I understand the text correctly, then the current interval should in fact be updated according to the returned value. Otherwise there would be a discrepancy between the next time for which the timer is actually re-scheduled and the value that's passed to the callback once the timer fires again.
This could be fixed by adding line #171.
Ozkan Sezer
The attached patch makes testautomation_sdltest.c more compatible wrt
LLONG_{MIN|MAX} macros and makes it to compile on older systems (e.g.
glibc-2.8) too, by replacing LLONG_{MIN|MAX} with INT64_{MIN|MAX}.
c.f.: bug #3494, where the same issue was described for SDL_test_fuzzer.c
Ozkan Sezer
An array defined like int xPositions[] = {-1, 0, 1, w-1, w, w+1 };
errors with Open Watcom: it strictly wants constants. Small patch
like below makes things more compatible.
Sylvain
This still happens with the current trunk version. (software renderer of testdrawchessboard.c)
When there is a rotation, the window size changed and the internal surface is marked as "surface_valid == SDL_FALSE".
And all further call fails.
SDL_video.c :
2478 void
2479 SDL_OnWindowResized(SDL_Window * window)
2480 {
2481 window->surface_valid = SDL_FALSE;
2482 SDL_SendWindowEvent(window, SDL_WINDOWEVENT_SIZE_CHANGED, window->w, window->h);
2483 }
some error set to :
2233 return SDL_SetError("Window surface is invalid, please call SDL_GetWindowSurface() to get a new surface");
So, this seems to be the behavior of the API ...
In the loop() function of testdrawchessboard.c, we can recreate the surface/renderer :
65 if (e.type == SDL_WINDOWEVENT)
66 {
67 if (e.window.event == SDL_WINDOWEVENT_SIZE_CHANGED)
68 {
69 surface = SDL_GetWindowSurface(window);
70 renderer = SDL_CreateSoftwareRenderer(surface);
71 }
72 /* Clear the rendering surface with the specified color */
73 SDL_SetRenderDrawColor(renderer, 0xFF, 0xFF, 0xFF, 0xFF);
74 SDL_RenderClear(renderer);
75 }
And it displays correctly.
Ozkan Sezer
The attached patch removes SDLCALL attribute from SDL_BlitFunc() funcptr.
As far as I can see, *SDL_BlitFunc() is completely internal to SDL with
no specific calling convention requirements. The actual functions assigned
to SDL_BlitFunc seem to not have any calling conventions specified. So,
easy solution is simply removing the strict calling convention from the
type.
Sylvain
Here's a patch.
It tries to get the hint first. Resizable will allow any orientation. Otherwise it uses width/height window.
setOrientation method is splitted in static and non-static, so that it can be overloaded in a user subclass.
Some artefact observed :
surfaceChanged() can be called twice at the beginning. When the phone starts in portrait and run a landscape application.
Clayton Craft
linux_input module is disabled by default, despite the comments in source code that it is otherwise:
src/video/directfb/SDL_DirectFB_video.c:
devdata->use_linux_input = readBoolEnv(DFBENV_USE_LINUX_INPUT, 0); /* default: on */
src/video/directfb/SDL_DirectFB_video.h:
#define DFBENV_USE_LINUX_INPUT "SDL_DIRECTFB_LINUX_INPUT" /* Default: on */
When using the directfb driver, the linux_input module is suppressed unless the SDL app is started with "SDL_DIRECTFB_LINUX_INPUT=1" set in the environment. I recall seeing at one point that the directfb folks recommended using linux_input over the other input drivers, but I am having trouble locating this recommendation. In any case, I believe that this should really be defaulted to 'on' since it's vastly superior to the other dfb input drivers!
Jimb Esser
Note: This is using DirectInput, I have to disable XInput as that causes all but the first 4 controllers to be completely ignored by SDL (I can find no way to reconcile XInput devices with DirectInput devices, otherwise I would make a patch that accepts the fifth and later controllers with DirectInput...). XInput does not seem to have the problem below, only DirectInput.
I plug in 3 identical wireless Xbox 360 controllers, call them J1, J2, J3. Direct Input shows them as having GUIDs G1, G2, G3. I unplug J1, then J2 and J3 show up as having GUIDs G1 and G2! Not so "unique"... I start my SDL app when just J2 and J3 are plugged in, and open J2 and J3. Then I plug in a new controller, SDL sees that now G3 exists, assigns that a new SDL joystick instance ID, which I request to be opened, but G3 at this point is J3, which I already had opened! So I end up with two instances of J3 opened, and none of J1. "Re-"opening G1 would get the actual handle to the newly attached controller, but there's no current way to know this. This is clearly a bug or poor design in DirectInput or my wireless receiver drivers, but is a showstopping bug for my 8-20 player games (as soon as any one controller runs out of battery or goes to sleep and gets turned back on, suddenly things are busted requiring a restart (or, at least, a reinitialization of all controllers - the game can't go on)).
The solution I found is to use HID paths instead of GUIDs to uniquely identify joysticks. GUIDs are still needed to open a controller, however I have added code to re-find the GUIDs for all joysticks whenever a new joystick is attached or removed. This does now require opening of all joysticks (instead of just enumerating them), though if your app, like mine, is opening all of them anyway so that any can press a button to join, that doesn't change much (although perhaps they joysticks should be kept open in this case, instead of closed and re-opened). If your app only ever opens one joystick, this will do more work at startup than it did previously.
Jonas Kulla
This eliminates the need to manually compile in SDL_main_android.c.
Instead, add "-lSDL2main -Wl,-u,SDL_main_dummy" when linking.
I don't know how the nkd-build process works, but unless it was
for some reason linking libSDL2main.a it should be unaffected.
Mark Callow
README-android says to copy or link the SDL source tree to the jni folder in your Android project. It is not desirable to have to compile SDL with every application; furthermore the Android NDK has support for prebuilt libraries.
Attached is script (to be put in build-scripts) that builds the Android version of the libraries. The script builds both the existing SDL2 module and a new SDL2_main module. This is a static library containing the code from src/main/android/SDL_android_main.c. Also attached is a patch for Android.mk adding this module.
Note that when building an application's native .so using this prebuilt libSDL2main, you must use a link option, such as --whole-archive, that forces inclusion of the code in the .so because the functions in SDL_android_main are called only from Java.
Alexey
Seems to be a missing functionality. I want to set an icon from RC file. I cant pass MAKEINTRESOURCE(X) string to SDL_RegisterApp() cause string returned by MAKEINTRESOURCE string is not actually a string and SDL_strlen will crash. Moreover LoadImage seems to be loading wrong icon size. LoadIcon seems to be fine.
Edward Rudd
Device: Logitech Rumble Gamepad F510 in Xinput mode.
Upon opening the joystick the values of the axes are queried via PollAllValues are not actually set on the device all the time.
This can easily be seen in the testjoystick or testgamecontroller test programs,as the testjoystick shows all axes in the center until one 'tickles' the triggers., and the testgamecontroller will show the triggers as 'on' until on 'tickles' the triggers.
Upon further research the culprit is the SDL_HINT_JOYSTICK_ALLOW_BACKGROUND_EVENTS hint. In the default value events are ignored until there is an active window, Thus in cases where the joystick system is initialized and controllers opened before the initial window is created & focuses, the initial values will be incorrect.
Here is my current workaround in the game I'm working on porting..
SDL_SetHint(SDL_HINT_JOYSTICK_ALLOW_BACKGROUND_EVENTS, "1");
SDL_GameController* gamepad = SDL_GameControllerOpen(index);
SDL_SetHint(SDL_HINT_JOYSTICK_ALLOW_BACKGROUND_EVENTS, "0");
Edmund Horner
When a 16-bit "565 format" surface has a colour key set, it will blit with correct transparency. If, however, it has its colour key set then is converted to a 32-bit ARGB format surface, the colour key in the converted image will not necessarily be the same pixel value as the transparent pixels. It may not blit correctly, because the colour key does not match the right pixels.
In my case, with an image using 0xB54A for transparency, the colour key was converted to 180,170,82; but the corresponding pixels (with the same original value) were converted to 180,169,82. Blitting the converted image did not use transparency where expected.
I have attached a test case. The bug has been replicated on both x86_64 Linux (SDL 2.0.2), and 32-bit MS C++ 2010 on Windows (SDL 2.0.0).
malferit
Hello, I began a little program with SDL2 on Linux in C, and when I call SDL_Init(SDL_INIT_VIDEO) I get an error and this is printed in the console:
XDM authorization key matches an existing client!
I searched through Internet, and found that some people suggest to run 'xhost +' or to specify this in /etc/X11/xdm/xdm-config:
DisplayManager*authName: MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1
I don't think an end user needs to know that...
But what bothered me is that first I started this little program in Pascal using the Freepascal compiler and it works. In freepascal you only use some thin header bindings in Pascal and then it links with the dynamic SDL library, so I don't understood why it worked with Freepascal and not in C.
I run ldd to the two generated applications:
Application in C:
linux-gate.so.1 (0xffffe000)
libSDL2-2.0.so.0 => /usr/lib/libSDL2-2.0.so.0 (0xb76ac000)
libpthread.so.0 => /lib/libpthread.so.0 (0xb766e000)
libc.so.6 => /lib/libc.so.6 (0xb74e2000)
libm.so.6 => /lib/libm.so.6 (0xb74a0000)
libdl.so.2 => /lib/libdl.so.2 (0xb749a000)
librt.so.1 => /lib/librt.so.1 (0xb7491000)
/lib/ld-linux.so.2 (0xb77b3000)
Application compiled with Freepascal:
linux-gate.so.1 (0xffffe000)
libSDL2-2.0.so.0 => /usr/lib/libSDL2-2.0.so.0 (0xb762a000)
libX11.so.6 => /usr/lib/libX11.so.6 (0xb74f3000)
libc.so.6 => /lib/libc.so.6 (0xb7367000)
libm.so.6 => /lib/libm.so.6 (0xb7325000)
libdl.so.2 => /lib/libdl.so.2 (0xb731f000)
libpthread.so.0 => /lib/libpthread.so.0 (0xb7305000)
librt.so.1 => /lib/librt.so.1 (0xb72fc000)
libxcb.so.1 => /usr/lib/libxcb.so.1 (0xb72dc000)
libXau.so.6 => /usr/lib/libXau.so.6 (0xb72d9000)
libXdmcp.so.6 => /usr/lib/libXdmcp.so.6 (0xb72d3000)
/lib/ld-linux.so.2 (0xb7755000)
It seems that Freepascal is linking with libX11, libxcb, libXau and libXdmcp .
Linking my C application with libxcb solved the problem (linking with libXau and/or libXdmcp without libxcb didn't work). Linking with X11 links all the other libraries and works as well.
So I fill this bug report mainly to let you know about this. I don't know if it is a problem that can be solved on the libSDL side or not, but at least I hope it will help.
Hi, some tests:
1. Disabled XDM. Login in console and running 'startx'. The program works without having to link with X11.
2. Enabled XDM. Added 'DisplayManager*authName: MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1' to /etc/X11/xdm/xdm-config.The program works without having to link with X11.
3. Enabled XDM without 'DisplayManager*authName: MIT-MAGIC-COOKIE-1' in /etc/X11/xdm/xdm-config . I get the authentication error unless I link with X11.
Coriiander
There's a slight mistake in the function "GetWindowStyle" found in file "SDL_windowswindow.c".
When a window is marked to be resizable, the resizable style is being added regardless of whether the window has a border or not. While for some arcane, hidden semantics this can be ok, it's still inconsistent in this case.
Witek Jachimczyk
I'm using SDL to develop a video viewer for MATLAB. The window is scrambled while using thightVNC with its default mode of RGB656.
SDL does not correctly recognize the pixel mode.
I found a solution for this problem. The solution involves modifying
SDL/src/video/SDL_pixels.c
Adding the following "if statement" under case 16: of SDL_MasksToPixelFormatEnum resolves the issue:
if (Rmask == 0x003F &&
Gmask == 0x07C0 &&
Bmask == 0xF800 &&
Amask == 0x0000) {
return SDL_PIXELFORMAT_RGB565;
}
I hope that this helps someone. I took me a while to figure it out.
Yann Dirson
When SDL_GL_GetProcAddress returns in error, the cause of the error is overwritten
in GL_GL_GetAttribute, reporting to the user "Failed getting OpenGL glGetString entry point", whereas the original "OpenGL library not loaded" never makes it
to the user.
Pushed a fix to:
f94cb13708
Note that the "OpenGL library not loaded" error looks like no root cause either,
and I'm still puzzled by the code path used: I'm forcing opengles2 renderer on
the x11 video driver on a rpi2, as in https://bugzilla.libsdl.org/3169, and although I now know that I must force the use of the RPI video driver instead
of the x11 one, I suspect even more accurate info can be given to user.
Daniel Gibson
AZERTY keyboard layouts (which are the default layouts in France and Belgium) don't have the number keys (1, 2, ..., 9, 0) in the first row of keys, but ?, &, ?", ', (, -, ?_, ??), = (with small differences between the France and Belgian variants). Numbers are reached via shift.
On Linux and OSX, SDL seems to use the corresponding ISO 8859-1 codes (231 for ?232 for ?tc) as SDL_Keycode (but no SDK_* constants exists for those values!), while on Windows SDL seems to map those keys to SDLK_1, SDLK_2 etc, like you'd get on QWERTY.
I don't know how other platforms behave.
So we have two problems:
1. At least on Linux and OSX invalid/undefined SDL_Keycodes are returned
2. Different platforms behave differently (Windows vs Linux/OSX)
It's unclear what behavior is desired: Should SDL_* constants for those keys be introduced (and Windows behavior changed accordingly)?
Or should all platforms behave like Windows here and use the existing SDLK_1, ..., SDLK_0 keycodes?
This bug on the mailing list:
https://forums.libsdl.org/viewtopic.php?t=11555 (my post about Linux/Windows)
https://forums.libsdl.org/viewtopic.php?t=11573 (Tim Walters discovered the same problem on OSX about 1.5 weeks later).
Sylvain
Let's you have a SDL_Surface that has ColorKey, but no Alpha Modulation.
When this surface is duplicated with SDL_ConvertSurface function, the result has ColorKey and Alpha Modulation (BLEND, and Opaque 255).
I think SDL_ConvertSurface should strictly keeps the input format.
example
=======
SDL_Surface *input; // ... Set up a surface with ColorKey and no AlphaMod
SDL_Surface *output = SDL_ConvertSurface(input, input->format, input->flags);
// "output" surface has a ColorKey but *also* AlphaMod (BLEND, and Opaque 255).
Rafal Muzylo
"if we're already using libtool, why aren't we using it ?"; they've been inspired by the fact, that at that mark, neither libSDL2_test.a nor libSDL2main.a were being built correctly (not sure if it's fully broken or just because I've tested the out-of-tree build)
Simon Hug
The bug is in the GL_ResetState and GLES_ResetState functions which get called after a new GL context is created. These functions set the cached current color to transparent black, but the GL specification says the initial color is opaque white.
The attached patch changes the values to 0xffffffff to reflect the initial state of the current color. Should the ResetState functions get called anywhere else in the future, this probably has to call the GL functions itself to ensure that the colors match.
Adam M.
The keysym.mod field does not reflect the state of the modified keys when processing key down events for the modifier keys themselves. The documentation says that it returns the current key modifiers, but they are not current for key down events involving modifier keys. I interpret "current" to mean "equal to SDL_GetModState() at the instant the event is processed/enqueued".
For example, if you depress the Shift key you get a key down event with .mod == 0. However, .mod should not be 0 because a shift key is down. If you then release the Shift key, you get a key up event with .mod == 0. Neither event reports the modifier key.
If you press Shift and then A, .mod is incorrect (== 0) when Shift is pressed, but is correct later when A is pressed (== KMOD_LSHIFT).
You might say this behavior is deliberate, i.e. keysym.mod is the value /before/ the event, not the current value as documented, but that explanation is incorrect because only key down events behave that way. Key up events correctly give the current value, not the value before the event.
Not only is it inconsistent with itself, I think it makes keyboard processing harder.
The problem is near line 740 in SDL_keyboard.c:
if (SDL_KEYDOWN == type) {
modstate = keyboard->modstate; // SHOULD THIS BE MOVED DOWN?
switch (keycode) {
case SDLK_NUMLOCKCLEAR:
keyboard->modstate ^= KMOD_NUM;
break;
case SDLK_CAPSLOCK:
keyboard->modstate ^= KMOD_CAPS;
break;
default:
keyboard->modstate |= modifier;
break;
}
} else {
keyboard->modstate &= ~modifier;
modstate = keyboard->modstate;
}
In the key down path, modstate (and thus keysym.mod) ends up being the modifier state /before/ the event, but in the key up path modstate ends up being the modifier state /after/ the event. Personally I think the "modstate = keyboard->modstate" line should just be moved after the entire if/else statement, so that keysym.mod always reflects the current state.
owen
I removed all the static variables from SDLActivity.java
Updated all the SDL_android.c jni calls as well
I added a new function to SDL_android.c/ h
void Android_JNI_SeparateEventsHint(const char* c);
This is called by SDL_androidtouch.c so that this TU doesn't need to call any JNI functions.
Philipp Wiesemann
There is another problem with the current implementation which maybe should be fixed first (to prevent some work). It was written as if it would get the number of a button from the Java side but actually it gets the state of all buttons. That is why it should not work if more than one button is pressed at once.
Ian Abbott
I just spotted what I think is a bug in "src/thread/pthread/SDL_sysmutex.c" in the SDL_TryLockMutex function when FAKE_RECURSIVE_MUTEX is defined (for an implementation of Pthreads with no recursive mutex support). It calls pthread_mutex_lock instead of pthread_mutex_trylock, so it will block until the mutex is available instead of returning SDL_MUTEX_TIMEDOUT if it cannot lock the mutex immediately.
Coriiander
Here is a minor correction for a non-breaking mistake in SDL_setenv for __WIN32__ platform. See below for details.
FILE:
"SDL/src/stdlib/SDL_getenv.c"
FUNCTION: (__WIN32__ platform)
int SDL_setenv(const char *name, const char *value, int overwrite)
CODE:
if (!overwrite) {
char ch = 0;
const size_t len = GetEnvironmentVariableA(name, &ch, sizeof (ch));
if (len > 0) {
return 0; /* asked not to overwrite existing value. */
}
}
WHAT'S WRONG:
The 3th argument to GetEnvironmentVariable (being DWORD nSize) must be the number of characters, not the number of bytes. SDL currently passes "the size of 1 char", rather "1". While it is non-breaking (1=1 after all), it is incorrect. Furthermore there is no need to specify the 2nd and 3th arguments at all.
CORRECTION 1: (corrected argument_
if (!overwrite) {
char ch = 0;
const size_t len = GetEnvironmentVariableA(name, &ch, 1);
if (len > 0) {
return 0; /* asked not to overwrite existing value. */
}
}
CORRECTION 2: (stripped of unneeded code)
if (!overwrite) {
if (GetEnvironmentVariableA(name, NULL, 0) > 0) {
return 0; /* asked not to overwrite existing value. */
}
}
Juha Niemim?
On AmigaOS 4 platform with Newlib 'C' library, there is a problem with failing fseeko64. This seemed to be caused by using fopen instead of fopen64.
Littlefighter19
When trying to mirror something on the PSP, I've stumbled upon the problem,
that using SDL_RenderCopyEx with SDL_FLIP_HORIZONTAL flips the image vertically, vise-versa SDL_FLIP_VERTICAL flips the image horizontally.
Proposed patch would be swapping the check in line 944 with the one in line 948 in SDL_render_psp.c
romain.lacroix
For the windows implementation of SDL_ShowMessageBox() : ./src/video/windows/SDL_windowsmessagebox.c:345 WIN_ShowMessageBox()
The implementation in 2.0.4 uses "button index" for parameter "id" of function AddDialogButton().
It then expects the value provided in param wParam of function MessageBoxDialogProc() to be a valid index of a button.
It uses this value to index in the array of buttons when DialogBoxIndirect() returns (line 474 : *buttonid = buttons[which].buttonid;)
However, when dismissing this box with Escape, the return value of DialogBoxIndirect will be SDL_MESSAGEBOX_BUTTON_ESCAPEKEY_DEFAULT (=2) which is not always a valid index of array buttons.
When the array buttons has a length less or equal than 2, the memory access is invalid; I can see that the value written to *buttonId is uninitialized memory (random value).
The fix I propose : use value "buttonid" (field of button) for parameter "id" of AddDialogButton(), then copy return value of DialogBoxIndirect() in *buttonid. This way, we will not use an out-of-bounds index in array buttons.
Simon Hug
The RGBA_FROM_PIXEL macro in src/video/blit.h [1] is not designed to work with more than 8 bits per channel and the ARGB2101010 format makes it read outside of the array bounds causing access violations. This can happen during blitting with the BlitNtoNPixelAlpha and SDL_Blit_Slow functions.
When SDL_InitFormat tries to calculate the loss of the channels [2], the Uint8 will wrap around and it will end up at 254 for the 10-bit channels. Clearly way over the 9 entries of the SDL_expand_byte array. (Not that a signed integer would help.) Then the macro tries to access the lookup table with the channel value which could be up to 1023. If the previous indirection didn't cause an access violation this one will.
I guess it's not worth modifying this macro for a format that only a few will use. It will only make the other blitters slower. I don't have good ideas to solve this issue.
Attached is a test case that does three blits. A copy one that work and the two that use the functions mentioned above.
[1] https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/file/cd1994d4f3c6/src/video/SDL_blit.h#l303
[2] https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/file/cd1994d4f3c6/src/video/SDL_pixels.c#l540
ny00
According to the current documentation in SDL_hints.h, if SDL_HINT_ANDROID_SEPARATE_MOUSE_AND_TOUCH is set to "0" (or not set at all) then mouse input should lead to touch events, along with corresponding *fake* mouse events with mouse id SDL_TOUCH_MOUSEID.
However, while moving a mouse around (actually using a trackpad identified as a mouse), I get SDL mouse motion events with differing mouse ids, as follows:
- If the mouse is moved while a mouse button is pressed, the mouse id is SDL_TOUCH_MOUSEID.
- Otherwise, the mouse id for mouse motion events is 0.
I've attached sample code for reference, which includes logs of the various mouse events (the "which" field is covered).
I believe that no actual mouse event should arrive, if the hint is unset. In particular, no mouse motion event should arrive while no mouse button is pressed.
I'm going to attach a patch which resolves this, while also disabling mouse wheel motion events.
xyzdragon
Reading https://wiki.libsdl.org/SDL_RenderCopyEx there is no mention what the angle means. Normally in a mathematically environment positive angles translate to counter-clockwise rotations, but in SDL positive angles means clockwise rotation.
Daniel
SDL_RenderReadPixels with SDL_RENDERER_SOFTWARE reads pixels from wrong coordinates.
SW_RenderReadPixels adjusts the rect coordinates according to the viewport. But since this is already done by SDL_RenderReadPixels, the final rect has x2 bigger X and Y.
Fabian Greffrath
we use SDL_GetPrefPath() in Chocolate Doom to get a reasonable directory to save and restore config files and savegames:
https://github.com/chocolate-doom/chocolate-doom/blob/sdl2-branch/src/m_config.c#L2162
However, since there is no "organization" behind Chocolate Doom and there is really only one "product" called Chocolate Doom, we pass an empty string for the org parameter and the package string for app.
This leads to two consecutive slashes in the path returned by SDL_GetPrefPath() like this:
/home/user/.local/share//chocolate-doom/
While this is harmless, it sure looks bad.
I believe that it should be possible to either pass a NULL pointer for the org parameter or at least have the function detect an empty string as a means to express "there is no origanization, just a single product". The generation of the path string to be returned by the function will have to get adapted accordingly.
Eric Wasylishen
Alt-Up/Down/Left/Right switches between displays using SDL_WINDOWPOS_CENTERED_DISPLAY
Shift-Up/Down/Left/Right shifts the window by 100px
Eric Wasylishen
Small change to checkkeys so you can toggle text input mode with a mouse click.
This is needed for testing how dead keys react to toggling mouse input, i.e. these bugs:
Simon Hug
Some code in SDL loads libraries with SDL_LoadObject to get more information or use newer APIs. SDL_LoadObject may fail, set an error message and SDL will continue with some fallback code. Since SDL will overwrite the error or exit the function with a return value that indicates success, the error form SDL_LoadObject for the optional stuff might as well be cleared right away.
Eric Wasylishen 2017-07-26 18:42:58 UTC
I set up an (admittedly exotic) 3-monitor setup, and when I enter fullscreen-desktop on the middle display (#2), the SDL window is off center. (covers half of monitor #2 and most of monitor #3).
The displays are arranged from left to right:
Display #1 (main): 2880x1800, 200% scaling
Display #2: 1920x1200, 150% scaling
Display #3: 1920x1080, 100% scaling
SDL display bounds:
INFO: Bounds: 1440x900 at 0,0
INFO: Bounds: 1281x801 at 1921,0 (these are incorrect)
INFO: Bounds: 1920x1080 at 4800,0
Correct bounds reported by calling EnumDisplayMonitors and printing the LPRECT param of the callback:
1440x900 at (0, 0)
1280x800 at (2880, 0)
1920x1080 at (4800, 0)
It seems like you need 3 displays to reproduce this, and the left two need DPI scaling, and the 3rd display needs to have a different scale factor than the others.
Related: https://bugzilla.libsdl.org/show_bug.cgi?id=3709
SDL: current hg (11235:6a587b9e0ec8)
Windows 10, Version 10.0.15063 Build 15063
Tested with testdraw2 and testgl2, and pressing alt+enter to enter fullscreen desktop.
This patch reworks SDL_windowsmodes.c to use EnumDisplayMonitors instead of EnumDisplayDevices, so we always have an HMONITOR for each SDL display.
With access to an HMONITOR, we can get the monitor bounds in virtual screen coordinates the proper way, by calling GetMonitorInfo. (whereas the original code was doing some calculations - e.g. "data->DeviceMode.dmPosition.x * data->ScaleX" - to try to get virtual screen coordinates. These worked in simple cases, but failed in more complex cases like this bug)
The one potential problem with my patch is, the ChangeDisplaySettingsEx docs say that you're supposed to get the display name from EnumDisplayDevices, but I'm getting the display name from GetMonitorInfo now.
Simon Hug
KMSDRM_VideoInit allocates and frees some connectors and encoders but doesn't set the pointer to NULL after freeing. The cleanup code at the end may free one of those garbage pointer should an error happen in the initialization.
Simon Hug
When WIN_WindowProc processes the WM_TOUCH message, it doesn't check if the touch functions have been properly loaded and may call a NULL pointer. It's probably an extremely rare case, but here's a patch that adds some checks anyway.
Sylvain
On Android, when shared libraries are not correctly loaded (eg SDLActivity.mBrokenLibraries is true), there is a pop-up with an error message.
After user dismisses the pop-up, application crashes:
- because the native function "nativePause()" may no be loaded (if libSDL2.so is not loaded).
- because mSurface is null.
tschwinger@elitemail.org
Most ironically, although autoconf/automake-based builds install (pretty half-assed) CMake package configuration files, they're missing in installations resulting from CMake-based builds entirely.
A proper configuration file typically also loads target exports (implemented in patch 3572, also fixing this issue - see my comment on that issue for details).
I believe it would be best to let the dinosaurs go extinct and redirect all build efforts to the CMake end for two reasons:
1. It potentially provides the best user experience, but you'd have to give it some love and ship with less quirky buildfiles.
2. It would force distros to build SDL via CMake and thus would ensure target exports are actually available everywhere.
Various CMake patches I submitted today in summary (directly converted from the HG commits and `am`d onto a fork of a git mirror that happened to be on `tip`).
https://github.com/tschw/SDL/commits/patched
Fixing #2576#3572, #3613, and this fresh ticket, which is almost entirely advertisement ;).
These already do to make SDL much less of a quirky fella to have in your dependency tree...
Martin Gerhardy
- list(APPEND EXTRA_CFLAGS ${MIR_TOOLKIT_CFLAGS} ${EGL_CLFAGS} ${XKB_CLFLAGS})
+ list(APPEND EXTRA_CFLAGS ${MIR_TOOLKIT_CFLAGS} ${EGL_CFLAGS} ${XKB_CFLAGS})
CFLAGS is spelled wrong in two different ways for EGL and XKB
And while you are on it...
sdl needs mir >= 0.24 afaik - it fails on travis-ci (ubuntu 14.04 LTS with 0.18 installed and in other environments, too (e.g. https://github.com/urho3d/Urho3D/issues/1685)
To fix this one should add a min version check to pkg_check_modules like this
- pkg_check_modules(MIR_TOOLKIT mirclient mircommon)
+ pkg_check_modules(MIR_TOOLKIT mirclient>=0.24 mircommon)
-Enabling checking for GCC_ATOMICS also on clang by default. This way all Android ABIs build successfully
-Android cmake: Threading was not enabled correctly
-Android cmake: Timers and dynamic lib loading were not included in the sources
Eric wing
Hi, I think I found a bug when using SDL_WINDOW_ALLOW_HIGHDPI with SDL_RenderSetLogicalSize on iOS. I use SDL_RenderSetLogicalSize for all my stuff. I just tried turning on SDL_WINDOW_ALLOW_HIGHDPI on iOS and suddenly all my touch/mouse positions are really broken/far-off-the-mark.
I actually don't have a real retina device (still) so I'm seeing this using the iOS simulator with a 6plus template.
Attached is a simple test program that can reproduce the problem. It uses RenderSetLogicalSize and draws some moving happy faces (to show the boundaries/space of the LogicalSize and that it is working correctly for that part).
When you click/touch, it will draw one more happy face where your button point is.
If you comment out SDL_WINDOW_ALLOW_HIGHDPI, everything works as expected. But if you compile with it in, the mouse coordinates seem really far off the mark. (Face appears far up and to the left.)
Alex Szpakowski on the mailing list suggests the problem is
"I believe this is a bug in SDL_Render?s platform-agnostic mouse coordinate scaling code. It assumes the units of the mouse coordinates are always in pixels, which isn?t the case where high-DPI is involved (regardless of whether iOS is used) ? they?re actually in ?DPI independent? coordinates (which matches the window size, but not the renderer output size)."
Additionally, if this is correct, the Mac under Retina is also probably affected too and "as well as any other platform SDL adds high-dpi support for in the future".
Levi Bard
In some environments, xrandr modes initialization can fail even though xrandr support is present and of a sufficient version.
(The one I encountered was an AWS instance running a virtual display)
The attached patch allows SDL to keep trying other methods if xrandr modes initialization fails (still subject to SDL_VIDEO_X11_REQUIRE_XRANDR).
Manuel
The attached patch adds support for KMS/DRM context graphics.
It builds with no problem on X86_64 GNU/Linux systems, provided the needed libraries are present, and on ARM GNU/Linux systems that have KMS/DRM support and a GLES2 implementation.
Tested on Raspberry Pi: KMS/DRM is what the Raspberry Pi will use as default in the near future, once the propietary DispmanX API by Broadcom is overtaken by open graphics stack, it's possible to boot current Raspbian system in KMS mode by adding "dtoverlay=vc4-kms-v3d" to config.txt on Raspbian's boot partition.
X86 systems use KMS right away in every current GNU/Linux system.
Simple build instructions:
$./autogen.sh
$./configure --enable-video-kmsdrm
$make
Now the clipboard isn't lost if you destroy a specific SDL_Window, as it
works on other platforms. You will still lose the clipboard data on
SDL_Quit() or process termination, but that's X11 for you; run a
Clipboard Manager daemon.
Fixes Bugzilla #3222.
Fixes Bugzilla #3718.
Eric Wasylishen
I think I found a better fix.
The problem with https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/ebdc0738b1b5 is setting the styleMask to 0 clears the NSWindowStyleMaskFullScreen bit, which then confuses Cocoa later when you try to leave fullscreen. Instead I'm just clearing the NSWindowStyleMaskResizable bit, although SetWindowStyle(window, NSWindowStyleMaskFullScreen); seems to also work.
Eric Wasylishen
Unfortunately this commit seems to have broken exiting desktop-fullscreen.
- Launch testgl2.
- Press alt+enter to go fullscreen-desktop
- Press alt+enter again. The spinning cube will freeze, and the window stays fullscreen desktop.
Simon Hug
SDL_GL_GetAttribute doesn't check if a video driver has been initialized and will access the SDL_VideoDevice pointer, which is NULL at that point.
I think all of the attributes require an initialized driver, so a simple NULL check should fix it. Patch is attached.
Jason Wyatt
After hiding the window, SDL_WINDOW_HIDDEN/SDL_WINDOW_SHOWN flags on a window are correctly updated. However on the next SDL_PumpEvents, they are set incorrectly.
This appears to be because X11_GetNetWMState does not check whether the _NET_WM_STATE property exists (it shouldn't on unmapped windows, see https://specifications.freedesktop.org/wm-spec/wm-spec-1.3.html#idm140130317598336). This results in an empty list of atoms for the state, which would imply that the window is not hidden.
(Seen on Fedora 24, Gnome)
--
Dan Ginsburg
More details on my proposed patch: I am on Kubuntu 16.04.2. I ran into this same bug, but with Jason's patch I found that actualType != None was true so the SDL_WINDOW_HIDDEN would still not be set. My fix instead is to explicitly check for whether the window is unmapped rather than relying on the returned values in XGetWindowProperty.
felix
The functions in src/render/SDL_yuv_mmx.c contain the following inline assembly snippet:
/* tap dance to workaround the inability to use %%ebx at will... */
/* move one thing to the stack... */
"pushl $0\n" /* save a slot on the stack. */
"pushl %%ebx\n" /* save %%ebx. */
"movl %0, %%ebx\n" /* put the thing in ebx. */
"movl %%ebx,4(%%esp)\n" /* put the thing in the stack slot. */
"popl %%ebx\n" /* get back %%ebx (the PIC register). */
Here's how it ended up in a binary on my old laptop:
0xb5c17dbd <ColorRGBDitherYV12MMX1X+93>: push $0x0
0xb5c17dbf <ColorRGBDitherYV12MMX1X+95>: push %ebx
0xb5c17dc0 <ColorRGBDitherYV12MMX1X+96>: mov 0xc(%esp),%ebx
0xb5c17dc4 <ColorRGBDitherYV12MMX1X+100>: mov %ebx,0x4(%esp)
0xb5c17dc8 <ColorRGBDitherYV12MMX1X+104>: pop %ebx
Apparently the compiler, oblivious to the fact that the assembly snippet manipulates the %esp register, decided to refer to the operand via that same register instead of via %ebp (I believe -fomit-frame-pointer enables this). This causes %ebx to be loaded with the wrong value, which later leads to a null pointer dereference.
Recent GCC can use the %ebx register normally: <https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=47602#c16>. There is even an explicit constraint "b" for allocating it.
Holger Schemel
Summary: This patch adds support for key events for the "rewind" and "fast forward" media keys on the Amazon Fire TV remote control.
How to reproduce the problem: Run Android build of SDL2 application on the Amazon Fire TV (tested with "stick" version) and log key events.
Expected behaviour: Every key pressed on the Fire TV remote control should result in a corresponding key event (pressed/released).
Observed behaviour: Of the bottom row of buttons on the Fire TV remote control, only the "play/pause" (middle) button generates a key event, while the "rewind" (left) and "fast forward" (right) buttons to not generate any event at all.
The attached patch adds support for these two missing buttons/keys.
Note 1: Some missing definitions were added for the already existing key codes SDL_SCANCODE_APP1 and SDL_SCANCODE_APP2 (to keep up the correct order of enumerations / array positions when adding the two new key codes).
Note 2: Definitions in "scancodes_linux.h" and "scancodes_xfree86.h" (to also add support for these keys on other platforms) were added without testing. However, I was unable to find corresponding definitions for these two media keys for Windows and Mac OS X.
Note 3: I have also updated the (broken) link to the USB usage page standard PDF document (comment in "include/SDL_scancode.h").
kdrakehp
The attached patch adds capture support to the sndio backend.
The patch also allows the `OpenDevice' function to accept arbitrary device names.
Bogomancer
On X11, windows created using the shaped window API appear distorted unless the width of the shape surface is divisible by 8.
Steps to reproduce:
1) Use your favorite image editor to resize one of the images in test/shapes/ to a width that's not a multiple of 8.
2) Compile and run test/testshape.c on the image you edited.
3) The shaped window will appear twisted and distorted.
It appears the bug was not caught sooner because all the test images are either 640 or 256 pixels wide.
I tracked down the bug to SDL_CalculateShapeBitmap() in SDL_shape.c. The shape surface is reduced to a 1-bit-per-pixel mask, but the original code doesn't take into account that X11 apparently wants each scanline to begin on a new byte.
Juha Niemim?ki
Fix for PTHREAD_MUTEX_RECURSIVE_NP check and restoring the original flags
Two fixes proposed:
1) Looks like there is a copy-paste issue regarding PTHREAD_MUTEX_RECURSIVE_NP check.
2) Compiler flag restoration doesn't look symmetrical regarding if/endif blocks. Moved to an outer block (if PTHREADS).
Ozkan Sezer
(In reply to Ryan C. Gordon from comment #9)
> I've put this patch in as https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/7213ae46e870 ...can
> you verify this works on the latest MinGW?
>
> Thanks,
> --ryan.
This patch is wrong: the structure in question has nothing to do with any
gcc version in use. I suggest reverting this adding a conigury check for
it, instead. Something like the following should do it: (configure needs
regenerating.)
Mark Callow
SDL_ShowMessageBox calls SDL_CaptureMouse which, in the UIKit driver, raises a ?That operation is not supported? error, overwriting the SDL error that an application may be trying to report.
This is because UIKit SDL_CaptureMouse returns SDL_Unsupported() which ends up calling SDL_SetError() which has the following code:
/* If we are in debug mode, print out an error message */
SDL_LogDebug(SDL_LOG_CATEGORY_ERROR, "%s", SDL_GetError());
The SDL_GetError call here overwrites the static buffer?..
Although an application can avoid this by using SDL_GetErrorMsg(char* errstr, int maxlen) to avoid the static buffer, SDL should be fixed.
The fix is simple. In SDL_SetError change
SDL_LogDebug(SDL_LOG_CATEGORY_ERROR, "%s", SDL_GetError());
to
SDL_LogDebug(SDL_LOG_CATEGORY_ERROR, "%s", error);
where error is the pointer to the buffer where it assembled the message.
Amruth Raj
- My app runs in full screen to play video(I use SDL_WINDOW_FULLSCREEN_DESKTOP)
- Cmd-tab to go out of full screen to another app
- Cmd-tab again to get back to my app
- Press left mouse button at one of the edges of the screen, don't release yet.
After this point the main thread is stuck until I release the left mouse button and hence video rendering doesn't happen anymore.
On debugging more, I see that thread 0 is stuck as shown below with sendEvent processing left mouse down. It comes out only after it receives a left mouse up. There are some frames below which show NSWindowResizing, but my window flag doesn't have SDL_WINDOW_RESIZABLE set.
Thread 0:: CrBrowserMain Dispatch queue: com.apple.main-thread
0 libsystem_kernel.dylib 0x00007fffbe13d34a mach_msg_trap + 10
1 libsystem_kernel.dylib 0x00007fffbe13c797 mach_msg + 55
2 com.apple.CoreFoundation 0x00007fffa889d434 __CFRunLoopServiceMachPort + 212
3 com.apple.CoreFoundation 0x00007fffa889c8c1 __CFRunLoopRun + 1361
4 com.apple.CoreFoundation 0x00007fffa889c114 CFRunLoopRunSpecific + 420
5 com.apple.HIToolbox 0x00007fffa7dfdebc RunCurrentEventLoopInMode + 240
6 com.apple.HIToolbox 0x00007fffa7dfdcf1 ReceiveNextEventCommon + 432
7 com.apple.HIToolbox 0x00007fffa7dfdb26 _BlockUntilNextEventMatchingListInModeWithFilter + 71
8 com.apple.AppKit 0x00007fffa6396a54 _DPSNextEvent + 1120
9 com.apple.AppKit 0x00007fffa6b127ee -[NSApplication(NSEvent) _nextEventMatchingEventMask:untilDate:inMode:dequeue:] + 2796
10 com.apple.AppKit 0x00007fffa66f568d +[NSWindow(NSWindowResizing) _mouseHysteresisCheck:withExpiration:andDistance:finalMouseLocation:] + 525
11 com.apple.AppKit 0x00007fffa65eedb5 -[NSWindow(NSWindowResizing) _hitTestWithHysteresisCheck:forEvent:allowWindowDragging:] + 394
12 com.apple.AppKit 0x00007fffa6c8f0db -[NSWindow(NSEventRouting) _handleMouseDownEvent:isDelayedEvent:] + 1873
13 com.apple.AppKit 0x00007fffa6c8ca6c -[NSWindow(NSEventRouting) _reallySendEvent:isDelayedEvent:] + 1942
14 com.apple.AppKit 0x00007fffa6c8bf0a -[NSWindow(NSEventRouting) sendEvent:] + 541
15 org.libsdl.SDL2 0x000000010d46d74a -[SDLWindow sendEvent:] + 90
16 com.apple.AppKit 0x00007fffa6b10681 -[NSApplication(NSEvent) sendEvent:] + 1145
17 org.libsdl.SDL2 0x000000010d46532b -[SDLApplication sendEvent:] + 139
18 org.libsdl.SDL2 0x000000010d466b2f Cocoa_PumpEvents + 495
19 org.libsdl.SDL2 0x000000010d44c1d5 SDL_PumpEvents_REAL + 53
20 org.libsdl.SDL2 0x000000010d44c2f5 SDL_WaitEventTimeout_REAL + 53
21 org.libsdl.SDL2 0x000000010d44c2b7 SDL_PollEvent_REAL + 23
22 org.libsdl.SDL2 0x000000010d51bb24 SDL_PollEvent + 36
23 libTest.dylib 0x000000010cf3e0e8 SDLEventProcessor::processEvents(int) + 568
24 Test 0x000000010cde6bba BrowserApp::RunAppMessageLoop(BAInstData*, CefStringBase, CefStringBase) + 810
25 Test 0x000000010ce04bbc main + 17980
26 libdyld.dylib 0x00007fffbe016235 start + 1
I further noticed that while entering full screen in SDL_cocoawindow.m NSResizableWindowMask is set. If I clear it inside windowDidEnterFullScreen, then, the issue doesn't repro.
This is discussed at https://discourse.libsdl.org/t/main-thread-gets-stuck-on-left-mouse-down/22753/3 and thanks to Eric for the pointers.
The Xlib documentation demands that 32-bit values here be passed in a long,
even when long itself isn't a 32-bit value. Otherwise libx11 might read
memory incorrectly.
Fixes Bugzilla #3692.
Simon Hug
There's a chance that an audio conversion from many channels to a few can use more than 9 audio filters. SDL_AudioCVT has 10 SDL_AudioFilter pointers of which one has to be the terminating NULL pointer. The SDL code has no checks for this limit. If it overflows there can be stack or heap corruption or a call to 0xa.
Attached patch adds a function that checks for this limit and throws an error if it is reached. Also adds some documentation.
Test parameters that trigger this issue:
AUDIO_U16MSB with 224 channels at 46359 Hz
V
AUDIO_S16MSB with 6 channels at 27463 Hz
The fuzzer program I uploaded in bug 3667 has more of them.
This only affects Wayland and DirectFB, as a Unix system generally has X11
support. Other platforms also have different sizes for the C union in
question, but are likely the only target for that platform, etc.
Apps that might run on Wayland or DirectFB will need to be compiled against
new headers from an official 2.0.6 release, or be prepared to force the x11
target, or not use SDL_GetWindowWMInfo().
Fixes Bugzilla #3428.
Now the compiler might say this:
'SDL_compile_time_assert_mytest' declared as an array with a negative size
instead of
'SDL_dummy_mytest' declared as an array with a negative size
It's easier for Visual Studio users that want this information to turn it on
or live without it, than it is to explain why every debugger that isn't Visual
Studio crashes out here. Eventually SetThreadDescription() will be the thing
everyone uses anyhow.
Fixes Bugzilla #3645.
(and several others).
Failing to check if a key was known to be pressed by SDL was causing
SDL_SendKeyboardKey to send duplicate key pressed events with the repeat
property set to true.
Fixes Bugzilla #3637.
The message sent upon the window being activated or deactivated, to trigger
the call to SDL_SetKeyboardFocus was missing a mandatory parameter. So
keyboard focus was never properly set.
Fixes Bugzilla #3658.
We don't fill buffers just to throw them away during shutdown now, we let the
AudioQueue free its own buffers during disposal (which fixes possible warnings
getting printed to stderr by CoreAudio), and we stop the queue after running
any queued audio during shutdown, which prevents dropping the end of the
audio playback if you opened the device with an enormous sample buffer.
Fixes Bugzilla #3555.
We need more than two buffers to flip between if they are small, or CoreAudio
won't make any sound; apparently it needs X milliseconds of audio queued when
it needs to play more or it drops any queued buffers. We are currently
guessing 50 milliseconds as a minimum, but there's probably a more proper
way to get the minimum time period from the system.
Fixes Bugzilla #3656.
Fixes Bugzilla #3448.
"Starting with Android API 13, another configuration change must be declared
to be handled by the app if it is desired to not let the system handle
rotation itself:
https://developer.android.com/guide/topics/resources/runtime-changes.html#HandlingTheChange
This will have effect if either a developer or SDL per default will set target
API > 12. Currently it is set to 12, but this might change in the future, like
when applying this patch: https://bugzilla.libsdl.org/show_bug.cgi?id=3445
The effect of not having this change applied is that the SDL app is destroyed
upon rotation. Even when the manifest has an additional entry to e.g. always
stay in landscape mode, the onDestroy() call will happen on devices that are
portrait per default, when switching off screen due to power save. The device
will then (at least try to) rotate into portrait to show the portrait screen
lock after resume.
I believe it is safe to apply this patch even with target API still set to 12,
the additional parameter is simply ignored."
"In particular, only one VkSurfaceKHR can exist at a time for a given window. Similarly, a native window cannot be used by both a VkSurfaceKHR and EGLSurface simultaneously"
CR: SamL
If an Emscripten app is in relative mouse mode and the user presses Escape
(or whatever is appropriate), then the pointer lock is broken by the browser.
This keeps track of those losses, and next time the user presses a mouse
button down on the canvas, if the app is still meant to be in relative mouse
mode, we will attempt to regrab the pointer.
This makes it much more seamless for things like first-person shooters, and
the app doesn't need any manual intervention.
Fixes Bugzilla #3562.
From Sylvain:
"With an android landscape application, if you quickly lock, then unlock your
device, you can see sometimes a quick glitch: screen badly draws in portrait,
then it correctly displays in landscape.
Not talking of a smooth rotation, it's a drawing glitch. And you need to have
a plain lock screen, with no model nor passphrase.
I think it happens because the call to "nativeResume()" occurs sometimes too
early.
It should be done once you have *all* those three things (in any sequence):
- onWindowsFocusChanged() set to true
- onResume() called
- a valid call to onSurfaceChanged()
Currently, this is not the case: you don't need to have onResume() called.
Just need to have isPaused, (eg onPaused()).
So "isPaused" should be renamed as "isResumedCalled".
But you also need some kind of isPaused state to make sure to don't call
nativePause() twice (and deadlocks...).
There are also redundant checks to "mHasFocus" and some creation of the
initialisation thread code from onSurfaceChanged() that could me moved.
So here's this patch:
- add some states, so we have cleaner transitions.
- make sure "onResume()" is called.
- some clean up
- it also goes faster in pause state (focus changed, onPause, without requiring isSurfaceReady which does seems to be needed).
Tested on a few devices and it removes the glitch.
But I haven't tested when the activity goes back to "init" state."
Samuel Hopkins
Just confirming that the patch from Andreas (attachment 1715 [details]) works for me under SDL 2.0.3 with xmonad.
Stas Sergeev
Confirming that the patch in this ticket fixes the full-screen switching for dosemu2 on ubuntu-16.04. Note that I am not using xmonad, so this bug appears to be generic.
"Using an application in portrait orientation, turning off the device would
dispatch SDL_APP_WILLENTERBACKGROUND, then SDL_APP_DIDENTERBACKGROUND then
lock the screen.
However, rotating the application the application to landscape, then turning
off the device would incorrectly dispatch SDL_APP_WILLENTERBACKGROUND,
SDL_APP_WILLENTERBACKGROUND, SDL_APP_WILLENTERFOREGROUND and then
SDL_APP_DIDENTERFOREGROUND before locking the screen. You can imagine how
this created trouble :)
It appears this occurs because (on this application) turning off a device
when in landscape is triggering a resize. The resize logic in SDLActivity
triggers a resume.
This patch has resolved the issue on my device:
It prevents the dispatch of (improper) FOREGROUND events when locking
the device, but we get still events when the device is turned back on
and unlocked."
This gracefully recovers when a device format is changed, and will switch
to the new default device if the current one is unplugged, etc.
This does not handle when a new default device is added; it only notices
if the current default goes away. That will be fixed by implementing the
stubbed-out MMNotificationClient_OnDefaultDeviceChanged() function.
"ISO C90 forbids mixed declarations and code [-Werror=declaration-after-statement]"
Moving some variable declarations to the top of Android_SetScreenResolution()
* alsa hotplug thread is low priority
* give a chance for other threads to catch up when audio playback is not progressing
* use nonblocking for alsa audio capture
There is a bug with SDL hanging when an audio capture USB device is removed, because poll never returns
These don't have to be power-of-2 sizes anymore because of SDL_AudioStream,
and the new resampler, but also, many platforms don't give you power-of-2 DMA
buffer in the first place!
We will throw away the data anyhow, but some apps depend on the callback
firing to make progress; testmultiaudio.c, if nothing else, is an example
of this.
Capture also will now fire the callback in these conditions, offering nothing
but silence.
Apps can check SDL_GetAudioDeviceStatus() or listen for the
SDL_AUDIODEVICEREMOVED event if they want to gracefully deal with
an opened audio device that has been unexpectedly lost.
According to Steam's OS stats, Windows 8.0 use is pretty much nil. Further,
Microsoft hasn't support Windows 8.0 development in any of their
actively-updated toolchains, and setting it up can be a pain.
In theory, SDL2 still supports Windows 8.0, however building of Windows 8.0
.dlls is no longer the default, if and when using the 'winrtbuild.*' scripts.
The MSVC 2012 project files for building Windows 8.0 dlls remain, though,
for the time being.
This is just enough to get you through a file that just used the extended
header for float or int data. It doesn't handle all the other things that
you expect from this header, like 24-bit samples inside a 32-bit container
or speaker masks.
This should remain binary compatible with Windows XP, as we dynamically
load anything we need and fall back to DirectSound/WinMM/XAudio2 if not
available.
Like other C runtimes, it should probably produce the string "(null)".
This bug probably only affected Windows, as most platforms use their standard
C runtime's snprintf().
Walter van Niftrik
We have found that since SDL 2.0.5 the audio callback thread is created with a very small stack size. In our application this is leading to stack overflows.
We believe there is a bug at http://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/file/391fd532f79e/src/audio/SDL_audio.c#l1132, where the is_internal_thread flag appears to be inverted.
Volumetric
In X11 the SDL error "Unknown touch device" can occur after which the application stops recognizing touch events. For a kiosk-type application this results in a hang as far as the user is concerned. This is reproducible on HP Z220/Z230/Z240 workstations by swapping USB cables for a while and it also occurs with no physical changes, probably due to USB device power management. A workaround is to make SDL re-enumerate the touch devices like it does at startup. A patch is attached.
Matthew
Its possible to set SDL_CaptureMouse() so you continue receiving mouse input while the mouse is outside your window. This works however There is then a gap where no messages send, which is when the mouse is hovering the title bar and the window edges.
X11 seemed to be confused by the broad definition, so WEIGHT_NAME,
SLANT and SETWIDTH_NAME were defined, thus fixing the font lookup
on some systems (tested on Mageia 6 with X11 1.19.1).
Fixes bug 3571.
Tom Seddon
GL_ActivateRenderer may call GL_UpdateViewport, which leaves the GL_PROJECTION matrix selected. But after GL_ResetState, the GL_MODELVIEW matrix is selected, suggesting that's the intended default state.
It seems at least like these should be consistent. Presumably GL_UpdateViewport should be doing a glMatrixMode(GL_MODELVIEW) before it finishes.
Also updates the naming of these Xbox Wireless Controllers connected via USB (and thus the third-party Xbox Controller Driver) to match.
The Xbox Wireless Controller entries are now listed, in order, via USB, bia Bluetooh (with older firmware) and via Bluetooth (with firmware 3.1.1221.0).
This is a bleeding edge API, added to Windows 10 Anniversary Edition (build
1607, specifically).
https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/mt774976(v=vs.85).aspx
Nothing supports this yet, including WinDbg, Visual Studio, minidumps, etc,
so we still need to also use the RaiseException hack. But presumably tools
will use this API as a more robust and universal way to get thread names
sooner or later, so we'll start broadcasting to it now.
Firmware revision 3.1.1221.0 changes the mapping of the Xbox One S
controller in Bluetooth mode. Aside from changing the layout of
other buttons, this revision also changes the triggers to act as
Accelerator and Brake axes from the simulation controls page.
The Darwin sysjoystick code didn't previously map anything at these
axes, making it impossible to detect input on these two buttons.
This defaults to the internal SDL resampler, since that's the likely default
without a system-wide install of libsamplerate, but those that need more can
tweak this.
This currently favors libsamplerate over the fast path (quality over speed),
but I'm not sure that's the correct approach, as there may be surprising
changes in performance metrics depending on what packages are available on
a user's system. That being said, currently, the only thing with access to
SDL_AudioStream is an SDL audio device's thread, and it might be mostly idle
otherwise, so maybe this is generally good.
Turns out that iterating from 0 to channels-1 was a serious performance hit!
These cases now tend to match or beat the original audio resampler's speed!
This allows us to avoid an extra copy, allocate less memory and reduce cache
pressure. On the downside: we have to do a lot of tapdancing to resample the
buffer in reverse when the output is growing.
It's expensive and (hopefully) unnecessary. If this becomes an overflow
problem, we could multiply both values by 0.5f before adding them, but let's
see if we can get by without the extra multiplication first.
We never seem to overflow the source buffer now; this might have been a
leftover from a bug that was covered by Vitaly's fixes?
Removing this conditional makes the resampler 10-20% faster. Left an
assert in there for debug builds, in case this still happens.
white.magic
The logic which decides if a device enumerated via the direct input system in the function EnumJoysticksCallback in SDL_dinputjoystick.c is processed is discarding valid joystick devices due to the assumption that devices of the type DI8DEVTYPE_SUPPLEMENTAL are not valid devices.
This change was added with 2.0.4 with this commit http://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/1b9d40126645 that is linked to this bug report https://bugzilla.libsdl.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2460 which indicates that in that case devices of the type DI8DEVTYPE_SUPPLEMENTAL were not desirable as they caused a singular device to emit multiple "device added" events.
Since then there appear to have been a few fixes to handle devices that fall into various other classes in the following two commits:
http://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/10ffb4787d7a and http://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/6a2bbac05728
Two devices I have reports of failing to be listed when the DI8DEVTYPE_SUPPLEMENTAL type is excluded are ECS Gametric Throttle and Thrustmaster MFD Cougar.
Sam Lantinga
I verified that the OUYA controller shows up as a single device with this change, so I've reverted the change to ignore supplemental devices, leaving framework in place to easily add devices that we want to ignore.
Removed some needless things ("len / sizeof (Uint8)"), and made sure the
int32 -> float code uses doubles to avoid working with large integer values
in a 32-bit float.
Mark Callow
The attached patch does the following for the X11 and Windows platforms, the only ones where SDL attempts to use context_create_es_profile:
- Adds SDL_HINT_OPENGL_ES_DRIVER by which the application can
say to use the OpenGL ES driver & EGL rather than the Open GL
driver. (For bug #2570)
- Adds code to {WIN,X11}_GL_InitExtensions to determine the maximum
OpenGL ES version supported by the OpenGL driver (for bug #3145)
- Modifies the test that determines whether to use the OpenGL
driver or the real OpenGL ES driver to take into account the
hint, the requested and supported ES version and whether ES 1.X
is being requested. (For bug #2570 & bug #3145)
- Enables the testgles2 test for __WINDOWS__ and __LINUX__ and adds
the test to the VisualC projects.
With the fix in place I have run testdraw2, testgl and testgles2 without any issues and have run my own apps that use OpenGL, OpenGL ES 3 and OpenGL ES 1.1.
Lukasz Biel
Tried to compile SDL2 using newest version of VS.
Got:
SDL_audiocvt.obj : error LNK2019: unresolved external symbol memcpy referenced in function SDL_ResampleCVT
1>E:\Users\dotPo\Lib\SDL\VisualC\x64\Release\SDL2.dll : fatal error LNK1120: 1 unresolved externals
whole compilation process: http://pastebin.com/eWDAvBce
Steps to reproduce:
clone http://hg.libsdl.org/SDL using tortoise hg,
open SDL\VisualC\SDL.sln,
when promted if should retarget solution click ok,
select release x64 build type,
Build/Build Solution
attempt 2, using Visual Studio cmake support:
open folder SDL\
select release x64 build type,
run CMake\Build CMakeLists.txt
build fails
When switched to debug build type, buils succeeds in both cases.
VS 2017 is still beta.
It causes audio pops if you're converting in chunks (and needs to
allocate/initialize/free on each convert). We'll either adjust this interface
when we break ABI for 2.1 to make this usable, or publish the SDL_AudioStream
API for those that want a streaming solution.
In the meantime, the "simple" resampler produces "good enough" audio without
pops and doesn't have to be initialized, so that'll do for now on the
SDL_AudioCVT interface.
K_NORMTAB, K_SHIFTTAB, K_ALTTAB, K_ALTSHIFTTAB
In the normal case we'll load all the keymaps from the kernel, but this reduces the size of the SDL library for the fallback case when we can't get to the tty.
Mark Logan 2015-08-24 15:57:50 UTC
In SDL_windowsopengles.c, WIN_GLES_SetSwapInterval is as follows:
WIN_GLES_SetSwapInterval(_THIS, int interval)
{
/* FIXME: This should call SDL_EGL_SetSwapInterval, but ANGLE has a bug that prevents this
* from working if we do (the window contents freeze and don't swap properly). So, we ignore
* the request for now.
*/
SDL_Log("WARNING: Ignoring SDL_GL_SetSwapInterval call due to ANGLE bug");
return 0;
}
With a recent version of ANGLE (early July) calling SDL_EGL_SetSwapInterval with a D3D11 backend appears to work just fine. I am working on testing this with D3D9.
--
Alex Szpakowski
I found the bug, it was fixed in 2013. https://bugs.chromium.org/p/angleproject/issues/detail?id=481
In my opinion it should be safe to unconditionally use SetSwapInterval now. Anyone who encounters the bug should update their ANGLE to a version less than 3 years old, especially since they'd be using a SDL version that's 3+ years newer than their ANGLE version.
Rob
I've ran into an issue where I successfully receive SDL_KEY[UP,DOWN] events but not SDL_TEXTINPUT or SDL_TEXTEDITING. In my case the code in SDL_EVDEV_do_text_input() is returning early (on error) prior to calling SDL_SendKeyboardText(). I'm running on the RaspberryPi 3, without X11.
In SDL_EVDEV_do_text_input() there is a condition to check keysyms with a type value below 0xf0, then subtract 0xf0 from type. Without understanding the purpose of this code, I disabled it, recompiled, and I'm getting correct SDL_TEXTINPUT events. I'm going to guess that my hack/fix is going to be problematic in some other environment, but after some initial testing it looks like everything is running fine in my setup.
Richard Russell
Resuming from a suspended state results in a black screen. This only happens when using GLES 1.1 (GLES 2 resumes correctly) and when the render target has been changed using SDL_SetRenderTarget. This problem is new in 2.0.4.
The attached test case demonstrates the issue.
Sylvain Becker has apparently found a fix as follows:
"In the opengles leaf function (in 'src/render/opengles/SDL_render_gles.c'), it appears there is a call to 'GLES_ActivateRenderer' in 'GLES_SetRenderTarget', which is not present in opengles2. When commenting out this 'GLES_ActivateRenderer', it seems to resume fine".
This appears to fix the testcase perfectly, but I don't know whether it could have any undesirable side-effects.
tvc
I believe this patch should fix it, instead of looping through all the tty's and seemingly selecting the wrong one and corrupting the console I've just made SDL open /dev/tty which is the console attached to the current process anyway.
felix
Here's a snippet of SDL_DestroyRenderer from hg revision 10746:7540ff5d0e0e:
SDL_Texture *texture = NULL;
SDL_Texture *nexttexture = NULL;
/* ... */
for (texture = renderer->textures; texture; texture = nexttexture) {
nexttexture = texture->next;
SDL_DestroyTexture(texture);
}
SDL_DestroyTexture removes the texture from the linked list pointed to by the renderer and ends up calling SDL_DestroyTextureInternal, which contains this:
if (texture->native) {
SDL_DestroyTexture(texture->native);
}
If it happens that texture->native is an alias of nexttexture two stack frames up, SDL_DestroyRenderer will end up trying to destroy an already freed texture. I've had this very situation happen in dosemu2.
Bug introduced in revision 10650:a8253d439914, which has a somewhat ironic description of "Fixed all known static analysis bugs"...
Rob
When calling ioctl(fd, KDGKBTYPE, &type) in SDL_EVDEV_is_console(), we declare type as an 'int'. This should be a 'char'. The subsequent syscall, and kernel code, only writes the lower byte of the word.
See: http://lxr.free-electrons.com/source/drivers/tty/vt/vt_ioctl.c?v=4.4#L399
ucval = KB_101;
ret = put_user(ucval, (char __user *)arg);
I've observed intermittent behavior related to this, and I can force an error condition by using an int initialized to 0xFFFFFFFF. The resulting ioctl will set type to 0XFFFFFF02, and the conditional return in SDL_EVDEV_is_console() will fail.
Recommend changing to char, or masking off unused bits.
There was a draft of this where it did audio conversion into the final buffer,
if there was enough room available past what you asked for, but that interface
got removed, so the parameters didn't make sense (and we were using the
wrong one in any case, too!).
For example, if sR is 0 and dR is 255, we will get -255*sA casted to an unsigned value. Basically results are quite large numbers instead of the expected 0-255 range.
Fixed a case where partial trigger pull could be bound to another button
There is a fundamental problem not resolved by this commit:
Some controllers have axes (triggers, pedals, etc.) that don't start at zero, but we're guaranteed that if we get a value that it's correct. For these controllers, the current code works, where we take the first value we get and use that as the zero point and generate axis motion starting from that point on.
Other controllers have digital axes (D-pad) that assume a zero starting point, and the first value we get is the min or max axis value when the D-pad is moved. For these controllers, the current code thinks that the zero point is the axis value after the D-pad motion and this doesn't work.
My hypothesis is that the first class of devices is more common and that we should solve for that, and add an exception to SDL_JoystickAxesCenteredAtZero() as needed for the second class of devices.
Ryan C. Gordon
Kristian says you can't do it with Wayland, and that going forward, it'll just handle whatever you throw at it anyhow.
https://twitter.com/hoegsberg/status/816148272402165761
So I say we mark it SDL_PIXELFORMAT_RGB888, which is what my X11 display currently reports, and leave it at that.
kaisyu
In case of OpenGLES, the sequences of loading and unloading driver library should be like that:
SDL_Init
...
SDL_GL_LoadLibrary
SDL_EGL_LoadLibrary
...
SDL_Quit
...
SDL_GL_UnloadLibrary
SDL_EGL_UnloadLibrary
...
However, according to my test results, the varible '_this->gl_config.driver_loaded' does not allow 'SDL_GL_UnloadLibrary' to call 'SDL_EGL_UnloadLibrary'.
Coriiander
This notice is about a misplaced comment.
Often times when we use an #if #endif sequence, the #endif is followed by a comment to indicate what #if statement it belonged to. The SDL_xaudio2.c file contains a misplaced comment, as follows (I stripped the other comments):
#ifdef __GNUC__
# define SDL_XAUDIO2_HAS_SDK 1
#elif defined(__WINRT__)
# define SDL_XAUDIO2_HAS_SDK
#include "SDL_xaudio2.h"
#else
#if 0
#include <dxsdkver.h>
#if (!defined(_DXSDK_BUILD_MAJOR) || (_DXSDK_BUILD_MAJOR < 1284))
# pragma message("Your DirectX SDK is too old. Disabling XAudio2 support.")
#else
# define SDL_XAUDIO2_HAS_SDK 1
#endif
#endif
#endif /* 0 */
That final /* 0 */ should be moved one line up. Like this (I tabbed it out for you to make it more clear):
Tristan
The internal SDL_vsnprintf implementation accesses memory outside buffer. The bug existed also inside the format (%) processing, which was fixed with Bug 3441.
But there is still an invalid access, if we do not have any format inside the source string and the destination string is shorter than the format string. You can use any string for this test, as long it is longer than the buffer.
Example:
va_list argList;
char buffer[4];
SDL_vsnprintf(buffer, sizeof(buffer), "Testing", argList);
The bug is located on the 'else' branch of the format char test:
while (*fmt) {
if (*fmt == '%') {
...
} else {
if (left > 1) {
*text = *fmt;
--left;
}
++fmt;
++text;
}
}
if (left > 0) {
*text = '\0';
}
As you can see that text is always incremented, even when left is already one. When then on the last lines, *text is assigned the NULL char, the pointer is located outside bounds.
Intellectual Kitty
In SDL_video.c, on line #1756, in SDL_SetWindowPosition (from today's distribution, 12-31-2016, https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/shortlog/bf19e0c84483):
if (displayIndex > _this->num_displays) {
should be:
if (displayIndex >= _this->num_displays) {
felix
Compiling even a simple SDL2 'hello world' program with gcc -Wstrict-prototypes (GCC 6.2.1) results in warnings like:
/usr/include/SDL2/SDL_gamecontroller.h:143:1: attention : function declaration isn't a prototype [-Wstrict-prototypes]
extern DECLSPEC int SDLCALL SDL_GameControllerNumMappings();
^~~~~~
It seems there is a missing 'void' between the parentheses.
This was a leftover of simplifying the resamplers down from autogenerated
code; I forgot to make something that the generator hardcoded into something
variable.
Fixes Bugzilla #3507.
Ozkan Sezer
http://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/464a2676d8ab seems to have
forgotten removing the return from SDL_dynapi_procs.h, and this patch
does that. Without it, MSVC warns:
c:\sdl2\src\dynapi\SDL_dynapi_procs.h(598) : warning C4098:
'SDL_GL_SwapWindow_DEFAULT' : 'void' function returning a value
c:\sdl2\src\dynapi\SDL_dynapi_procs.h(598) : warning C4098:
'SDL_GL_SwapWindow' : 'void' function returning a value
Ozkan Sezer
This adds the name 'ad' to two unnamed unions in edid.h
and adjusts edid-parse.c for it. Nameless unions are not supported in
ancient gcc, which I happened to use on one of my ancient setups.
These fixes are lumped into two categories:
1. add new file, SDL_dataqueue.c, to UWP/WinRT build-inputs (via MSVC project
files)
2. implement a temporary, hack-fix for a build error in SDL_xinputjoystick.c.
Win32's Raw Input APIs are, unfortunately, not available for use in UWP/WinRT
APIs. There does appear to be a replacement API, available in the
Windows.Devices.HumanInterfaceDevice namespace.
This fix should be sufficient to get SDL compiling again, without affecting
Win32 builds, however using the UWP/WinRT API (in UWP/WinRT builds) would
almost certainly be better (for UWP/WinRT builds).
TODO: research Windows.Devices.HumanInterfaceDevice, and use that if and as
appropriate.
Ciro Santilli
GCC 6, Ubuntu 16.10, cd test; ./configure; make
/bin/sh config.status Makefile
config.status: creating Makefile
gcc -o loopwave loopwave.c -g -O2 -D_REENTRANT -I/usr/include/SDL2 -DHAVE_OPENGLES2 -DHAVE_OPENGL -DHAVE_SDL_TTF -g -lSDL2_test -lSDL2
gcc -o testatomic testatomic.c -g -O2 -D_REENTRANT -I/usr/include/SDL2 -DHAVE_OPENGLES2 -DHAVE_OPENGL -DHAVE_SDL_TTF -g -lSDL2_test -lSDL2
In file included from /usr/include/SDL2/SDL_main.h:25:0,
from /usr/include/SDL2/SDL.h:32,
from testatomic.c:14:
/usr/include/SDL2/SDL_stdinc.h:261:20: error: variably modified ?SDL_dummy_size? at file scope
typedef int SDL_dummy_ ## name[(x) * 2 - 1]
^
testatomic.c:106:1: note: in expansion of macro ?SDL_COMPILE_TIME_ASSERT?
SDL_COMPILE_TIME_ASSERT(size, CountTo>0); /* check for rollover */
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Makefile:114: recipe for target 'testatomic' failed
make: *** [testatomic] Error 1
If I remove the line SDL_COMPILE_TIME_ASSERT(size, CountTo>0); /* check for rollover */ it works, lazy to figure out the best way to do this.
This currently doesn't affect absolute motion, which would need to be implemented on each windowing system so the cursor matches the reported mouse coordinates.
Diego
I was previously unaware that rotating the device to a different orientation when the keyboard is shown causes a keyboardWillHide followed by a keyboardWillShow notification. The previous patch would then mistakenly StopTextInput when rotating. This patch fixes that by checking if the device is rotating before stopping text input.
Ozkan Sezer
With rev. 10651, i.e. http://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/747a6a795b21 ,
SDL2 - OS X builds fail to run on 10.6 (my setup: i686 / 10.6.8)
because the symbol _IOPMAssertionCreateWithDescription is missing.
The SDK listing it for 10.7+ does seem correct. Reverting r10651
and rebuilding makes it to function again.
Simon Hug
The SDL_BlitScaled function runs into an access violation for specific blit coordinates and surface sizes. The attached testcase blits a 800x600 surface to a 1280x720 surface at the coordinates -640,-345 scaled to 1280x720. The blit function that moves the data then runs over and reads after the pixel data from the src surface causing an access violation.
I can't say where exactly it goes wrong, but I think it could have something to do with the rounding in SDL_UpperBlitScaled. final_src.y is 288 and final_src.h is 313. Together that's 601, which I believe is one too much, but I just don't know the code enough to make sure that's the problem.
Sylvain
I think this patch fix the issue, but maybe it's worth re-writing "SDL_UpperBlitScaled" using SDL_FRect.
The non-deprecated approach (IOPMAssertion) already exists in SDL, and is
available in Mac OS X 10.6 and later (although it was incorrectly listed as
10.7 and later in SDL). Since SDL now requires 10.6 or later, this is no
longer conditionally used.
realitix
SDL2 allows to create widow and to get information through SDL_SysWMinfo.
But it misses something, with Vulkan, you need the HWND and HINSTANCE of the window for Win32 system.
Sadly, SDL2 provides only HWND but not HINSTANCE.
In some context, it can be difficult to get the HINSTANCE, indeed, I'm using pySDL2 (Python) and I can only access properties that SDL2 gives me.
I have to use a dirty trick like that to get the HINSTANCE: (https://raw.githubusercontent.com/bglgwyng/pyVulkan/master/examples/win32misc.py)
felix
Building SDL 2.0.5, or even the Mercurial snapshot (r10608) with GCC 6.2.1 and --enable-video-directfb generates a number of compiler diagnostics and fails.
Simon Hug
The software renderer produces incorrect results when blending textures at an angle with certain blend modes. It seems that there were some edge cases that weren't considered when the SW_RenderCopyEx function was last changed. Or another bug possibly covered up the problem. (More on that in another bug report.)
Most of the issues come from the fact that the rotating function sets a black colorkey. This is problematic because black is most likely appearing in the surface and the final blit will ignore these pixels. Unless a colorkey is already set (the software renderer currently never sets one), it's very hard to find a free color. Of course it could scan over the whole image until one is found, but that seems inefficient.
The following blend modes have issues when drawn at an angle.
NONE: The black pixels get ignored, making them essentially transparent. This breaks the 'dstRGBA = srcRGBA' definition of the NONE blend mode.
MOD: Again, the black pixels get ignored. This also breaks the 'dstRGB = dstRGB * srcRGB' definition of the MOD blend mode, where black pixels would make the destination black as well. A white colorkey will work though, with some preparations.
BLEND: There are some issues when blending a texture with a translucent RGBA target texture. I - uh - forgot what the problem here exactly is.
This patch fixes the issues mentioned above. It mainly changes the code so it tries to do things without the colorkey and removes the automatic format conversion part from the SDLgfx_rotateSurface function. Getting the format right is something the caller has to do now and the required code has been added to the SW_RenderCopyEx function.
There's a small change to the SW_CreateTexture function. RLE encoding a surface with an alpha mask can be a lossy process. Depending on how the user uses the RGBA channels, this may be undesired. The change that surfaces with an alpha mask don't get encoded makes the software renderer consistent with the other renderers.
The SW_RenderCopyEx function now does these steps: Lock the source surface if necessary. Create a clone of the source by using the pixel buffer directly. Check the format and set a flag if a conversion is necessary. Check if scaling or cropping is necessary and set the flag for that as well. Check if color and alpha modulation has to be done before the rotate. Check if the source is an opaque surface. If not, it creates a mask surface that is necessary for the NONE blend mode. If any of the flags were set, a new surface is created and the source will be converted, scaled, cropped, and modulated. The rest of the function stays somewhat the same. The mask also needs to be rotated of course and then there is the NONE blend mode...
It's surprisingly hard to get the pixel from a rotated surface to the destination buffer without affecting the pixel outside the rotated area. I found a way to do this with three blits which is pretty hard on the performance. Perhaps someone has an idea how to do this faster?
As mentioned above, the SDLgfx_rotateSurface now only takes 8-bit paletted or 32-bit with alpha mask surfaces. It additionally sets the new surfaces up for the MOD blend mode.
I shortly tested the 8-bit path of SDLgfx_rotateSurface and it seemed to work so far. This path is not used by the software renderer anyway.
Vitaly Novichkov
Okay, when I researched code and algorithm, I tried to replace condition "while(dst >= target)" with "while(dst > target)" and crashes are gone.
Seems on some moments it tries to write into the place before memory block begin, therefore phantom crashes appearing after some moments.
Sylvain 2016-11-07 08:49:34 UTC
when rotated +90 or -90, some transparent lines appears, though there is no Alpha or ColorKey.
if you set a dummy colorkey, it will remove the line ...
if you set a some alpha mod, the +90/-90 get transparent but not the 0/180 ...
x414e54
It is a bit of a pain to update the library or rely on whatever version the user has on their computer for default mappings.
So providing an easily updatable text file via SDL_GameControllerAddMappingsFromFile is still currently the most viable way. However using this replaces all mappings provided by the SDL_HINT_GAMECONTROLLERCONFIG environment variable which may have come from the user's custom Steam mapping.
There should be an easy way for games to supply extra game controller mappings to fill in the differences between SDL versions without it clobbering the SDL_HINT_GAMECONTROLLERCONFIG environment variable.
Internally the mappings could use a priority system and if the priority is lower then it will not overwrite the mappings.
For now it just assumes SDL_HINT_GAMECONTROLLERCONFIG is the highest priority, the default hardcoded are the lowest and anything set via the API is medium.
Sam
I've discovered that when building on powerpc64le (and probably powerpc64) SDL's configure script fails to detect dynamic library support, causing it to build a static library. This causes link failures due to undefined symbols later when packages link with -lSDL.
This seems to be because the included autotools package is too old to detect powerpc64le. This change corrects the problem for me but newer versions of autotools should handle it without a patch
Mark Pizzolato
On Windows with Visual Studio, when building SDL as a static library using the x86 (32bit) mode, several intrinsic operations are implemented in code in SDL_stdlib.c.
One of these, _allshr() is not properly implemented and fails for some input. As a result, some operations on 64bit data elements (long long) don't always work.
I classified this bug as a blocker since things absolutely don't work when the affected code is invoked. The affected code is only invoked when SDL is compiled in x86 mode on Visual Studio when building a SDL as a static library. This build environment isn't common, and hence the bug hasn't been noticed previously.
I reopened#2537 and mentioned this problem and provided a fix. That fix is provided again here along with test code which could be added to some of the SDL test code. This test code verifies that the x86 intrinsic routines produce the same results as the native x64 instructions which these routines emulate under the Microsoft compiler. The point of the tests is to make sure that Visual Studio x86 code produces the same results as Visual Studio x64 code. Some of the arguments (or boundary conditions) may produce different results on other compiler environments, so the tests really shouldn't be run on all compilers. The test driver only actually exercised code when the compiler defines _MSC_VER, so the driver can generically be invoked without issue.
Ozkan Sezer
On systems with old glibc, such mine with glibc-2.8, the following warning
is issued and is fixed easily by defining _GNU_SOURCE:
/home/me/SDL2-2.0.5/src/video/x11/SDL_x11modes.c: In function 'CalculateXRandRRefreshRate':
/home/me/SDL2-2.0.5/src/video/x11/SDL_x11modes.c:263: warning: implicit declaration of function 'round'
/home/me/SDL2-2.0.5/src/video/x11/SDL_x11modes.c:263: warning: incompatible implicit declaration of built-in function 'round'
x414e54
I have implemented Drag and Drop and Clipboard support for Wayland.
Drag and dropping files from nautilus to the testdropfile application seems to work and also copy and paste.
This no longer uses a script to generate code for every possible type
conversion or resampler. This caused a bloat in binary size and and compile
times. Now we use a handful of more generic functions and assume staying in
the CPU cache is the most important thing anyhow.
This shrinks the size of the final build (in this case: macOS X amd64, -Os to
optimize for size) by 15%. When compiling on a single core, build times drop
by about 15% too (although the previous cost was largely hidden by multicore
builds).
Alex Baines
I realized overnight that my patch probably broke text input events with UIM, and I confirmed that it does. Can't believe I overlooked that... I've been making stupid mistakes in these patches recently, sorry.
Anyway, *this* one seems to fix it properly. Knowing my luck it probably breaks something else.
Patch uses XkbFreeKeyboard to free the memory returned by XkbGetMap.
Earlier implementation called XkbFreeClientMap which frees all the maps
but not data->xkb structure itself, XkbFreeKeyboard will free maps and
the structure.
Joshua Bodine
I'm going to reopen this because configure should still accurately report whether libudev will be used. Right now it just tests whether it's enabled as an argument, not whether configure was successful in finding it.
Kai Sterker
SDL2 on Haiku so far uses Haiku-specific APIs for loading dynamic objects as add-ons, instead of using dlopen to load them as libraries. This, for example, leads to SDL_mixer not being able to load its audio backends, when compiled with standard settings.
As discussed at https://www.freelists.org/post/haikuports/SDL2-mixer-ogg-music-not-playing-and-other-stuff,2 , the best way to deal with this would be using dlopen instead of load_add_on. The following patch implements this change by dropping the Haiku-specific bits and using dlopen instead.
/home/fedora/SDL2-2.0.5/src/video/SDL_blit_N.c: In function 'calc_swizzle32':
/home/fedora/SDL2-2.0.5/src/video/SDL_blit_N.c:127:5: error: ISO C90 forbids mixed declarations and code [-Werror=declaration-after-statement]
const vector unsigned char plus = VECUINT8_LITERAL(0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00,
^
Elis?e Maurer
I scratched my head for a while until I realized there's a typo in the command listed in the instructions for universal Mac builds: https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/file/3a3a88db1fc2/docs/README-macosx.md#l24
It should say `g++-fat.sh` but instead it says `g++fat.sh`, which makes `./configure` fail with a C++ preprocessor error.
Kai Sterker
Apparently, SDL2 on Haiku does not generate SDL_TEXTINPUT events.
Attached is a patch that adds this functionality.
Tested with SDLs own checkkeys program and different keymaps as well as my own SDL application and German keyboard layout to verify it generates the expected input.
Albert Casals
On a RaspberryPI, it might become convenient to specify the Dispmanx layer SDL uses.
Currently, it is hardcoded to be 10000 to sit above most applications.
This can be specially useful when integrating other graphical apps and frameworks like OMXplayer, QT5 etc.. in order to have more flexibility on their Z-order.
ny00
Unfortunately, simply checking the return codes of "onNativePadDown/Up" as previously done has its own issue:
If an SDL joystick is connected *and* opened, then a proper KeyEvent, say with keycode KEYCODE_BUTTON_1, should lead to an SDL joystick button event as expected.
If, however, the joystick was *not* opened, then "onNativePadDown/Up" will return a negative value, so before the commit from bug 3426, you could unexpectedly get a keyboard event. (In practice, you'll just get a log message, since KEYCODE_BUTTON_1 has no mapping to a proper SDL_ScanCode value, but it's still an problem).
What should still be done, though, is checking the key code itself. We do have the KeyEvent.isGamepadButton method, but according my test, it returns "true" exactly (and only) for the KEYCODE_BUTTON* values, and not for KEYCODE_DPAD* or any other key code.
Here is a possible solution:
- Do check the return codes of "onNativePadDown/Up" as previously done.
- In addition, in "Android_OnPadDown/Up" from src/joystick/android/SDL_sysjoystick.c, 0 should *always* be returned in case the key code can be translated to an SDL_joystick button; Even if no matching joystick can be found.
Philipp Wiesemann
Maybe the fault is in the SDL_VIDEO_DRIVER_WINDOWS section in SDL_InitSubSystem() of "src/SDL.c". Because there only SDL_INIT_JOYSTICK is checked. The flags are adapted for SDL_INIT_GAMECONTROLLER afterwards.
Eric Wasylishen
The patch makes StartTextInput/StopTextInput call Xutf8ResetIC ( https://www.x.org/releases/X11R7.5/doc/man/man3/XmbResetIC.3.html ) on the XIC of all SDL windows.
This fixes my use case in Quakespasm (Ubuntu 16.04, system keyboard layout set to German. Type the '^' dead key, which opens Quakespasm's developer console and calls SDL_StartTextInput, then press 'e'. I expect the dead key to be ignored.)
Also, here is a patch for sdl2's "checkkeys" for testing this: https://bugzilla-attachments.libsdl.org/attachment.cgi?id=2451
Olav Sorensen
After a drag and drop event, any following mouse button input (down/up) doesn't generate an event. Clicking any mouse button a *second* time generates an event like it should.
Further investigation shows that the new SDL_HINT_MOUSE_FOCUS_CLICKTHROUGH logic also causes this issue in other cases, like the first time you open the program and click the mouse.
Simon Hug
There are currently three entry points in the SDL2_main code for windows: main, wmain and WinMain. Only the latter two properly convert the arguments to UTF-8.
Console applications linked with MSVC will always link with the main entry point (wmain has to be selected by manually setting the entry point). This makes it likely that such programs will not have proper unicode arguments.
Sylvain
After a long time, I found out more clearly what was going wrong.
The native libraries should be built with a "APP_PLATFORM" as low as possible.
Ideally, APP_PLATFORM should be equals to the minSdkVersion of the AndroidManifest.xml
So that the application never runs on a lower APP_PLATFORM than it has been built for.
An additional good patch would be to write explicitly in "jni/Application.mk": APP_PLATFORM=android-10
(If no APP_PLATFORM is set, the "targetSdkVersion" of the AndroidManifest.xml is applied as an APP_PLATFORM to the native libraries. And currently, this is bad, because targetSdkVersion is 12, whereas minSdkLevel is 10.
And in fact, there is a warning from ndk: "Android NDK: WARNING: APP_PLATFORM android-12 is larger than android:minSdkVersion 10 in ./AndroidManifest.xml".)
to precise what happened in the initial reported test-case:
Let say the "c" code contains a call to "srand()".
with APP_PLATFORM=android-21, libSDL2.so contains a undef reference to "srand()".
with APP_PLATFORM=android-10, libSDL2.so contains a undef reference to "srand48()".
but srand() is missing on devices with APP_PLATFORM=android-10 (it was in fact replaced by srand48()).
So, if you build for android-21 (where srand() is available), you will really have a call to "srand()" and it will fail on android-10.
That was the issue. The path tried to fix this by in fact always calling srand48().
SDL patches that were applied are beneficial anyway, there are implicitly allowing they backward compatibility of using android-21 on a android-10 platform.
It can be helpful in case you want to target a higher APP_PLATFORM than minSdkVersion to have potentially access to more functions.
Eg you want to have access to GLES3 functions (or other) of "android-21". But, if dlopen() fails (on android-10), you do a fall-back to GLES2.
Robert Folland
When running this little test program with SDL2 on Wayland it often crashes in SDL_Init.
From a backtrace it is apparent that there is a race condition in creating a xkb_context_ref. Sometimes it is 0x0.
By moving the relevant lines higher up in Wayland_VideoInit (in SDL2-2.0.4/src/video/wayland/SDL_waylandvideo.c:302) this seems to get fixed.
I moved the call to WAYLAND_xkb_context_new() up to before the call to WAYLAND_wl_display_connect().
Here is the test program (just a loop of init and quit), and a backtrace from gdb:
#include <cstdio>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <SDL2/SDL.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <iostream>
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
int count = atoi(argv[1]);
for (int i = 0; i < count; i++) {
std::cout << "Init " << i << std::endl;
if (SDL_Init(SDL_INIT_VIDEO) < 0) {
SDL_LogError(SDL_LOG_CATEGORY_APPLICATION,
"Couldn't initialize SDL: %s\n",
SDL_GetError());
return 1;
}
std::cout << "Quit" << std::endl;
SDL_Quit();
}
return 0;
}
Init 12
Quit
Init 13
Program received signal SIGSEGV, Segmentation fault.
xkb_context_ref (ctx=ctx@entry=0x0) at src/context.c:156
156 ctx->refcnt++;
(gdb) bt
#0 xkb_context_ref (ctx=ctx@entry=0x0) at src/context.c:156
#1 0x00007ffff5e1cd4c in xkb_keymap_new (ctx=0x0, format=XKB_KEYMAP_FORMAT_TEXT_V1, flags=flags@entry=XKB_KEYMAP_COMPILE_NO_FLAGS) at src/keymap-priv.c:65
#2 0x00007ffff5e1c6cc in xkb_keymap_new_from_buffer (ctx=<optimized out>,
buffer=0x7ffff7fd5000 "xkb_keymap {\nxkb_keycodes \"(unnamed)\" {\n\tminimum = 8;\n\tmaximum = 255;\n\t<ESC>", ' ' <repeats 16 times>, "= 9;\n\t<AE01>", ' ' <re
peats 15 times>, "= 10;\n\t<AE02>", ' ' <repeats 15 times>, "= 11;\n\t<AE03>", ' ' <repeats 15 times>, "= 12;\n\t<AE04>", ' ' <repeats 12 times>..., length=48090,
format=<optimized out>, flags=<optimized out>) at src/keymap.c:191
#3 0x00007ffff7b8ea4e in keyboard_handle_keymap (data=0x6169b0, keyboard=<optimized out>, format=<optimized out>, fd=5, size=48091)
at /home/vlab/abs/sdl2/src/SDL2-2.0.4/src/video/wayland/SDL_waylandevents.c:269
#4 0x00007ffff64501f0 in ffi_call_unix64 () from /usr/lib/libffi.so.6
#5 0x00007ffff644fc58 in ffi_call () from /usr/lib/libffi.so.6
#6 0x00007ffff665be3e in wl_closure_invoke (closure=closure@entry=0x61f000, flags=flags@entry=1, target=<optimized out>, target@entry=0x616d20,
opcode=opcode@entry=0, data=<optimized out>) at src/connection.c:949
#7 0x00007ffff6658be0 in dispatch_event (display=<optimized out>, queue=<optimized out>) at src/wayland-client.c:1274
#8 0x00007ffff6659db4 in dispatch_queue (queue=0x617398, display=0x6172d0) at src/wayland-client.c:1420
#9 wl_display_dispatch_queue_pending (display=0x6172d0, queue=0x617398) at src/wayland-client.c:1662
#10 0x00007ffff665a0cf in wl_display_roundtrip_queue (display=0x6172d0, queue=0x617398) at src/wayland-client.c:1085
#11 0x00007ffff7b8faa0 in Wayland_VideoInit (_this=<optimized out>) at /home/vlab/abs/sdl2/src/SDL2-2.0.4/src/video/wayland/SDL_waylandvideo.c:302
#12 0x00007ffff7b7aed6 in SDL_VideoInit_REAL (driver_name=<optimized out>, driver_name@entry=0x0) at /home/vlab/abs/sdl2/src/SDL2-2.0.4/src/video/SDL_video.c:513
#13 0x00007ffff7ae0ee7 in SDL_InitSubSystem_REAL (flags=16416) at /home/vlab/abs/sdl2/src/SDL2-2.0.4/src/SDL.c:173
#14 0x0000000000400b24 in main (argc=2, argv=0x7fffffffebb8) at vplay-init.cpp:13
(gdb)
Eric wing
Sometimes an SDL_assert triggers at RPI_WarpMouseGlobal
src/video/raspberry/SDL_rpimouse.c:232 'update'.
It doesn't always reproduce, but it seems to happen when you really bog down the system and the event loop can't update for awhile.
The first time I hit this, I wasn't even using the mouse. I don't call any warp mouse functions either.
I can usually reproduce with a simple program that runs an expensive blocking CPU series of functions which blocks the main loop until complete (can be up to 10 seconds).
Sometimes this assertion gets triggered after that. I'm not sure if
they are related or coincidental.
Disabling the SDL_asserts when compiling SDL will avoid this problem. I actually haven't seen any problems with the mouse when I do this.
On a Raspberry Pi 2 running Raspbian Jessie.
Call SDL_GL_GetDrawableSize() directly because we may be in the initialization path and SDL_GetRendererOutputSize() will fail because the renderer magic isn't set up yet.
Daniel Gibson
Ok, I followed the simple approach of just making SDL_PIXELFORMAT_RGBA32 an alias of SDL_PIXELFORMAT_RGBA8888/SDL_PIXELFORMAT_ABGR8888, depending on endianess. And I did the same for SDL_PIXELFORMAT_ARGB32, .._BGRA, .._ABGR.
SDL_GetPixelFormatName() will of course return SDL_PIXELFORMAT_RGBA8888 (or SDL_PIXELFORMAT_ABGR8888) instead of SDL_PIXELFORMAT_RGBA32, but as long as that's mentioned in the docs it shouldn't be a problem.
Apparently some systems see "hw:", some see "default:" and some see
"sysdefault:" (and maybe others!). My workstation sees both "hw:" and
"sysdefault:" ...
Try to find a prefix we like and prioritize the prefixes we (think) we want
most. If everything else fails, if there's a "default" (not a prefix) device
name, list that by itself so the user gets _something_ here.
If we can't find a prefix we like _and_ there's no "default" device, report
no hardware found at all.
Weitian Leung
Just moved ibus direct call to SDL_IME_* related functions, and adds fcitx IME support (uses DBus, too),
enable with env: SDL_IM_MODULE=fcitx (ibus still the default one)
D39 does not support negative viewport values which the current implementation relies on.
D3D11 does support negative viewport values so that will continue working.
Refer to Bug 2799.
x414e54
Wayland will sometimes send empty resize events (0 width and 0 height) to the client. I have not worked out the exact conditions a client would receive these but I can assume it might be if the window is offscreen or not mapped yet.
This causes issues with some SDL clients as they receive the 0x0 event and unexpected resize event or might not request to resize back to the correct size.
As per the wl_shell Wayland spec configure events are only a suggestion and the client is free to ignore or pick a different size (this is how min/max and fixed aspect ratio is supped to be implemented).
A patch is attached but is just the first iteration and I will fix any issues such as checking for FULLSCREEN/MAXIMIZED or RESIZABLE flags unless someone else fixes this first.
I have update to take into account non resizable and fullscreen windows. Also adding in maximize/restore and title functions for Wayland.
Darren Kulp
The dummy video driver is not available on Mac OS X if SDL_VIDEO_OPENGL is set at library compilation time.
In src/video/SDL_video.c, there is a compile-time check in SDL_CreateWindow() for (SDL_VIDEO_OPENGL && __MACOSX__). When it succeeds, SDL_WINDOW_OPENGL is always requested. Since the dummy video driver does not supply an OpenGL implementation, the error "No OpenGL support in video driver" is supplied to the user, and SDL_CreateWindow() is exited early.
Adam M.
When doing a rotated texture copy with the software renderer, where the angle is a multiple of 90 degrees, one or two edges of the image get cut off. This is because of the following line in sw_rotate.c:
if ((unsigned)dx < (unsigned)sw && (unsigned)dy < (unsigned)sh) {
which is effectively saying:
if (dx >= 0 && dx < src->w-1 && dy >= 0 && dy < src->h-1) {
As a result, it doesn't process pixels in the right column or bottom row of the source image (except when they're accessed as part of the bilinear filtering for nearby pixels). This causes it to look like the edges are cut off, and it's especially obvious with an exact multiple of 90 degrees.
Michael Labb?
NVidia has released some pretty nice Tegra profiling tools for their Android devices. The NVidia Tegra Graphics Debugger works by providing an interposer library that intercepts ES2 and EGL calls. You must link against these libraries.
Unfortunately, this quietly fails with SDL2 because libEGL and libGLES2 are dynamically loaded with dlopen().
NVidia offers a secondary approach to using the Tegra Graphics Debugger: root your device and install a global interposer library. Almost no devs will try this first if they don?t have a rooted device.
I propose an update to the Android readme that explains why the static linking approach recommended by NVidia doesn?t work.
Nitz
In function SDLgfx_rotateSurface:
rz_dst =
SDL_CreateRGBSurface(SDL_SWSURFACE, dstwidth, dstheight + GUARD_ROWS,
rz_src->format->Rmask, rz_src->format->Gmask,
rz_src->format->Bmask, rz_src->format->Amask);
Here rz_src get De-referenced without NULL check, which is risky.
Simon Sandstr?m
As stated in Summary. The switch statement will execute the default case and set a SDL error message: "SDL_MixAudio(): unknown audio format".
There are atleast two more problems here:
1. SDL_MixAudioFormat does not notify the user that an error has occured and that a SDL error message was set. It took me awhile to understand why I couldn't mix down the volume on my AUDIO_U16LSB formatted audio stream.. until I started digging in the SDL source code.
2. The error message is incorrect, it should read: "SDL_MixAudioFormat(): unknown audio format".
Daniel Gibson
Currently, SDL_CreateRGBSurface() and SDL_CreateRGBSurfaceFrom() take Uint32 masks for RGBA to "describe" the Pixelformat of the surface.
Internally those value are only used to map to one of the SDL_PIXELFORMAT_* enum values that are used for further processing.
I think it would be both handy and more efficient to be able to specify SDL_PIXELFORMAT_* yourself without using SDL_PixelFormatEnumToMasks() to create masks first, so I implemented functions that do that:
SDL_CreateRGBSurfaceWithFormat() and SDL_CreateRGBSurfaceWithFormatFrom() which are like the versions without "WithFormat" but instead of taking 4 Uint32s for R/G/B/A masks, they take one for a SDL_PIXELFORMAT_* enum value.
Together with https://bugzilla.libsdl.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2923 creating a SDL_Surface* from RGBA data (e.g. from stb_image) is as easy as
surf = SDL_SDL_CreateRGBSurfaceWithFormat(0, w, h, bppToUse*8, SDL_PIXELFORMAT_RGBA32);
Ryan C. Gordon
We still include iconv.h in SDL_stdinc.h, probably because this header might have referenced the native iconv functions and types directly. Since these are hidden behind a stable ABI now and never just a #define for the system iconv, we shouldn't need this header included from a public SDL header anymore, slowing down external apps compiles and pulling tons of stuff into the namespace.
Jan Klass
Not sure if this is limited to the joystick subsystem,
but I created a minimal program for reproducibility,
which is attached.
The issue occurs with my gamepad Razer Onza (an xbox-style gamepad) plugged in.
On initialization, the gamepad is being recognized.
After quitting the subsystem, the poll will receive the joystick added event,
which it instantly handles itself, calling SDL_SYS_JoystickDetect again,
which this time calls IDirectInput8_EnumDevices with dinput = NULL (after it was released on quit).
This seems to lead to an access violation within said function, which I have no source for.
Jan Hellwig
On Windows, you are able to navigate between the buttons on a MessageBox that was created using SDL_ShowMessageBox using the arrow keys. However, if you press the left arrow key, the selection jumps to the button on the right of the currently selected one (and vice versa).
This can be fixed by reversing the order in which the buttons are added to the dialog.
The attached patch files fixes this problem. However the first press of an arrow key leads to the selection of the leftmost or rightmost button on the MessageBox, not to the selection of the button left/right of the one that is selected by default.
Ryochan7
I have been using SDL 2 for a little project that I have been developing for a while. My project is called antimicro and it takes gamepad input and then translates gamepad events into keyboard and mouse events. SDL is used to read the input from an XInput gamepad and it works great for the most part. However, there is one glaring problem that I have encountered.
When a device is unplugged and SDL sends the centered value release events for all axes, buttons, and hats, SDL does not use the proper centered value for the triggers. It pushes an SDL_JOYAXISMOTION event onto the queue with a value of 0 for all axes. That value is converted to around 16,000 for a Game Controller. That value is incorrect for triggers and, in my program, that causes any bindings that are assigned to the triggers to get activated. With most profiles, that will typically mean that a mouse right click and left click will be activated before the device is finally seen as removed and then those bindings are released by antimicro.
Jonas Kulla
At startup time, the single android window is assigned a "windowed" (window->windowed.{w,h}) size based on the current orientation of the mobile device; this size is never updated throughout the lifetime of the app.
This becomes problematic when the app is paused and then resumed in an orientation that it did not start up in. Eventually, 'SDL_OnWindowRestored()' is called, which calls 'SDL_UpdateFullscreenMode()'. This function is very problematic because it is written with a desktop monitor in mind: it tries to find a matching display mode for the windowed size, doesn't find any, and finally applies the windowed size as the fullscreen one. In the end, the windowed size is reported in a RESIZED event, which doesn't correspond to the actual surface size.
To see this in action: Start an orientation aware SDL app in eg. portrait mode, suspend the app, put the device into landscape orientation and resume the app. It will erroneously render in portrait mode (until the device is rotated again).
This tends to be a frequent spot where drivers hang, and the waits were
often unreliable in any case.
Instead, our audio thread now alerts the driver that we're done streaming audio
(which currently XAudio2 uses to alert the system not to warn about the
impending underflow) and then SDL_Delay()'s for a duration that's reasonable
to drain the DMA buffers before closing the device.
This tries to make SDL robust against device drivers that have hung up,
apps don't freeze in catastrophic (but not necessarily uncommon) conditions.
Now we detach the audio thread and let it clean up and don't care if it
never actually runs to completion.
James Zipperer
The problem I was seeing was that the the ALSA hotplug thread would call SDL_RemoveAudioDevice, but my application code was not seeing an SDL_AUDIODEVICEREMOVED event to go along with it. To fix it, I added some code into SDL_RemoveAudioDevice to call SDL_OpenedAudioDeviceDisconnected on the corresponding open audio device. There didn't appear to be a way to cross reference the handle that SDL_RemoveAudioDevice gets and the SDL_AudioDevice pointer that SDL_OpenedAudioDeviceDisconnected needs, so I ended up adding a void *handle field to struct SDL_AudioDevice so that I could do the cross reference.
Is there some other way beside adding a void *handle field to the struct to get the proper information for SDL_OpenedAudioDeviceDisconnected?
James Zipperer
Close the audio device before waiting for the audio thread to complete, which fixes a situation where the audio thread never completes
Add an additional check in the audio thread to see if the device is enabled and bail out if the device is no longer enabled
Joe Thompson
With Direct Input device (MOMO Steering Wheel w/FF)
with SDL 2.0.3,
SDL_HapticOpenFromJoystick() would fail. (Can't set exclusive mode)
Now with 2.0.4 rc1,
SDL_HapticOpenFromJoystick() succeeds but the the returned SDL_Haptic* cannot be used. Calls to SDL_HapticNewEffect() fail with "Haptic error Unable to create effect"
If SDL_HapticOpen() is used instead of HapticOpenFromJoystick(), the device is usable. Calls to HapticNewEffect() succeed with the exact same parameters as the previous failing call.
I have attached a proposed patch for this issue.
When using SDL_HapticOpenFromJoystick(), the original code did not (re)enumerate the axes. This returned a new haptic device with 0 axes. Later, when a new effect is created, SDL_SYS_SetDirection() would set the flags to include DIEFF_SPHERICAL, regardless of what the caller actually set. (see Line 566 in SDL_dinputhaptic.c). This would cause the SDL_HapticNewEffect() to fail (or interpret the coordinates incorreclty.)
The patch moves the call to IDirectInputDevice8_EnumObjects() outside of the if() block so that the axes are (re)enumerated for the new haptic device.
Note: For steering wheels it is common for the joystick to have multiple axes (ie steering, throttle, brake), but the haptic portion of the joystick usually only applies to steering.
Fixes Bugzilla #3441.
"When using internal SDL_vsnprintf(), and source string length is greater
than destination, the final NULL char will be written beyond destination size.
Primary issue that is SDL_strlcpy returns length of source string
(SDL_PrintString()), not how much is written to destination. The destination
ptr is then incremented by this length before the sanity check is done.
Destination string is properly terminated, but an extra NULL char will be
written beyond destination buffer length.
Patch used internally is attached which fixes primary issue with SDL_strlcpy()
in SDL_PrintString() and adjusts sanity checks to increment destination ptr
safely."
Tim McDaniel
Using checkkeys test app:
* Press and hold Caps Lock key.
* checkkeys reports a CapsLock key pressed event and a CapsLock key released event.
* Release Caps Lock key.
* checkkeys reports no further events.
This patch fixes OSX Caps Lock up/down event detection by installing a HID callback.
Ray Molenkamp
When building sdl as shared lib, the version info is lacking in the final binary.
CMake gathers the right resource files into ${VERSION_SOURCES} but then doesn't do anything with them.
Deve
When I'm trying to close on-screen keyboard using SDL_StopTextInput() function by touching the screen (SDL_FINGERUP or SDL_FINGERDOWN event), the screen is flickering. It is white for a while.
Note that it usually works without problems when I use phone's "back" button. I noticed flickering occasionally too, but not that often.
Philipp Wiesemann
The attached patch maybe fixes the flicker but not the actual fault causing it.
Timo Gurr
On cross hosts running autotools for SDL2_gfx-1.0.1 fails to find sdl2.m4:
eautoreconf: running in /var/tmp/paludis/build/media-libs-SDL2_gfx-1.0.1/work/SDL2_gfx-1.0.1 ...
aclocal
aclocal-1.13: warning: autoconf input should be named 'configure.ac', not 'configure.in'
configure.in:128: warning: macro 'AM_PATH_SDL2' not found in library
libtoolize --copy --force --automake
aclocal
aclocal-1.13: warning: autoconf input should be named 'configure.ac', not 'configure.in'
configure.in:128: warning: macro 'AM_PATH_SDL2' not found in library
autoconf
configure.in:128: error: possibly undefined macro: AM_PATH_SDL2
If this token and others are legitimate, please use m4_pattern_allow.
See the Autoconf documentation.
* Failed Running autoconf !
SDL2 installs it to /usr/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu/share/aclocal on cross hosts, attached patch makes use of CMAKE_INSTALL_FULL_DATAROOTDIR to support correctly installing to the arch independent location /usr/share/aclocal.
John Wordsworth
While attempting to integrate CEF (Browser) into an SDL application, we noticed that there were problems on OS X where approximately 50% of the input events were essentially being lost - even when we were using off-screen rendering in CEF and passing through input events manually.
It appears that this problem has been around for a while (see: http://www.magpcss.org/ceforum/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=11141).
Please consider the following patch that fixes this issue. Instead of processing events directly after calling [NSApp nextEventMatchingMask:...] we now pass these events down to NSApp, for processing by an overloaded sendEvent: method. Chromium also forwards events to NSApp in the same way, which means we don't miss events, even if they were originally dequeued by CEF.
Daniel
Seems like check of the visibility of renderer (renderer->hidden) is missing in SDL_RenderCopyEx.
In SDL_RenderCopy it should be done much earlier (after checking support for RenderCopyEx, line 1750).
Michael
In SDL_x11modes.c the CalculateXRandRRefreshRate() function performs integer math on values that may return fractional results. This causes a value that would be calculated as 59.99972... to be returned as 59. In Linux the xrandr command returns 60Hz for this particular display mode yet SDL returns 59Hz.
I suggest this function be updated to correctly round the result of the calculation instead of truncating the result.
Machiel van Hooren
In SDL_dxjoystick.c line 349 there is a constant c_dfDIJoystick2.
However, this constant is aparently also defined in dinput8.lib.
I encountered a linking error when statically linking to SDL:
SDL2_static.lib(SDL_dxjoystick.obj) : error LNK2005: _c_dfDIJoystick2 already defined in dinput8.lib
My application is also linking to dinput8.lib because we rolled our own joystick input and are not using the joystick functionality from SDL.
Patrick Gutlich
The mouse cursor gets corrupted when the mouse moves over the screen edges (right and bottom) a weird type of scaling seems to occur and you end up with a blank square.
tvc
I've spent the last few days implementing touchscreen support in core/linux/SDL_evdev.c. It's fairly rudimentary at the moment, as can be seen from the multiple TODO's and FIXME's littered throughout, but I'm mainly submitting this patch for review. I've tested this patch on my Raspberry Pi 2 with the official touchscreen and it works fantastically, reporting all 10 multitouch points. I'm happy to work on this further, the evdev logic also needs a bit of a cleanup I think (I may have included a few changes). But if it's good enough in its current state to be committed then I'm sure there'd be plenty of people pleased, as currently the only other framework/library that supports touchscreens on the Raspberry Pi is Kivy.
Fritzor
Source Suface is ABGR and Destination Surface is ABGR. We use software blending. In the Switch-Case statement for SDL_COPY_BLEND (Line 126) the alpha-channel is not calculated like in every SDL_blit_auto - function. So if the destination Surface has alpha - channel of zero the resulting surface has zero as well.
Add: ?dstA = srcA + ((255 - srcA) * dstA) / 255;? to code and everything is okay.
Marcel Bakker
Observed when resizing or moving a window in Windows 7.
Depending on how you resize/move your window
, you may receive none or a lot of SDL_WINDOWEVENT_EXPOSED events
, at the moment you release the mouse button.
Maybe add this event to an already existing list of overflow candidates ?
C.W. Betts
Swift is very strict with types, so much that those of different signedness/size must be cast. Most of the defines are imported as 32-bit signed integers, while the corresponding field in a struct is a 32-bit unsigned integer. Appending a "u" would cause the defined types to be imported as 32-bit unsigned integers.
Yann Dirson
When attempting to force use of opengles2 renderer with:
int wanted_renderer = -1;
for (int i = 0; i < numrenderers; i++) {
SDL_RendererInfo renderer_info;
if (SDL_GetRenderDriverInfo(i, &renderer_info) != 0) {
SDL_LogError(SDL_LOG_CATEGORY_APPLICATION, "Couldn't get renderer driver info: %s\n",
SDL_GetError());
quit(2);
}
std::cerr << "Renderer " << i << " '" << renderer_info.name << "': flags=0x"
<< std::hex << renderer_info.flags << std::dec
<< ", " << renderer_info.num_texture_formats << " texture formats, max="
<< renderer_info.max_texture_width << "x"
<< renderer_info.max_texture_height << "\n";
if (!strcmp(renderer_info.name, "opengles2")) {
std::cerr << " selecting!\n";
wanted_renderer = i;
}
}
renderer = SDL_CreateRenderer(window, wanted_renderer, 0);
... on banana pi or raspberry pi I get an error like the following (the actual
context profile value varies, being used uninitialized)
ERROR: Couldn't create renderer: Unknown OpenGL context profile 900
With this patch I get the following, which should help more pointing to a real problem:
ERROR: Couldn't create renderer: Failed getting OpenGL glGetString entry point
I pushed a patch (based on master branch of unofficial git mirror):
550389c89f
I'll be opening a different bug for the underlying issue.
Evgeny Vrublevsky
Original code in the video/windows/SDL_windowsevents.c registers obsolete WNDCLASS (not WNDCLASSEX). As the result only one icon size is used as the small and normal icons. Also original code doesn't specify required size of an icon. As the result when 256x256 icon is available, the program uses it as a default icon, and it looks ugly.
We have to use WNDCLASSEX and load icons with proper sizes which we can get using GetSystemMetrics.
Better idea. We could use the first icon from resources, like the Explorer does. Patch is included. It also correctly loads large and small icons, so it will look nice everywhere.
ny00
Using the OpenGL ES 1.1 renderer, after updating a texture with SDL_UpdateTexture (or SDL_UnlockTexture), a following call to SDL_RenderFillRect draws a rectangle with the wrong color (which appears to be the same as the texture's top-left pixel).
Comparing SDL_render_gles.c:GLES_UpdateTexture to SDL_render_gl.c:GL_UpdateTexture, a missing call to glDisable appears to be the cause. After adding it back, the bug is resolved.
ny00
On Android, the keycodes KEYCODE_BUTTON_1..16 (actual values 188-203) are translated to SDL_Joystick buttons no. 20-35. These are currently ignored in SDL_gamecontroller.c.
The attached patch fixes this, by increasing k_nMaxReverseEntries from 20 to another arbitrary bound of 48.
Side-note: Maybe some log should be emitted in case of going over any such bound?
jfverdon
Genie (https://github.com/bkaradzic/genie) is a well known premake fork which uses internally Lua 5.3 (as opposed to version 5.1 used in premake4).
As there is some Lua's API breaks in Lua 5.2, SDL premake scripts do not works with premake.
The two incompatibilities I noticed were:
* unhandle modes "rt" and "wt" for io.open. Has io.open opens files in text mode by default, the "t" flag is not needed (this flag is not supported in Genie).
* os.execute signature change, the return value is a tuple from Lua 5.2, before it was just the called program exit code.
winterknight
The showrev.sh script shows the tip, instead of the current hg revision. This can be mismatched if one were to use hg update -r ??? to revert to a previous revision.
Patch uses parents instead of tip, which will show the revision that the source is compiled with, instead of the latest revision that the user who is compiling has downloaded.
joe.gsoc16
I recently looked into Unicode support in SDL2 and realized that
SDL_TEXTEDITING doesn't get triggered at all (Japanese IME).
According to others on IRC it works fine on Windows/Mac but not
for me on (arch)Linux.
When compiling SDL with autotools, IBus support is enabled by
default but not so with CMake.
I never used CMake before but got it working and also included
that pkg-config determines flags for dbus (FIXME in CMakeLists).
Diego
The keyboard on iPads has a dismiss button that hides the keyboard. When the keyboard was hidden using that button, instead of the return key, SDL was still reporting IsTextInputActive as true. This patch adds an extra SDL_StopTextInput when iOS reports the keyboard will hide.
Simon Hug
I'm proposing some changes to the IME test program test/testime.c. The patch includes support for the GNU Unifont hex file, making the SDL_ttf dependency optional. There were also one or two bugs that prevented the text and underline from showing up poperly.
Simon Hug
There's a call to the POSIX function random in test/testqsort.c. Naturally, Windows doesn't do that. The attached patch changes the call to the SDLtest framework random functions and adds some seed control.
Looking at SDLTest_RandomInitTime, I just want to say that 'srand((unsigned int)time(NULL)); a=rand(); srand(clock()); b=rand();' is an absolutely terrible way to initialize a seed on Windows because of its terrible LCG.
Simon Hug
The SDLmain file src/main/windows/SDL_windows_main.c defines both entry points for console applications, main and wmain. This seems to confuse MSVC. It outputs a LNK4067 warning and then chooses main, which is a shame because only wmain has the unicode handling. Using SDLmain.lib provided on libsdl.org, the linker also goes for main.
I'm proposing to not define the main entry point at all. wmain should be supported well enough with MSVC.
Simon Hug
The two tests test/testaudioinfo.c and test/testaudiohotplug.c are missing error checking when they call SDL_GetAudioDeviceName. This function can return NULL which the tests pass straight to SDL_Log.
Eric Wasylishen
The bug here is that a dead keys pressed before calling SDL_StartTextInput() carries over into future text input, so the next key pressed will have the deadkey applied to it.
This in undesirable, imho, and doesn't occur on OS X (haven't check Linux or elsewhere). It's causing a problem for Quakespasm on German keyboard layouts, where we use the ^ deadkey to toggle the console (which enables/disables text input), and ^ characters are showing up in the TEXTINPUT events.
Simon Hug
The function console_wmain in src/main/windows/SDL_windows_main.c does not null terminate the argument list it is creating. As specified by the C standard, "argv[argc] shall be a null pointer."
The SDLTest framework makes use of that null pointer and some test programs can cause an access violation because it's missing.
Simon Hug
The description of the SDL_RenderClear function in the SDL_render.h header says the following:
"This function clears the entire rendering target, ignoring the viewport."
The word "entire" implies that the clipping rectangle set with SDL_RenderSetClipRect also gets ignored. This is left somewhat ambiguous if only the viewport is mentioned. Minor thing, but let's see what the implementations actually do.
The software renderer ignores the clipping rectangle when clearing. It even has a comment on this: /* By definition the clear ignores the clip rect */
Most other render drivers (opengl, opengles, opengles2, direct3d, and psp [I assume. Can't test it.]) use the scissor test for the ClipRect and don't disable it when clearing. Clearing will only happen within the clipping rectangle for these drivers.
An exception is direct3d11 which uses a clear function that ignores the scissor test.
Simon Hug
When updating the viewport in GLES_UpdateViewport, the OpenGL ES renderer doesn't flip the projection matrix for target textures. The lines, rectangles and textures (if drawn with glDrawArrays) are upside down when drawing to target textures.
Simon Hug
The OpenGL ES 2 renderer does not check the target texture format when using SDL_RenderReadPixels and just always uses ABGR8888. This can result in swapped or wrong colors.
The attached patch adds a check and selects the target texture format, if a texture is set as the target.
Simon Hug
All OpenGL renderers always flip the rows of the pixels that come from glReadPixels. This is unnecessary for target textures since these are already top down.
Also, the rect->y value can be used directly for target textures for the same reason. I don't see any code that would handle the logical render size for target textures. Or am I missing something?
The attached patch makes the renderers only the flip rows if the data comes from the default framebuffer.
Simon Hug
The current SDL_SaveBMP_RW function that saves surfaces to a BMP uses an old bitmap header which doesn't officially support alpha channels. Applications just ignore the byte where the alpha is stored. This can easily be extended by using a newer header version and setting the alpha mask.
The attached patch has these changes:
- Extending the description of the function in the SDL_surface.h header with the supported formats.
- Refining when surfaces get stored to a 32-bit BMP. (Must have bit depth of 8 or higher and must have an alpha mask or colorkey.)
- Fixing a small bug that saves 24-bit BGR surfaces with a colorkey in a 24-bit BMP.
- Adding code that switches to the bitmap header version 4 if the surface has an alpha mask or colorkey. (I chose version 4 because Microsoft didn't lose its documentation behind a file cabinet like they did with version 3.)
- Adding a hint that can disable the use of the version 4 header. This is for people that need the legacy header or like the old behavior better. (I'm not sure about the hint name, though. May need changing if there are any rules to that.)
Simon Hug
The GL_SetBlendMode and GLES_SetBlendMode functions of the opengl and opengles renderers call the glTexEnvf to set the texture env mode to either GL_MODULATE (the default) or GL_REPLACE for the NONE blend mode. Using GL_REPLACE disables color and alpha modulation for textures.
These glTexEnv calls were put in the SetBlendMode function back in 2006 [1], but there the NONE code still used the GL_DECAL mode. The GL_REPLACE mode came in 2008 [2]. I'm a bit confused why that wasn't always GL_MODULATE and a bit surprised nobody reported that yet (unless I missed it). I guess only a few use the gles renderer and the newish shaders mask the issue.
Simon Hug
The GL_CreateTexture function doesn't have any checks for the case where the driver doesn't support the framebuffer object extension. It will call into GL_GetFBO which will call the non-existent glGenFramebuffersEXT.
Also, for some reason GL_CreateContext always sets the SDL_RENDERER_TARGETTEXTURE info flag, even if it is not supported. Changeset cc226dce7536 [1] makes this change, but doesn't explain why. It seems to me like the code would already have taken care of this [2].
The attached patch adds some checks and stops SDL from reporting render target support if there is none. The application can then properly inform the user instead of just crashing.
Simon Hug
When the SDL_Blit_Slow function compares the pixel to the color key it does so without removing the alpha component from the pixel value and the key. This is different from the optimized 32-bit blitters which create a rgb mask and apply it to both to filter the alpha out. SDL_Blit_Slow will only skip the pixels with the exact alpha value of the key instead of all pixels with the same color.
The attached test case blits a surface with a color key and prints the pixel values to the console. The third row is expected to be skipped.
Simon Hug
It seems not everyone implemented glDrawTexfOES the same. Intel and Mesa ignore the viewport entirely, whereas the Raspberry Pi implementation offsets the coordinates and does viewport clipping.
The glDrawTexfOES extension text [1] for the function says "Xs and Ys are given directly in window (viewport) coordinates." I guess this wasn't clear enough.
Alex Szpakowski
Honestly I'd probably remove that codepath from SDL_Render entirely. It's an OpenGL ES 1-specific extension that isn't likely to give huge performance gains and adds additional maintenance overhead to SDL_Render while also having bugs in some drivers (as seen here).
SFC30 controller: http://www.8bitdo.com/sfc30/
The SFC30 controller can present itself in a variety of modes and it offers up
different names in each. This patch captures data for three modes (one USB and
two Bluetooth) on three platforms (Mac OS X, Windows, Linux).
However, USB mode on Linux and Windows is missing as the button events did not
make it through to SDL's controllermap tool on Fedora 24/Linux 4.5.5 nor Steam
Big Picture mode on Windows. The two Bluetooth modes were indistinguishable on
Windows. Two modes on OS X were indistinguishable.
There exists a similar controller called the SNES30 (And some others) that are
very likely identical except for the name, but I have not verified this yet so
haven't synthesized lines for those controllers until I can.
Kai Sterker
There are already patches available from mingw64 that fix the issue
https://github.com/Alexpux/MINGW-packages/tree/master/mingw-w64-SDL2
With those applied, I could compile SDL2 without problems. But of course, it would be preferable if SDL built cleanly from source.
Vitaly Novichkov
Line 124
====================================================================
const DWORD flags = thread->stacksize ? STACK_SIZE_PARAM_IS_A_RESERVATION : 0;
====================================================================
Error of compiler:
====================================================================
CC build/SDL_systhread.lo
src/thread/windows/SDL_systhread.c: In function 'SDL_SYS_CreateThread':
src/thread/windows/SDL_systhread.c:124:45: error: 'STACK_SIZE_PARAM_IS_A_RESERVA
TION' undeclared (first use in this function)
const DWORD flags = thread->stacksize ? STACK_SIZE_PARAM_IS_A_RESERVATION :
0;
^
src/thread/windows/SDL_systhread.c:124:45: note: each undeclared identifier is r
eported only once for each function it appears in
make: *** [build/SDL_systhread.lo] Error 1
====================================================================
Fixing when I adding into begin of the file:
====================================================================
#ifndef STACK_SIZE_PARAM_IS_A_RESERVATION
#define STACK_SIZE_PARAM_IS_A_RESERVATION 0x00010000
#endif
====================================================================
ny00
This report is going to cover three issues, with a suggestion for fixes. For reference, tests were done using an installation of android-x86-5.1-rc1.iso within a VirtualBox session. I've actually used an adapter that accepts up to two Playstation 1/2 controllers.
A ZIP file should be attached, with the following contents:
- The patch file itself.
- Outputs of joysticks lists from testjoystick with different orders (before fixing bug).
- Game controllers database entries (for reference).
--- Different outputs for different platforms may stem from different tools being used; The Android mapping was manually constructed using a previously available mapping as a base.
--- Note that it turns out the Linux mapping is already out there in some form: https://github.com/gabomdq/SDL_GameControllerDB/blob/master/gamecontrollerdb.txt
And so, let's begin listing the issues:
1. While changeset https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/9b540bea3cf1 has good intentions, it appears to make various input devices being mistakenly detected as SDL joysticks. I got lists of the devices from joysticktest, given in the ZIP file. "badordering.txt" is what I get if the device has been plugged since a reboot of the virtual machine, while I've gotten "goodordering.txt" after hot-plugging the USB adapter. As expected, only in the latter case I could use the controller in the test program (assuming it isn't modified).
To take care of this, I updated pollInputDevices and added the function SDLActivity.isDeviceSDLJoystick, in order to have a better filter. Note that it also checks that the device id is non-negative, since VIRTUAL_KEYBOARD appears to include a SOURCE_DPAD, and I should probably keep accepting it as an SDL_joystick (good if you want, say, to support multiple independent d-pad devices).
I hope the device id filter does not break support for the virtual remote (mentioned in the changeset above).
2. So there's a weird glitch here, where the game controller is reported to have SOURCE_KEYBOARD and SOURCE_JOYSTICK, while each controller button press/release emits a KeyEvent with SOURCE_KEYBOARD only. So obviously any test going over the event's own sources is expected to fail.
It is possible to try and filter by the key code, but then there are the dpad key codes, which can also be emitted by actual PC keyboard's key presses/releases (the arrow keys).
So instead, I just call the newly added isDeviceSDLJoystick function again and check if the input device (not the event) has any source considered to be a joystick/gamepad for us.
3. Finally, if SDL2 properly detects an SDL_Joystick being connected, but it is not opened, then whenever a KeyEvent is received after a button press/release from the same controller, SDLActivity.onNativePadDown/onNativePadUp returns a negative value. In such a case, the onKey handler continues to check for SOURCE_KEYBOARD (and possibly also SOURCE_MOUSE), which is clearly not desired.
And so, in the given patch, the return values of onNativePadDown and onNativePadUp are ignored and "true" is returned either way.
(Note: Maybe the native functions should be modified to have the return value of "void".)
Finally, as another side-note, I've noticed that the various bitwise tests for sources are wrong. For instance, to check if an InputDevice 'device' has source SOURCE_JOYSTICK, the value (device.getSources() & SOURCE_JOYSTICK) should be compared to SOURCE_JOYSTICK, not 0.
However, I think there's enough that this patch covers. At the least, isDeviceSDLJoystick partially solves this.
neoaggelos
It is common for Mac OS X to use the SDL2.framework instead of the classic UNIX dynamic lib.
Therefore, it makes sense for AM_PATH_SDL2() to be able to locate it. Attached is a patched sdl2.m4 (updated for that purpose).
Changes:
* look for SDL2.framework ONLY if pkg-config and sdl2-config tests failed (this is to ensure compatibility with the old behaviour)
* adds option ('--disable-sdlframework') to retreat to the old behaviour
* adds variable 'SDL2_FRAMEWORK' for the user to specify the exact path to SDL2.framework (e.g. if it is installed in a non-standard location)
Open to suggestions for further improvements
The Apple TV remote is currently exposed as a joystick with its touch surface treated as two axes. Key presses are also generated when its buttons and touch surface are used.
A new hint has been added to help deal with deciding whether to background the app when the remote's menu button is pressed: SDL_HINT_APPLE_TV_CONTROLLER_UI_EVENTS.
Previously when the canvas was scaled up and the pointer was locked,
motion corresponding to less than one pixel was lost. Therefore,
slow mouse motion resulted in no motion. This fixes that.
Browsers don't have the functionality to fully support the generic
SDL_ShowMessageBox(), but this handles the likely most-common case.
Without this, you'd return immediately with a proper error result and no UI,
but probably no one checks that for SDL_ShowSimpleMessageBox. And if they
did: what would they do to handle this anyhow?
We'd need to lobby for an HTML spec of some sort that allows customizable
message boxes--that block!--to properly support SDL message boxes on
Emscripten, but this is probably Good Enough for now.
AudioQueues are available in Mac OS X 10.5 and later (and iOS 2.0 and later).
Their API is much more clear (and if you don't mind the threading tapdance
to get its own CFRunLoop) much easier to use in general for our purposes.
As an added benefit: they seemlessly deal with format conversion in ways
AudioUnits don't: for example, my MacBook Pro's built-in microphone won't
capture at 8000Hz and the AudioUnit version wouldn't resample to hide this
fact; the AudioQueue version, however, can handle this.
Generate the C protocol files from the protocol XML files installed by
wayland-protocols, and use them to implement support for relative pointer
motions and pointer locking.
Note that at the time, the protocol is unstable and may change in the future.
Any future breaking changes will, however, fail gracefully and result in no
regressions compared to before this patch.
Since we are loading shared objects dynamically, build our own version of the
core protocol symbols, so that we in the future can include protocol
extensions.
This will be used by Wayland compositors to match the application ID and
.desktop file to the SDL window(s).
Applications can set the SDL_VIDEO_WAYLAND_WMCLASS environemnt variable
early in the process to override using the binary name as a fallback.
Note that we also support the SDL_VIDEO_X11_WMCLASS in the Wayland
backend so that if a program correctly associated the desktop file with
the window under X11, only a newer SDL would be needed for it to work
under Wayland.
https://bugzilla.libsdl.org/show_bug.cgi?id=3376
Author: James Zipperer <james.zipperer@synapse.com>
Date: Sun Aug 21 01:19:19 2016 -0700
bugfix for controller / joystick add / remove being in the event queue at the same time
The repro steps were this:
1. run an sdl2 winrt/uwp app, on Win10, v10.0.10586.0 or higher
2. hide the cursor, via a call to SDL_ShowCursor(0)
3. make the Win10 game bar appear, by pressing the Windows + G hotkey
4. observe that the mouse cursor appears, in order to interact with the
game bar (this is expected behavior)
5. make the Win10 game bar disappear, either by pressing the Windows + G hotkey
again, or clicking somewhere in the app
EXPECTED RESULT: cursor disappears, as game bar disappears
ACTUAL RESULT: cursor didn't always disappear
Moved this code from winmm into core so both can use it.
DirectSound (at least on Win10) also returns truncated device names, even
though it's handed in as a string pointer and not a static-sized buffer. :/
The Windows 10 Anniversary Update (1607) breaks the method uses that SDL uses to
detect XInput devices. That is, on Windows 10 Anniversary Update, it is no longer
possible to query RAWINPUT for HID devices, and check for "IG_" in the device name.
Presumably, this will be fixed in the future.
This patch works around the issue by adding the Xbox One controller series to the
well-known device list.
This skips the more expensive RAWINPUT check for those devices, and causes them to
be detected as XInput devices once again.
Otherwise, if you had a massive, one-time queue buildup, the memory from that
remains allocated until you close the device. Also, if you are just using a
reasonable amount of space, this would previously cause you to reallocate it
over and over instead of keeping a little bit of memory around.
I think this was important for SDL 1.2 because some targets needed
special device memory for DMA buffers or locked memory buffers for use in
hardware interrupts or something, but since it just defines to SDL_malloc
and SDL_free now, I took it out for clarity's sake.
- It's now always called if device->hidden isn't NULL, even if OpenDevice()
failed halfway through. This lets implementation code not have to clean up
itself on every possible failure point; just return an error and SDL will
handle it for you.
- Implementations can assume this->hidden != NULL and not check for it.
- implementations don't have to set this->hidden = NULL when done, because
the caller is always about to free(this).
- Don't reset other fields that are in a block of memory about to be free()'d.
- Implementations all now free things like internal mix buffers last, after
closing devices and such, to guarantee they definitely aren't in use anymore
at the point of deallocation.
Turns out that libartsc isn't thread-safe, so if we run a capture and playback
device at the same time, it often crashes in arts's internal event loop.
We could throw mutexes around the read/write calls, but these are meant to
block, so one device could cause serious latency and stutter in the other.
Since this audio target isn't in high-demand (Ubuntu hasn't offered a libartsc
package for years), I'm just backing out the capture support. If someone needs
it, they can pull it out of the revision history.
(We probably never noticed because this is meant to block until it fully
writes a buffer, and would only trigger an issue if we had a short write
that wasn't otherwise an error condition.)
This workaround, unfortunately, requires that apps directly link to a set of
Win32-style cursor resource files (that contain a transparent cursor image).
Copies of suitable resource files are in src/core/winrt/, and should be
included directly in an app's MSVC project.
A rough explanation of this workaround/hack, and why it's needed (and
seemingly can't be done through programmatic means), is in this change's code.
This allows us to set an explicit stack size (overriding the system default
and the global hint an app might have set), and remove all the macro salsa
for dealing with _beginthreadex and such, as internal threads always set those
to NULL anyhow.
I've taken some guesses on reasonable (and tiny!) stack sizes for our
internal threads, but some of these might turn out to be too small in
practice and need an increase. Most of them are simple functions, though.
Win10's 'GamepadAdded' event seems to need to have something registered with it
in order for Xinput-based gamepad detection to work. This 'fix' simply causes
a dummy event-handler to be added for this event, in case an app wants to use
gamepads on Xbox One (most likely).
This is kind of nasty, because ALSA reports dozens of "devices" that aren't
really things you'd ever want, or things that should be listed this way, but
the default path still works as before, and it at least allows these devices
to be available to apps.
This does not handle hotplugging yet. You get a device list at init time
and that's it.
- Cache the _NET_FRAME_EXTENTS data locally, so we don't have to query
the X server for them (instead, we update our cached data when PropertyNotify
events alert us to a change).
- Use our cached extents for X11_GetWindowBordersSize(), so it's a fast call.
- Window position was meant to refer to the client area, not the window
decorations, so adjust appropriately when getting/setting the position.
We now only raise the magic exception that names the thread when
IsDebuggerPresent() returns true. In such a case, Visual Studio will
catch the exception, set the thread name, and let the debugged process
continue normally. If the debugger isn't running, we don't raise an exception
at all.
Setting the name is a debugger trick; if the debugger isn't running, the name
won't be set if attached later in any case, so this doesn't lose functionality.
This lets this code work without assembly code, on win32 and win64, and
across various compilers.
The only "gotcha" is that if you have something attached that looks like a
debugger but doesn't respect this magic exception trick, the process will
likely crash, but that's probably a deficiency of the attached program.
Fixes Bugzilla #2089.
The returned value is currently not used by the caller. The instance id would
also not be needed on Java side and providing it just complicated the function.
Partially fixes Bugzilla #3234.
This assert triggers when run under XMonad. It's safe to pass a zero here
anyhow, as this will still work "well enough" and the original
problem--GNOME printing a warning message--is still fixed because GNOME's
window manager gives us a chance to grab a non-zero user-time value before
this code is run.
(and thanks to Cengiz for many of the previous Unreal-related
patches! They were generically credited to Epic Games, but a large
amount of that work was his contribution.)
Fixes Bugzilla #3067.
This is for corner cases where a multi-window app is activated and wants to
make a decision about where focus should go.
This patch came from Unreal Engine 4's fork of SDL, compliments of Epic Games.
Adam M.
When setting a texture alpha mod other than 255 and also specifying a flip mode in the software renderer, the rendering fails. When the texture has an alpha channel, it becomes invisible when flipped. When the texture does not have an alpha channel, it is flipped but the colors are wrong: the alpha mod makes the texture darker rather than more translucent.
0) Initialize a software renderer.
1) Load 16-bit 565 or 32-bit texture.
2) Set texture blend mode to BLEND.
3) Set texture alpha mod to 150.
4) Draw the texture flipped horizontally and/or vertically.
Adam M.
There are three problems in the code that I see.
1. SW_RenderCopyEx enables a color key on surface_scaled even if the source surface didn't have a color key.
2. SW_RenderCopyEx doesn't copy blend mode, color mod, or alpha mod from src to surface_scaled.
3. When SDL_BlitScaled(src, srcrect, surface_scaled, &tmp_rect) is called, it blends the src pixels into surface_scaled instead of overwriting them (if src has blending, etc. enabled).
I've attached a patch that 1) fixes the three problems that I mentioned, 2) adds the requested performance improvement of using the regular blit function if no rotation or flipping is needed, 3) avoids cloning the source surface if no stretching is required, and simplifies the rotation code slightly.
Adam M.
Okay, here is the problem, I think.
During the first blit, RLEAlphaSurface is called to do RLE conversion of the RGBA source into a format allowing it "to be quickly alpha-blittable onto dest". Since the destination is the screen, it has no alpha channel. RLEAlphaSurface calls copy_opaque(dst, src + runstart, len, sf, df) (where copy_opaque is copy_32), which has this code:
SDL_RLEaccel.c:984:
RGBA_FROM_8888(*src, sfmt, r, g, b, a);
PIXEL_FROM_RGBA(*d, dfmt, r, g, b, a);
On the first line, it reads the source pixel 0xFFFFFFFF. The second line drops the alpha value (because dfmt for the screen has no alpha channel) and writes 0x00FFFFFF. Later, when the RLE conversion is being undone, uncopy_32 is called, which has the following code:
SDL_RLEaccel.c:1001:
Uint32 pixel = *s++;
RGB_FROM_PIXEL(pixel, sfmt, r, g, b);
a = pixel >> 24;
PIXEL_FROM_RGBA(*dst, dfmt, r, g, b, a);
However, the the alpha channel has already been dropped by copy_opaque (= copy_32), so pixel = 0x00FFFFFF and 'a' becomes 0. Thus, all opaque pixels lose their alpha channel when being unRLE'd. (I don't know what happens to pixels with alpha from 1-254, but they should be checked too.)
So, that seems to be the problem, but I'm not sure what the solution should be. Since opaque pixels have alpha == 255, I'm thinking to create another uncopy function for opaque pixels that simply uses 255 for alpha.
However, there may be other problems here. For translucent pixels, uncopy_32 assumes the alpha channel is stored in the upper 8 bits, but copy_32 doesn't store it there. Instead, it stores it in whatever location is appropriate for the destination surface. Isn't one of their behaviors incorrect, given the other? I'm not sure which to change, however.
For translucent pixels, it seems that the blit function uses do_blend, which is the BLIT_TRANSL_888 macro, which also assumes alpha is in top 8 bits. It has the comment "we have made sure the alpha is stored in the top 8 bits...", but it seems that's not true (copy_32 doesn't make sure the alpha goes there).
Perhaps the correct fix is to make copy_32 put the alpha there, but then that seems to require that RLE conversion be limited to destination surfaces that don't use the upper 8 bits. However, looking further, it seems that has already been done: if (masksum != 0x00ffffff) return -1; /* requires unused high byte */
Sylvain
When using API 21 and running on an old device (android < 5.0 ?) some function are missing.
functions are (at least) : signal, sigemptyset, atof, stpcpy (strcat and strcpy), srand, rand.
Very few modifications on SDL to get this working :
on SDL
======
Undefine android configuration :
HAVE_SIGNAL
HAVE_SIGACTION
HAVE_ATOF
In "SDL_systrhead.c", comment out the few block of lines with "sigemptyset".
Android.mk:
remove the compilation of "test" directory because it contains a few rand/srand calls
Also, there are more discussions about this in internet :
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/android-ndk/RjO9WmG9pfEhttp://stackoverflow.com/questions/25475055/android-ndk-load-library-cannot-locate-srand
Sylvain
http://developer.android.com/reference/android/view/InputDevice.html
int SOURCE_CLASS_JOYSTICK Constant Value: 16 (0x00000010)
int SOURCE_JOYSTICK Constant Value: 16777232 (0x01000010)
int SOURCE_KEYBOARD Constant Value: 257 (0x00000101)
int SOURCE_GAMEPAD Constant Value: 1025 (0x00000401)
int SOURCE_DPAD Constant Value: 513 (0x00000201)
I have an a PC keyboard that I connect to an android device.
The issue is that "arrow" keys gets lost.
More explanation:
This device gets detected twice by the java "pollInputDevices()" both as SOURCE_KEYBOARD and as a composite (0x1000311 == SOURCE_JOYSTICK | SOURCE_KEYBOARD | SOURCE_DPAD).
Because of being a SOURCE_CLASS_JOYSTICK, only the second entry is registered, and I opened it.
When I press one arrow key, the java method "onKey(...)" is called.
The Source "event.getSource()" is "SOURCE_KEYBOARD", so it enters this conditions :
if ( (event.getSource() & InputDevice.SOURCE_GAMEPAD) != 0 ||
(event.getSource() & InputDevice.SOURCE_DPAD) != 0 ) {
And then, it enters :
SDLActivity.onNativePadDown() (native code in "SDL_sysjoystick.c")
Since the "arrows" are viewed as "D-PAD", it gets translated :
int button = keycode_to_SDL(keycode);
But the android-java "event.getDeviceId()" is wrong: this is the one from the Keyboard, and not the one from the Joystick that I have opened.
So I don't get them through the Joystick interface.
And since, the keycode has been translated, it returns 0 and assume it was consumed.
So I lost the key in the function "Android_OnPadDown()"
Notice, It won't happen with other normal "letters" keys because they does not get translated by "keycode_to_SDL", so "Android_OnPadDown()" returns -1.
And then java code send the keys to "SDLActivity.onNativeKeyDown()".
Possible patch on "Android_OnPadDown" and also "Android_OnPadUp" (and maybe other functons):
85 int
186 Android_OnPadDown(int device_id, int keycode)
187 {
188 SDL_joylist_item *item;
189 int button = keycode_to_SDL(keycode);
190 if (button >= 0) {
191 item = JoystickByDeviceId(device_id);
192 if (item && item->joystick) {
193 SDL_PrivateJoystickButton(item->joystick, button , SDL_PRESSED);
194 }
+ else return -1;
195 return 0;
196 }
197
198 return -1;
199 }
It would allow the java caller function to send the key to "SDLActivity.onNativeKeyDown();"
Another solution, would be to replace:
if ( (event.getSource() & InputDevice.SOURCE_GAMEPAD) != 0 ||
(event.getSource() & InputDevice.SOURCE_DPAD) != 0 ) {
by
if ( (event.getSource() & InputDevice.SOURCE_CLASS_JOYSTICK) != 0)
Because only "SOURCE_CLASS_JOYSTICK" devices are registered/opened.
Sylvain
I have an android device to which I try to connect the google virtual remote application.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.google.android.tv.remote
The java method "pollInputDevices()" detects it as an input source 0x701 which is (SOURCE_KEYBOARD | SOURCE_GAMEPAD | SOURCE_DPAD).
It it not added because it does not AND-bitwise with "SOURCE_CLASS_JOYSTICK".
It's only a virtual DPAD and it works when checking also with SOURCE_CLASS_BUTTON
Sylvain
With a Landscape application.
Going to background with Home Key, then foreground.
The screen is distorted.
This has been reported by Samsung. It happens on S5 and Samsung Alpha, see the video attached.
I have captured the following logcat:
V/SDL (20549): onResume()
V/SDL (20549): surfaceCreated()
V/SDL (20549): surfaceChanged()
V/SDL (20549): pixel format RGB_565
V/SDL (20549): Window size:1920x1080
I/SDL (20549): SDL_Android_Init()
I/SDL (20549): SDL_Android_Init() finished!
V/SDL (20549): SDL audio: opening device
V/SDL (20549): SDL audio: wanted stereo 16-bit 22.05kHz, 256 frames buffer
V/SDL (20549): SDL audio: got stereo 16-bit 22.05kHz, 1764 frames buffer
V/SDL (20549): onWindowFocusChanged(): true
V/SDL (20549): onWindowFocusChanged(): false
V/SDL (20549): onPause()
V/SDL (20549): nativePause()
V/SDL (20549): surfaceDestroyed()
Background / Foreground
V/SDL (20549): onResume()
V/SDL (20549): surfaceCreated()
V/SDL (20549): surfaceChanged()
V/SDL (20549): pixel format RGB_565
V/SDL (20549): Window size:1080x1920
V/SDL (20549): surfaceChanged()
V/SDL (20549): pixel format RGB_565
V/SDL (20549): Window size:1920x1080
V/SDL (20549): onWindowFocusChanged(): true
V/SDL (20549): nativeResume()
This seems to be related to the fact that I have in "AndroidManifest.xml":
android:configChanges="..."
Because of the fields: "orientation" and also "screenSize".
I have looked for another way to solve the issue. Discarding the "surfaceChanged" call, based on the "requestedOrientation" and the new Orientation. It seems to be better.
On my failing test case, the first "surfaceChanged()" is discarded. Sometimes the "focusChanged()" might appear between the two "surfaceChanged()", while the surface is not yet ready. Thus, discarding also the "nativeResume()".
So, for robustness, a call to "nativeResume()" is added at the end of "surfaceChanged()".
Some update:
1/ First I tried, to discard the surface using the current orientation (rather than width / heigh). -> that solve the issue sometimes, but not always.
2/ Samsung Certification now accepts my application that were previously failing.
3/ I personally now owns a Samsung S5, and was able to solve the issue on my side.
4/ I now use the patch and get no complaints from my users. (but I admit, nobody seemed to be complaining before neither...).
5/ I have added a v2 because of a new smart-phone called "Black Berry Passport" that has a square screen of 1440x1440. This screen has a "status bar" so the resolution is in fact : 1440x1308. (as reported by "surfaceChanged").
Problem is: the portrait resolution is in fact a Landscape!
So the "v1" patch is always discarding the "surface" of BlackBerry Passport. Which is terribly bad.
Hence, I added the "v2" patch not to discard the surface when aspect ratio is < 1.20. (BB 1440/1308 is : 1.1009). Which seems fair.
Martin Gerhardy
Not sure - but I think there might be a logic flaw in SDL_SetWindowGrab.
The problem here is that this modifies the window flags and e.g. sets
SDL_WINDOW_INPUT_GRABBED - but the _this->grabbed_window pointer is not
yet set.
Then in SDL_UpdateWindowGrab the _this->grabbed_window pointer is only
set if the function pointer _this->SetWindowGrab is not NULL. But if
this is NULL, the _this->grabbed_window pointer is never set, but every
future call to any of the grab functions include an assert for:
SDL_assert(!_this->grabbed_window || ((_this->grabbed_window->flags &
SDL_WINDOW_INPUT_GRABBED) != 0));
That means the first call works, the second always fails and triggers
the assert.
Magnus Bjerke Vik
This causes issues when for instance using the joystick API to make an Android phone rotate an object by rotating the phone. When the absolute value of an axis reported by android is larger than earth gravity, SDL will overflow the Sint16 value used for joystick axes, causing sporadic movements when close to the gravity. Just holding the phone so that e.g. Y points directly upwards will make it unstable, and even more if you just tap the phone gently from below (increasing the acceleration).
More detailed: SDLActivity gets the accelerometer values in onSensorChanged and divides each axis by earth gravity. SDL_SYS_JoystickUpdate takes each of the axis values, multiplies them by 32767.0 (largest Sint16), and the casts them to Sint16. From this you can see that any value from Android that exceeds earth gravity will overflow the joystick axis.
A fix is to clamp the values so that they won't overflow the Sint16.
Simon Deschenes
My build system still shows warning as errors.
The first warning says that the member named instances can never be false (or NULL) as it is a static array, and we should check for instances[index] which we do anyway.
Ozkan Sezer
pthread/SDL_syssem.c requires _GNU_SOURCE predefined (like SDL_sysmutex.c),
otherwise sem_timedwait() prototype might not be available to it. Problem
seen with glibc-2.3.4.
If the allocation of an SDL_Touch failed, the number of touch devices was still
increased. Later access of the SDL_Touch would then have dereferenced the NULL.
Joe Thompson
This is a regression. The changes to fix#2460 cause the EnumJoysticksCallback() function to return without adding devices (Line 345 in SDL-0a2b6bc7005f\src\joystick\windows\SDL_dinputjoystick.c).
Looking at dinput.h on my system, at least DI8DEVTYPE_DRIVING and DI8DEVTYPE_FLIGHT need to be added to the test.
It might be better to check if (devtype == DI8DEVTYPE_SUPPLEMENTAL) rather than checking if it is NOT EQUAL to a long list of types. Or check if the device is already in the list.
This happens when the pointer is grabbed, but it's not clear if this is a
bug in x.org or my misunderstanding of the XGrabPointer() documentation.
At any rate, we'll want to revisit this later for a better solution.
Fixes Bugzilla #2963.
Make note to send it, and send next time we SDL_PumpEvents().
Otherwise, we might be trying to use malloc() to push a new event on the
queue while a signal is interrupting malloc() elsewhere, usually causing a
crash.
Fixes Bugzilla #2870.
This was the only thing that made SDL_config.h generate differently between
32 and 64-bit versions of Linux, so instead we force a function cast in our
X11 code to match our dynamic loader version, which removes the compile error
on some machines that prompted this test in the first place.
Xlib never wrote to this data, so if you're on an older Xlib where this param
wasn't const, your data should still be intact when we force the caller to
think it was actually const after all.
Fixes Bugzilla #1893.
Fixes Bugzilla #2895.
His notes:
The following trivial changes make SDL2 tree (mostly) compatible with Visual
Studio 2005:
* SDL_stdlib.c: Similar to VS2010 and newer, VS2005 also generates memcpy(),
(it also generates memset(), see below), so propagate the #if condition to
cover VS2005.
* SDL_pixels.c (SDL_CalculateGammaRamp): VS2005 generates a memset() call for
gamma==0 case, so replace the if loop with SDL_memset().
* SDL_windowsvideo.h: Include msctf.h only with VS2008 and newer, otherwise
include SDL_msctf.h
* SDL_windowskeyboard.c: Adjust the #ifdefs so that SDL_msctf.h inclusion is
always recognized correctly.
Fixes Google Chrome, etc, freezing up when SDL owns the clipboard selection
and actually sends thems the correct text for pasting. Confirmed working with
Unicode strings in UTF-8 format.
There were a few tweaks in this patch, but the specific fix is that
event.xselection.target in the SelectionNotify event we send back in reply
must be set to the same atom as the request ("TARGETS" in this case), and
we failed to do that in this special case. Things that don't ask for a target,
like the Gnome Terminal app, worked fine because they don't ask for TARGETS
and just go right to asking for a UTF8_STRING, and Mozilla apparently just
was more liberal in what they accepted in reply.
Chrome would reject our wrong reply and freeze up waiting for a valid one.
Someone should fix that in Chrome, too. :)
Fixes Bugzilla #2926.
Roberto
I have debugged the code checking the function calls when Direct3D is the renderer, remember that with software and OpenGL renderers, this issue is not happening.
- Create the texture:
SDL_Texture *pTex = SDL_CreateTexture(pRenderer, iFormat, SDL_TEXTUREACCESS_TARGET, pSurf->w, pSurf->h);
- Update the texture:
SDL_UpdateTexture(pTex, NULL, pSurf->pixels, pSurf->pitch);
SDL_render.c, SDL_UpdateTexture(): return renderer->UpdateTexture(renderer, texture, rect, pixels, pitch);
SDL_render_d3d.c, D3D_UpdateTexture(): if (D3D_UpdateTextureRep(data->device, &texturedata->texture, texture->format, rect->x, rect->y, rect->w, rect->h, pixels, pitch) < 0) {
SDL_render_d3d.c, D3D_UpdateTextureRep(): if (D3D_CreateStagingTexture(device, texture) < 0) {
SDL_render_d3d.c, D3D_CreateStagingTexture(): result = IDirect3DDevice9_CreateTexture(..., D3DPOOL_SYSTEMMEM, ...) --> FAIL! with INVALIDCALL code
After checking a bit the Microsoft documentation, I found this:
D3DUSAGE_RENDERTARGET can only be used with D3DPOOL_DEFAULT. (https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/bb172625%28v=vs.85%29.aspx)
The call that fails, is using D3DUSAGE_RENDERTARGET with D3DPOOL_SYSTEMMEM which is unsupported, hence the INVALIDCALL return code.
The window needs to catch ClientMessage events for one specific window, but
XNextEvent() catches everything, and XWindowEvent doesn't catch ClientMessage,
so we need predicate procedure and XIfEvent() here.
Fixes Bugzilla #2980.
Otherwise, SDL_PIXELFORMAT_BGR24 is reported as having alpha, because
its SDL_ARRAYORDER_BGR pixel order uses the same integer value as
SDL_PACKEDORDER_RGBA, since we weren't checking the pixel type to
differentiate.
Fixes Bugzilla #2977.
These events accidentally slipping in sometimes appears to be a bug (or
maybe new behavior) in 10.10, as previous versions of Mac OS X don't appear
to ever trigger this.
Thanks to Paulo Marques for pointing out the fix on the SDL mailing list!
Fixes Bugzilla #2842 (again).
Zack Middleton
The change to the keymap to use SDL_SCANCODE_TO_KEYCODE in SDL_x11keyboard.c causes all SDL scancodes without a Usc4 character to be XOR'd with SDLK_SCANCODE_MASK, but not all key code are suppose to be (as seen in include/SDL_keycodes.h). SDLK_BACKSPACE is not 0x4000002A.
I think the full list of keys affected are return, escape, backspace, tab, and delete.
Volumetric
The "Unknown touch device" message appears because the initial touch device setup loop uses SDL_GetTouch() as a guard for calling SDL_AddTouch(). SDL_GetTouch() will always report "Unknown touch device" since the device hasn't been added yet. The SDL_GetTouch() call is unnecessary since SDL_AddTouch() calls SDL_GetTouchIndex() to verify that the device hasn't been added yet, and SDL_GetTouchIndex() has the benefit of not reporting an error for a device it can't find.
Jacob Lee
If a user has a non-standard keyboard mapping -- say, their caps lock key has been mapped to Ctrl -- then SDL_GetModState() is no longer accurate: it only considers the unmapped keys. This is a regression from SDL 1.2.
I think there are two parts to this bug: first, GetModState should use keycodes, rather than scancodes, which is easy enough.
Unfortunately, on my system, SDL considers Caps Lock, even when mapped as Control, to be both SDL_SCANCODE_CAPSLOCK and SDLK_CAPSLOCK. The output from checkkeys for it is:
INFO: Key pressed : scancode 57 = CapsLock, keycode 0x40000039 = CapsLock modifiers: CAPS
Whereas the output for xev is:
KeyPress event, serial 41, synthetic NO, window 0x4a00001,
root 0x9a, subw 0x0, time 40218333, (144,177), root:(1458,222),
state 0x10, keycode 66 (keysym 0xffe3, Control_L), same_screen YES,
XKeysymToKeycode returns keycode: 37
XLookupString gives 0 bytes:
XmbLookupString gives 0 bytes:
XFilterEvent returns: False
I think the problem is that X11_UpdateKeymap in SDL_x11keyboard.c only builds a mapping for keycodes associated with a Unicode character (anything where X11_KeyCodeToUcs returns a value). In the case of caps lock, SDL scancode 57 becomes x11 keycode 66, which becomes x11 keysym 65507(Control_L), which does not have a unicode value.
To fix this, I suspect that SDL needs a mapping of the rest of the x11 keysyms to their corresponding SDL key codes.
hiduei
Overview:
Initializing the Video Subsystem causes many errors though everything works as it should.
Steps to Reproduce:
1) Set Loglevel to SDL_LOG_PRIORITY_ERROR
2) Initialize the Video Subsystem (SDL_Init(SDL_INIT_VIDEO))
Actual Results:
Many errors (see attachment) are printed on stderr, then the application continues as expected.
Expected Results:
The errors should have been warnings at most.
Andreas Ragnerstam
I have two windows where one has a renderer where the logical size has been changed with SDL_RenderSetLogicalSize. When I get SDL_MOUSEMOTION events belonging to the non-scaled window these will have been scaled with the factor of the scaled window, which is not expected.
Adding some printf debugging to SDL_RendererEventWatch of SDL_render.c, where (event->type == SDL_MOUSEMOTION), I found that for every mouse motion SDL_RendererEventWatch is called twice and the event->motion.x and event.motion.y are set twice for the event, once for each renderer where only the last one set will be saved to the event struct. This will work fine if both renderers have the same scale, but otherwise the motion coordinates will be scaled for the renderer belonging to another window than the mouse was moved in.
I guess one solution would be to check that window == renderer->window for SDL_MOUSEMOTION events, similar to what is done for when SDL_WINDOWEVENT events.
I get the same error on both X11 and Windows.
The same problem also exists for SDL_MOUSEBUTTONDOWN and SDL_MOUSEBUTTONUP events.
Apparently you might get strange paths from GetModuleFileName(), such as
short path names or UNC filenames, so this avoids that problem. Since you have
to tapdance with linking different libraries and defining macros depending on
what Windows you plan to target, we dynamically load the API we need, which
works on all versions of Windows (on Win7, it'll load a compatibility wrapper
for the newer API location).
What a mess.
This also now does the right thing if there isn't enough space to store the
path, looping with a larger allocated buffer each try.
Fixes Bugzilla #2435.
Jason Wyatt
Currently the keymapnotify event handling is commented out as FIXME in SDL_x11events.c (It looks like this may have functioned SDL1.2).
Not handling this event means that if a window manager shortcut such as ALT+SPACE is used, SDL will send an ALT key down signal, but not an up signal. Also querying SDL about the key state, it believes the ALT key remains pressed.
X passes the events keypress (alt), ?focusout?, ?focusin?, keymapnotify.
This lets windows know when they are dropping a mouse event because their
hit test reported something other than SDL_HITTEST_NORMAL. It lets them know
exactly where in the event queue this happened.
This patch is based on work in Unreal Engine 4's fork of SDL,
compliments of Epic Games.
This is currently implemented for X11, Cocoa, Windows, and DirectFB.
This patch is based on work in Unreal Engine 4's fork of SDL,
compliments of Epic Games.
This allows an app to know when a set of drops are coming in a grouping of
some sort (for example, a user selected multiple files and dropped them all
on the window with a single drag), and when that set is complete.
This also adds a window ID to the drop events, so the app can determine to
which window a given drop was delivered. For application-level drops (for
example, you launched an app by dropping a file on its icon), the window ID
will be zero.
Specifically: always on top, skip taskbar, tooltip, utility, and popup menu.
This is currently only implemented for X11.
This patch is based on work in Unreal Engine 4's fork of SDL,
compliments of Epic Games.
Notably: it sets the error string to inform you that your custom SDL is built
without xrandr support, which apparently has been a support issue for
Unreal Engine 4 developers.
This is often useful for SDL apps that aren't meant to be games: the
integrated GPU starts up faster, uses less power, and is often more than
fast enough.
Note that even with this change, the app will still default to the more
powerful, discrete GPU if one is available; an app that prefers the integrated
GPU will still need the NSSupportsAutomaticGraphicsSwitching key properly
set in its Info.plist and Mac OS X 10.7 or later.
https://developer.apple.com/library/mac/qa/qa1734/_index.html
Martin Gerhardy
According to https://msdn.microsoft.com/de-de/library/2kzt1wy3%28v=vs.120%29.aspx when one is using /MT for msvc compilations the libcmt.lib is already linked to the binary. This lib includes the symbol that is now guarded (see attached patch) by the #ifndef _MT.
I don't know if any joysticks report those usages for any buttons in practice, but other prominent Mac gaming software exposes them, so we might as well too.
xaudio2 is not linked against sdl but the sdk already handles dynamically loading (XAudio2Create is inlined and just loads a com object). Updated SDL_xaudio2.c
DXGI fails to report any displays in at least one of the
"Windows App Certification Kit 10.0"'s tests for Store Apps. This was
causing SDL's video initialization code to fail, when the suspect test
("Direct3D Feature Test") was run, as DXGI was unable to report a
display-output at adapter-index 0, output-index 0.
The workaround that is applied here attempts to detect this case, then
use a hopefully-reasonable alternative means to calculate at least one
display output.
"UWP" appears to be Microsoft's new name for WinRT/Windows-Store APIs.
This set of changes updates SDL's WinRT backends to support the Win10 flavor
of WinRT. It has been tested on Win10 on a desktop. In theory, it should
also support Win10 on other devices (phone, Xbox One, etc.), however further
patches may be necessary.
This adds:
- a set of MSVC 2015 project files, for use in creating UWP apps
- modifications to various pieces of SDL, in order to compile via MSVC 2015 +
the Win10 API set
- enables SDL_Window resizing and programmatic-fullscreen toggling, when using
the WinRT backend
- WinRT README updates
WinRT 8.0 (Phone and non-Phone) didn't offer an API to set an already-created
thread's priority. WinRT 8.1 offered this API, along with several other
Win32 thread functions that were previously unavailable (in WinRT).
This change makes WinRT 8.1+ platforms use SDL's Win32 backend.
This change-set fixes a lot of windowing related bugs, especially with
regards to Windows 8.x apps running on Windows 10 (which was the driver for
this work). The primary fixes include:
* listed display modes were wrong, especially when launching apps into a
non-fullscreen space
* reported window flags were often wrong, especially on Windows 10
* fullscreen/windowed mode switches weren't failing (they are not
programmatically possible in Win 8.x apps).
This change has also been tested as buildable + runnable on Win32 + MSVC 2015,
2013, 2012, and 2010. It may fix similar build errors (in XInput code) that
are appearing in MingW builds (on buildbot).
This conversation came from Joshua Granick on Twitter, starting here:
https://twitter.com/singmajesty/status/653640543675641857
"We found an issue where certain Android keyboards (like the S6 with
predictive text) wouldn't work ... Certain keyboards use a predictive text
mode that does not dispatch a traditional onKey events, which is troublesome
... but telling the OS to use a "visible password" keyboard helps deal with
this problem ... perhaps there's some other way (onKeyPreIme?) to do
"textediting" events, but for now, this should be a fast fix ...
I hear it affects the Galaxy Tab A 8.0", Galaxy S6, Asus ZenPhone 2, maybe
others"
They were not needed internally since the switch to the common EGL backend.
Thanks to the SDL mailing list for pointing out that the functions seem unused.
It was redundant because SDLActivity already inherits an empty method from the
base class SurfaceView (which does not implement it but inherits it from View).
Visibility of onDraw() in SDLActivity is now protected again instead of public.
The Y coordinate is flipped in Cocoa, so if you change the height, the window
will move and maybe clip against the screen edge if you don't adjust its Y
coordinate to match.
Possibly fixes Bugzilla #3066.
Unity's window manager is (legitimately, since it moves the client window's
position) sending one, and SDL was incorrectly trying to mask it out. Other
window managers (KWin, apparently) don't move the window and would hang here
indefinitely.
Fixes Bugzilla #3052.
Martin Gerhardy
Just a minor thing, but a huge outcome. All the other jni related functions already have those flags, but the nativeInit function lacks them - so it might be stripped away.
In extremely rare cases, probably due to misconfigured drivers, one might
see this happen, and rather than terminate the process, we try to recover
by reporting an error to the app.
Fixes Bugzilla #3068.
Note that extra steps must be taken when using glReadPixels to read the contents of the main OpenGL ES framebuffer on iOS, if multisampling is used. See the OpenGL ES section of README-ios.md for details.
There are platforms it isn't implemented on (and currently can't be
implemented on!), and there's currently no way for an app to know this.
This shouldn't break ABI on apps that moved to a revision between 2.0.3 and
2.0.4.
This relies on a successful SDL_Init(SDL_INIT_VIDEO) to work, since it's
silly to reproduce all the Xinerama/XRandR code in the message box parts. If
X11 is available but SDL hasn't been initialized, the message box will center
in the primary screen, which will be positioned weirdly on multi-head setups,
but this should fix the most significant common case.
Author: Benoit Pierre <benoit.pierre@gmail.com>
Date: Fri Jul 3 02:17:10 2015 +0200
fix 14dd48ae5bc43b61b2a0dd0b3177d22edec707ef regression
The window manager detection code in X11_HasWindowManager does not work
with Awesome (http://awesome.naquadah.org/). Remove it, and reuse the
result of the more correct checks in X11_CheckWindowManager.
Elise Maurer
When inputting text, dead-keys are currently not handled correctly on Windows with the latest SDL2 tip as well as the 2.0.3 release.
Using a French AZERTY keyboard, when I type the `^` key followed by `e` key to compose the `` character, I erroneously get two SDL_TEXTINPUT events, one with the `^` character and one with the `e` character.
I've looked at the history for SDL_windowsevents.c and there's been some back-and-forth with several methods for handling text input:
* r8142 removed any handling of WM_CHAR because keyboard input was being handled through WM_KEYDOWN along with ToUnicode since r7645.
* But using ToUnicode actually breaks dead-keys (googling for "ToUnicode dead keys" reports many horror stories of people trying to work around that and failing).
* It seems like r7645 introduced a double-fix: it fixed WM_CHAR to properly handle Unicode, and also (unnecessarily?) added text input handling to WM_KEYDOWN. Later, r8142 removed the WM_CHAR stuff instead of the WM_KEYDOWN stuff.
The attached patch restores handling of text input through WM_CHAR and removes it from WM_KEYDOWN. I've tested it with French, English and Russian layouts and it seems to do its job. Obviously, with such matters, it's still a risky change.
Sometimes, on removal SDL_EVDEV_udev_callback() gets called with zero udev_class. This in turn seems to be caused the SDL_udev.c:guess_device_class() failing to find the attributes of the parent device.
Apparently this is normal, attributes are not guaranteed to be in place during removal, depending on timing. This lack of attributes causes guess_device_class() to return zero.
This fix mimics the code in linux/SDL_sysjoystick.c:joystick_udev_callback() which effectively has the same fix already in place.
- disable compiling in XAudio2 support. We both need the DX SDK to make this code plus we need to work out the runtime dependency problem this code bring in on windows (needing the DX runtime installed).
CR: SamL
- do the scancode to keyboard code lookup for the grave key, so that we can show users the correct keyface for the key, rather than forcing it to "`". Note that if a game is using SDLK_* for its KB mapping then after this change on some keyboards the top left key will no longer be mapped correctly with the old data.
CR: SamL
Adam M.
It loses the title and icon when window recreation fails. For instance, this may happen when trying to create an OpenGL ES window on a system that doesn't support it. But at that point, the title and icon have already been lost.
The internal function SDL_EGL_LoadLibrary() did not delete and remove a mostly
uninitialized data structure if loading the library first failed. A later try to
use EGL then skipped initialization and assumed it was previously successful
because the data structure now already existed. This led to at least one crash
in the internal function SDL_EGL_ChooseConfig() because a NULL pointer was
dereferenced to make a call to eglBindAPI().
If SDL_SaveBMP_RW() was called with NULL passed as SDL_RWops argument, different
values were returned depending on SDL_GetError(). If no error was set before the
call (or SDL_ClearError() was called) then 0 was returned. This is wrong because
nothing was saved. If an error was set before the call then -1 was returned.
This was fixed by directly returning -1 for NULL input instead of deciding based
on SDL_GetError(). No new error is set because this would otherwise override a
maybe more useful error set in SDL_RWFromFile() which is used by SDL_SaveBMP().
Fixes Bugzilla #2798.
Fixes Bugzilla #2212.
Fixes Bugzilla #2826.
Fixes Bugzilla #2661.
Fixes Bugzilla #1885.
Fixes Bugzilla #1578.
Fixes Bugzilla #2751.
(whew!)
Notable changes, from Alex's notes:
- The SDL_WINDOW_ALLOW_HIGHDPI flag is now needed (along with SDL_GL_GetDrawableSize or SDL_GetRendererOutputSize) to use Retina / high DPI resolutions, bringing SDL?s Retina-related behavior on iOS in line with Mac OS X. Window dimensions and display modes are now in the ?points? (non-high DPI) coordinate system rather than pixels, whereas SDL_GL_GetDrawableSize is in pixels.
- Reworked the custom extended launch screen code:
- It now hides after the first SDL_PumpEvents call rather than SDL_CreateWindow, and it fades out in a similar manner to the system launch screen behavior.
- It now mirrors the system launch screen behavior when deciding which image to display: it falls back to using the Launch Images dictionary in Info.plist if the iOS 8+ launch screen nib isn?t available, and if the Launch Images dictionary doesn?t exist it uses the old standard launch image names.
- The extended launch screen can now be disabled via the SDL_IPHONE_LAUNCHSCREEN define in SDL_config_iphoneos.h.
- Added support for SDL_HINT_ACCELEROMETER_AS_JOYSTICK.
- Added access to a window view's renderbuffer and framebuffer to syswm.
- Added OpenGL ES debug labels for the Renderbuffer and Framebuffer Objects created with SDL_GL_CreateContext.
- Added support for sRGB OpenGL ES contexts on iOS 7+.
- Updated OpenGL ES contexts to support native-resolution rendering (when SDL_WINDOW_ALLOW_HIGHDPI is enabled) on the iPhone 6 Plus, i.e. 1080x1920 rather than 1242x2208.
- Updated SDL_GL_CreateContext, SDL_GL_SwapWindow, SDL_GL_MakeCurrent, and SDL_GL_DeleteContext to be more robust.
- Updated SDL windows to display a UIView at all times, even when an OpenGL context is not active. This allows rotation, touch events, and other windowing-related events to work properly without an active OpenGL context. It also makes it easier to use SDL_GetWindowWMInfo after creating a SDL window.
- Updated the iOS-specific Objective-C code to use cleaner and more modern language features and APIs, including ARC instead of manual reference counting.
- Updated SDL_HINT_ORIENTATIONS to allow disabling custom orientations if the hint is set with no valid orientation names.
- Fixed several rotation and orientation bugs with windows and display modes, especially in iOS 8+.
- Fixed SDL_SetWindowFullscreen failing to update the status bar visibility on iOS 7+.
- Fixed the orientation of the offset applied to the window?s view when the onscreen keyboard is shown in iOS 8+.
- Fixed SDL_IsScreenKeyboardShown (patch by Phil Hassey.)
- Fixed several major memory leaks caused by missing autorelease pool blocks in the iOS-specific Objective-C code.
- Removed several dead code paths.
- The iOS 7 SDK (Xcode 5) or newer is now required to build SDL for iOS.
This avoids a hint lookup for each mouse event we get by setting a static Java
variable from native code during our hint watcher callback.
Also attempts to do the right thing with mouse buttons if you happen to be
on an API14 (Ice Cream Sandwich, Android 4.0) or later device. We still
target API12 (Honeycomb MR1, Android 3.1) for SDL 2.0.4 though.
This isn't tested, so I'm pushing to see what the Android buildbot says. Stand
back, I'm a professional!
Clarify that grabbing the mouse only works with one window at a time; this was
always true at the system level, though SDL could previously get confused
by multiple simultaneous grabs, so now we explicitly break any existing
grab before starting a new one and document it as such.
Also track the window that is currently grabbed, and provide an API to query
for that window. This makes it easy to automate mouse ungrabbing at
breakpoints with gdb7's scripting, since the scripts can now know which window
to ungrab.
In 2.1, we should probably change this API to SDL_GrabInput(win) and
SDL_UngrabInput(void), or something.
We continued looping while maxlen > 0, but maxlen was unsigned, so an overflow
would make it a large number instead of negative. Fixed.
Some snprintf() implementations might return a negative value if there isn't
enough space, and we now check for that.
Don't overrun the SDL error message buffer, if snprintf() returned the number
of chars it wanted to write instead of the number it did.
snprintf is a portability mess, we should just never use the C runtime for it.
Fixes Bugzilla #2049.
This extension allows the user to specify whether a full flush is performed when making a context not current.
The only way to set this currently is at context creation, so this patch provides that functionality.
Defualt behaviour is set at FLUSH, as per the spec.
This patch does not contain the changes to WGL, appleGL or other platforms as I do not have access to GL 4.5 hardware on those platforms.
Full details on the use of KHR_context_flush_control can be found here:
https://www.opengl.org/registry/specs/KHR/context_flush_control.txt
The data produced by the callback is just thrown away and the audio thread
delays as if it's waiting for the hardware to drain.
This lets apps that rely on their audio callback firing regularly continue
to make progress to function as properly as possible in the face of disaster.
Apps that want to know that the device is really gone and deal with that
scenario can use the new hotplug functionality.
Device enumeration now happens at startup and then is managed exclusively
through hotplugging instead of full redetection. The device name list now has
a unique "handle" associated with each item and SDL will pass this to the
backend so they don't have to figure out how a human readable name maps to
real hardware for a second time.
Other cleanups, fixes, improvements, plus all the audio backends updated to
the new interface...largely untested at this point, though.
This fills in the core pieces and fully implements it for Mac OS X.
Most other platforms, at the moment, will report a disconnected device if
it fails to write audio, but don't notice if the system's device list changed
at all.
Various constants in ANGLE/WinRT, both in MSOpenTech's ms-master branch, and
in Google's branch, were changed again. This change makes SDL/WinRT work with
them.
To note, the ms-master branch (of ANGLE) was updated via this merge:
bbd2eb0a9c (diff-d1377fbe747de154e1bfcf7221d3de67)
If the function WIN_ConvertUTF32toUTF8() failed (should currently not be
possible) a not terminated string would have been sent as text input event.
This also fixed converting characters more often than needed on key repetition.
If the function Emscripten_ConvertUTF32toUTF8() failed (should currently not be
possible) a not terminated string would have been sent as text input event.
The key event callbacks were always removed from the same target although it is
possible to set them to different targets using the hint. This is only a partial
fix because it assumes that the hint is not changed to a different value later.
64-bit Linux uses a "long" instead of "long long" for 64-bit ints.
Added a special-case this so SDL_PRI?64 doesn't trigger compiler warnings
when used with SDL's 64-bit datatypes on 64-bit Linux.
- fix crash on OSX when removing a device. If the remove happened due to the CFRunLoopRunInMode call in SDL_SYS_JoystickDetect then we would delete the device right away, before SDL_SYS_JoystickUpdate could clean it up. So move the CFRunLoopRunInMode to after the cleanup logic, preventing this case. This does mean that adds and removes of joysticks now take 1 extra frame to show up.
After disconnecting a joystick the remaining kept their original device index.
This was not correct because the device index must be a number between 0 and
SDL_NumJoysticks(). It was fixed with ideas from SDL's joystick implementation
for Android. Some range checks were removed as the caller already checks them.
SDL_SYS_JoystickUpdate() was implemented incorrectly. For every call to it all
attached joysticks were checked. But actually only the given SDL_Joystick should
be checked then. This allowed sending broken events for attached but not opened
joysticks. It also checked the opened joysticks more often than actually needed.
This allows for this kind of code in an application:
int monitorID = 1; // the second monitor!
SDL_SetWindowPosition(sdlWin,
SDL_WINDOWPOS_CENTERED_DISPLAY(monitorID),
SDL_WINDOWPOS_CENTERED_DISPLAY(monitorID));
Fixes Bugzilla #2849.
Yes this seems confusing as on mac+linux Long is either 32 or 64bits depending on the architecture, but this is how the X11 protocol is defined. Thus 5 is the correct value for the nelts here. Not 5 or 10 depending on the architecture.
More info on the confusion https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=16802
"MACOSX_COREAUDIO" is actually an internal #define set up elsewhere, and
this CMake var is never exported past the CMake script anyhow.
Partially fixes Bugzilla #2807.
- Added new custom launch screen code. It uses the launch screen nib when available on iOS 8+, the launch images dictionary if the launch screen nib isn't available, and the old standard image names if the launch image dictionary isn't in the plist.
The launch screen is now hidden during the first call to SDL_PumpEvents rather than SDL_CreateWindow so apps can have the launch screen still visible if they do time-consuming loading after creating their window. It also fades out in roughly the same way as the system launch screen behavior.
It can be disabled by setting the SDL_IPHONE_LAUNCHSCREEN define in SDL_config_iphoneos.h to 0.
- A blank UIView is now created and displayed when the window is first created. The old behavior was to defer creating any view until SDL_GL_CreateContext, which prevented rotation, touch events, and other windowing-related things from working until then. This also makes it easier to use SDL_GetWindowWMInfo after creating a window.
- Moved the keyboard and animation callback code from SDL's UIView subclasses to its UIViewController subclass, which lets them work properly in all cases when a SDL window is valid, even before SDL_GL_CreateContext is called and after SDL_GL_DeleteContext is called.
- SDL_GL_CreateContext, SDL_GL_SwapWindow, SDL_GL_MakeCurrent, and SDL_GL_DeleteContext are more robust.
- Fixed some edge cases where SDL windows weren't rotating properly or their reported sizes were out of sync with their actual sizes.
- Removed all calls to [UIApplication setStatusBarOrientation:]. It doesn't seem to work as expected in all cases in recent iOS versions.
- Some code style cleanup.
The callbacks used to receive the HTML events were not removed if the joystick
subsystem initialization failed or if the joystick subsystem was quit. Also, the
already connected joysticks were not deleted if the initialization failed later.
The needed header files are already included with SDL.h. Still including them in
the test programs is confusing because it somehow suggests they would be needed.
It's slightly faster than failing later, after a strchr() call, since this
will get called multiple times with a NULL string if the system totally
fails elsewhere.
This change integrates initialization settings for ANGLE/WinRT, as suggested in
MSOpenTech's latest ANGLE template-projects (for MSVC).
This should fix some OpenGL initialization issues on WinPhone 8.1 on ARM, and
on the 1st-generation Surface RT.
SDL_JOYDEVICEADDED events must contain the device index which is a value between
0 and the number of connected joysticks. The old implementation included a value
based on the instance id instead. It worked in some cases because the values are
similar initially. But after disconnecting joysticks this is no more the case
and the always increasing instance id becomes larger than number of joysticks.
Exit was broken since the main loop extraction needed for Emscripten support
because the former local but now global variables were not reset correctly.
Windows Phone does not appear to allow VSync to be turned off. Doing so appears
to either result in content not getting drawn (when the D3D debug runtime is
turned off), or forcing VSync back on and logging an error (when the D3D debug
runtime is turned on).
VSync had been getting turned on anyways, this change just notes such:
- via the WinRT README
- by always setting the SDL_RENDERER_PRESENTVSYNC flag when creating an
SDL_Renderer on Windows Phone
Eric Wasylishen
Here's a patch to make the 'testrelative' demo program more useful: it just makes the orange rectangle wrap around. Previously, the orange cursor would just disappear off screen if you move the mouse a lot in one direction, so it was hard to tell if relative mouse mode was still working.
- Don't create a temporary context first; this was probably due to Windows
needing one to get the address of wglCreateContextAttribsARB(), but that's
a unique quirk of WGL, and doesn't apply to glX. The glX spec explicitly says
you have to get a function pointer that works with any context from
glXGetProcAddress(), including when no context exists.
- Properly check for the GLX_ARB_create_context instead of just looking for a
non-NULL glXCreateContextAttribsARB()...some implementations, like Mesa,
never return NULL for function lookups (Mesa returns pointers into a jump
table that is filled out when the GL is initialized; since you can look up
functions before you have a valid context, it can't definitely say a function
isn't valid at that point).
Normally there's a 200 millisecond delay on all focus events in case there
was a vidmode change, now we note the last vidmode change and only impose this
delay if a change happened extremely recently.
Thanks to Epic Games for reporting this issue.
Jonas Kulla
The configure script didn't differentiate between Linux and Android, unconditionally compiling in the unix implementation of SDL_sysfilesystem.c.
I'm probably one of the very few people building SDL for android using classic configure + standalone toolchain, so this has gone undetected all along.
This is a little macro magic to use malloc() directly instead of SDL_malloc(),
etc, so static analysis tests that know about the C runtime can function
properly, and understand that we are dealing with heap allocations, etc.
This changed our static analysis report from 5 outstanding bugs to 30.
5x as many bugs were hidden by SDL_malloc() not being recognized as malloc()
by the static analyzer!
SDL_WinRTRunApp() is used on WinRT to launch a main(int, char **)-style
function. It has optional, and experimental support for launching content
inside a XAML control, backed by a main() function running on a separate thread.
This is provided via it's 2nd parameter, which can be a pointer to a XAML
control. (If NULL, XAML support will not be used.)
This change renames the experimental feature's parameter (to SDL_WinRTRunApp())
as "reserved", until such time as the functionality is ready for use. It will
likely be renamed again in the future, when running SDL on top of a XAML control
via a separate thread, becomes reasonably usable.
This is a Win32-specific fix for bug 2726. A WinRT fix for this bug was applied
separately, via https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/91f56dcad879
This fix applies SDL_TOUCH_MOUSEID to 'mouse' events coming from touch devices,
but only when relative-mouse-mode is turned OFF. This bug is still present
when relative-mouse-mode is ON, however Microsoft does not provide documentation
on whether or not those input events (which come from WM_INPUT) can be
identified as touch-specific or not. Unofficially, that data might be available
(via GetMessageExtraInfo()), however this patch only uses MS-documented APIs.
Zack Middleton
Using X11 (on Debian Wheezy), SDL_GetModState() & KMOD_NUM and KMOD_CAPS are not set to system state (numlock/capslock LEDs). Pressing numlock or capslock toggles the mod state, though if num/caps lock is enabled before starting the program it's still reversed from system state. This makes getting KMOD_NUM and KMOD_CAPS in programs unreliable. This can be seen using the checkkeys test program.
The function that appears to have handle this in SDL 1.2 is X11_SetKeyboardState. The function call is commented out with "FIXME:" in SDL 2.
Using Windows backend through WINE; on first key press if numlock and/or capslock is enabled on system, numlock/capslock SDL_SendKeyboardKey is run and toggles KMOD_NUM/KMOD_CAPS to the correct state. On X11 this does not happen.
The attached patch makes X11 backend set keyboard state on window focus if no window was previously focused. It sets all keys to system up/down state and toggles KMOD_NUM/KMOD_CAPS via SDL_SendKeyboardKey to match system if needed. The patch is based on SDL 1.2's X11_SetKeyboardState.
Coriiander
Upon creating a window, a window property is added to it through the Win32-function "SetProp". This is done in the SDL-function "SetupWindowData" in file "src\video\windows\SDL_windowswindow.c".
Whenever you call "SetProp" to add a property to a Win32-window, you should also call the Win32-function "RemoveProp" to remove it before destroying that Win32-window.
While you might think that it's ok and that Windows will clean up nicely itself, it is not ok. It is against all Win32-API guidelines and is mostlikely a leak. Especially on external windows (CreateWindowFrom) you want to have things done right, not messy and leaky, affecting some other module. Even if SDL gets shutdown entirely that external window will now forever still have the "SDL_WindowData" prop attached to it.
The backing scale factor can change when the window moves between retina and non-retina displays.
The only other way to detect such a change is to compare the output of SDL_GL_GetDrawableSize or SDL_GetRendererOutputSize every frame, which is less than desirable, especially since the necessary app logic is likely already being executed when a window resize event is received.
This lets SDL-based apps respond to "Open With" commands properly, as they
can now obtain the requested path via a standard SDL dropfile event.
This is only checked on startup, so apps don't get drop events at any other
time, even if Android supports that, but this is still a definite
improvement.
Fixes Bugzilla #2762.
This apparently has fallout: the PS4 (and maybe PS3?) controllers apparently
report some bogus axes, but it won't change the axes we currently expect, and
thus the game controller config string is still stable.
Fixes Bugzilla #2719.
Since all device detection/removal happens on the main thread now, post events inline with when the status changes occur.
Also fixed rare cases when joystick API functions could return data about removed joysticks when called with a device index.
According to the documentation of Android's MotionEvent, the getPressure() may
return values higher than 1 on some devices. To prevent passing such values into
SDL they are now corrected to 1 in Java before the JNI call (where it is assumed
to be correct).
Currently SDL only sends SDL_FINGERMOTION events if the touch state (position or
pressure) changed. By correcting pressure down to 1 some events may get dropped
in the rare case that only the pressure was changed but was out of range and the
position did not change.
id.zeta
The optimization from Bug 11 added a code branch on cases where the source RGB masks match the destination RGB masks and a optimized blit function Blit4to4MaskAlpha that always overrides the source alpha info would be chosen. Unfortunately, the branch also errorneously took over the RGBA<->RGBA blitting cases where the source alpha info should be copied, while they would instead get overriden in Blit4to4MaskAlpha.
The attached patch fixes that by handling the RGBA<->RGBA cases correctly in that branch with the original BlitNtoNCopyAlpha as well as uses an optimized Blit4to4CopyAlpha along the same vein.
Code signature can be added after build with the following command line:
codesign --force --sign 76BB5ACAC44CA5EFA5F879434D157B81DA842CFB SDL2.framework/Versions/A
With this commit, you can compile SDL2 with Emscripten
( http://emscripten.org/ ), and make your SDL-based C/C++ program
into a web app.
This port was due to the efforts of several people, including: Charlie Birks,
Sathyanarayanan Gunasekaran, Jukka Jyl?nki, Alon Zakai, Edward Rudd,
Bruce Mitchener, and Martin Gerhardy. (Thanks, everyone!)
On Android starting the application after a previous quit did not always work.
Android keeps VM processes for a faster restart and therefore the loaded *.so.
The expected use case is for games that are designed with multiple aspect ratios already in mind and leave optional margins on the edges of the game which won't hurt if they are cut off.
An example use case is a game is designed for wide-screen/16:9, but then wants to deploy on an iPad which is 4:3. Normally, SDL will letterbox, which will shrink things and result in wasted space. But the designer already thought about 4:3 and designed the edges of the game so they could be cut off without any functional loss. So rather than wasting space with letterboxing, "overscan" mode will zoom the rendering to fill up the entire screen. Parts on the edges will be drawn offscreen, but since the game was already designed with this in mind, it is fine. The end result is the iPad (4:3) experience is much better since it feels like a game designed for that screen aspect ratio.
This patch introduces a new SDL_hint: SDL_HINT_RENDER_LOGICAL_SIZE_MODE.
Valid values are "letterbox" or "0" for letterboxing and "overscan" or "1" for overscan.
The default mode is letterbox to preserve existing behavior.
// Example usage:
SDL_SetHint(SDL_HINT_RENDER_LOGICAL_SIZE_MODE, "overscan");
SDL_RenderSetLogicalSize(renderer, SCREEN_WIDTH, SCREEN_HEIGHT);
Chris Beck
When creating a homebrew recipe for wesnoth, I discovered that the SDL image configuration routine does not detect libpng properly -- if you have multiple instances of libpng on your system, and you use environment variables to select an instance which is not in your system directory, the build can be broken, because it will run configuration tests against the system installed version, but deduce that it should use the filename of the system-installed version. In a vanilla build of wesnoth using homebrew, this results in segfaults at runtime, because you end up linking against two different versions of libpng, which is also needed independently of SDL.
The problem is essentially in the "find_lib" routine in the configure file:
find_lib()
{
gcc_bin_path=[`$CC -print-search-dirs 2>/dev/null | fgrep programs: | sed 's/[^=]*=\(.*\)/\1/' | sed 's/:/ /g'`]
gcc_lib_path=[`$CC -print-search-dirs 2>/dev/null | fgrep libraries: | sed 's/[^=]*=\(.*\)/\1/' | sed 's/:/ /g'`]
env_lib_path=[`echo $LIBS $LDFLAGS | sed 's/-L[ ]*//g'`]
for path in $gcc_bin_path $gcc_lib_path $env_lib_path /usr/lib /usr/local/lib; do
lib=[`ls -- $path/$1 2>/dev/null | sort -r | sed 's/.*\/\(.*\)/\1/; q'`]
if test x$lib != x; then
echo $lib
return
fi
done
}
Because the for loop goes over the system directories before the environment directories, any system-installed lib will shadow the lib selected via environment variables. This is contrary to the behavior of the configuration tests earlier in the script, which prefers the environment variable libs over the system-installed libs. The 'for' loop should instead be:
for path in $env_lib_path $gcc_bin_path $gcc_lib_path /usr/lib /usr/local/lib; do
You can see the full discussion on the Homebrew / linuxbrew issue tracker here: https://github.com/Homebrew/linuxbrew/issues/172
I have checked that this bug also affects SDL 1.2.15, SDL_mixer and SDL_ttf 1.2, which all use this same "find_lib" routine. I have not determined if the bug affects SDL 2.0, which seems not to use this exact routine.
Elias Vanderstuyft
Remove the dependency of the calculation of Linux "phase" on "period",
currently the "phase" parameter is interpreted as a time shift, instead of a phase shift.
The Linux input documentation is not clear about the exact units of the "phase" parameter (see http://lxr.free-electrons.com/source/include/uapi/linux/input.h?v=3.17#L1075 ),
but we're about to standardize the 'phase shift' interpretation into the Linux input documentation,
since this will ease the job of a driver to recalculate the effect's state when the user dynamically updates the "period" parameter.
Elias Vanderstuyft
"Horizontal" is not very precise, use "Positive phase" instead.
"Positive" because it's actually waveform(2*pi*t + phase) instead of waveform(2*pi*t - phase).
Elias Vanderstuyft
It's not obvious from the general "haptic direction" description what the SDL direction actually means in terms of force magnitude sign,
currently its meaning is only reflected by the example.
This change does a few things, all with regards to the WinRT implementation of
SDL_GetPrefPath():
1. it fixes a bug whereby SDL_GetPrefPath() did not create the directory it
returned. On other SDL platforms, SDL_GetPrefPath() will create separate
directories for its 'org' and 'app' folders. Without this, attempts to create
files in the pref-path would fail, unless those directories were first created
by the app, or by some other library the app used. This change makes sure
that these directories get created, before SDL_GetPrefPath() returns to its
caller(s).
2. it defaults to having SDL_GetPrefPath() return a WinRT 'Local' folder
on all platforms. Previously, for Windows Store apps, it would have used a
different, 'Roaming' folder. Files in Roaming folders can be automatically,
and synchronized across multiple devices by Windows. This synchronization can
happen while the app runs, with new files being copied into a running app's
pref-path. Unless an app is specifically designed to handle this scenario,
there is a chance that save-data could be overwritten in unwanted or
unexpected ways.
The default is now to use a Local folder, which does not get synchronized, and
which is arguably a bit safer to use. Apps that wish to use Roaming folders
can do so by setting SDL_HINT_WINRT_PREF_PATH_ROOT to "roaming", however it
is recommended that one first read Microsoft's documentation for Roaming
files, a link to which is provided in README-winrt.md.
To preserve older pref-path selection behavior (found in SDL 2.0.3, as well as
many pre-2.0.4 versions of SDL from hg.libsdl.org), which uses a Roaming path
in Windows Store apps, and a Local path in Windows Phone, set
SDL_HINT_WINRT_PREF_PATH_ROOT to "old".
Please note that Roaming paths are not supported on Windows Phone 8.0, due to
limitations in the OS itself. Attempts to use this will fail.
(Windows Phone 8.1 does not have this limitation, however.)
3. It makes SDL_GetPrefPath(), when on Windows Phone 8.0, and when
SDL_HINT_WINRT_PREF_PATH_ROOT is set to "roaming", return NULL, rather than
silently defaulting to a Local path (then switching to a Roaming path if and
when the user upgraded to Windows Phone 8.1).
Jonas Kulla
src/main/windows/SDL_windows_main.c:137:
cmdline = SDL_iconv_string("UTF-8", "UCS-2-INTERNAL", (char *)(text), (SDL_wcslen(text)+1)*sizeof(WCHAR));
I'm trying to compile an SDL2 application for windows using the mingw-w64 32bit toolchain provided by my distro (Fedora 19). However, even the simplest test program that does nothing at all fails to startup with a "Fatal error - out of memory" message because the mingw iconv library provided by my distro does not support the "UCS-2-INTERNAL" encoding and the conversion returns null.
From my little bit of research, it turns out that even though this encoding is supported by the external GNU libiconv library, some glibc versions (?) don't support it with their internal iconv routines, and will instead provide the native endian encoding when "UCS-2" is specified.
Nonetheless, I wonder why the native endianness is considered in the first place when Windows doesn't even run on any big endian archs (to my knowledge). And true enough, 'WIN_StringToUTF8' from core/windows/SDL_windows.h is used everywhere else in the windows backend, which is just a macro to iconv with "UTF-16LE" as source. Therefore it would IMO make sense to use this macro here as well, which would solve my problem (patch attached).
Nitz
I added xdnd_version check to XdndPosition case also
under DEBUG_XEVENTS macro.
by this we can get the action requested by user.
I analysed further and found out that removing xdnd_version check at XdndDrop case is a bad idea because
in XConvertSelection API timestamp should be passed if(xdnd_version >= 1)
otherwise CurrentTime should be passed
So xdnd_version check is important at XdndDrop case
I made xdnd_version as a static so that it can store the version in other cases also.
WinRT apps can set a default, preferred orientation via a .appxmanifest file.
SDL was overriding this on app startup, and making the app use all possible
orientations (landscape and portrait).
Thanks to Eric Wing for the heads up on this!
Visual C++ 2013 Update 4 re-introduced the Sleep() function to WinRT apps (for
code that targets Windows 8.1 and Windows Phone 8.1). This led to a build
error, as SDL was defining it's own Sleep() function (to make up for the lack
of a public Sleep() function). The fix makes sure that SDL's custom Sleep()
function is only used when Windows' Sleep() is not available.
Many thanks go out to Sergiu Marian Gaina for the fix!
This would fail if the compiler was given a .m file _and_ no "-o" option; it
would fail to automatically calculate the correct .o filename in this
situation.
Thanks to Ethan Lee for the help tracking this one down!
Only the first-pressed finger wpuld get reported as having moved (via SDL's
touch APIs). Subsequently pressed fingers wouldn't report as being moved, even
though the OS was reporting (to SDL) that they had moved.
These variants include:
- Windows 8.0 for x86
- Windows 8.0 for x64
- Windows 8.0 for ARM
- Windows 8.1 for x86
- Windows 8.1 for x64
- Windows 8.1 for ARM
- Windows Phone 8.0 for x86 (for use with the Windows Phone emulator)
- Windows Phone 8.0 for ARM
- Windows Phone 8.1 for x86 (for use with the Windows Phone emulator)
- Windows Phone 8.1 for ARM
iOS 8 introduces LaunchScreen NIBs which use autolayout to handle all devices and orientations with a single NIB instead of multiple launch images. This is also the only way to get the App Store badge "Optimized for iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus". So if the application is running on iOS 8 or greater AND has specified a LaunchScreen in their Info.plist, this patch will use the NIB as the launch screen. Otherwise, the code falls back to the legacy code path.
Note: Upon audit of the legacy path, it appears that it does not properly handle the UILaunchImages Info.plist convention. I've added comments inline to the code about this. However, in about a year from now, nobody is going to care about this path since everybody should be using LaunchScreen NIBs.
SDL_HINT_WINRT_PREF_PATH_ROOT allows WinRT apps to alter the path that
SDL_GetPrefPath() returns. Setting it to "local" uses the app's
OS-defined Local folder, setting it to "roaming" uses the app's OS-defined
Roaming folder.
Roaming folder support is not available in Windows Phone 8.0. Attempts to
make SDL_GetPrefPath() return a Roaming folder on this OS will be ignored.
Various bits of documentation on this were added to SDL_hints.h, and to
README-winrt.md
Further support regarding IME and on-screen keyboards is pending, some of
which might not be 100% compatible with other platforms, given WinRT platform
restrictions. An MSDN article at http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/apps/hh465404.aspx
indicates that on-screen keyboard display requires that the user first tap on
a Windows/XAML text control.
This change adds basic SDL_TEXTINPUT support, with input coming from hardware
keyboards, at a minimum, and without the need for XAML integration (which is
still pending integration into SDL, by and large).
This scenario can occur, for example, when the 4-finger touch sequence is used to switch spaces. the SDL window does not receive the touch up events and ends up thinking there are far more fingers on the pad than there are.
So the solution here is everytime a new "touch" appears we can through and check if there are any existing known touches by the OS and if there are none, abut SDL things there are, we simply go through and cancel the SDL touches.
Side affects.
- the "touch up" won't occur until the users sends a new touch (could be well after the actual release really did occur)
Windows Phone 8.0 either did not define, or provide access to, a 'RoamingFolder'
or 'TemporaryFolder' for apps to use. Windows 8.0 and 8.1 do, as does
Windows Phone 8.1. This change allows SDL-based Windows Phone 8.1 apps to
access these folders, via either the SDL_WinRTGetFSPathUNICODE() or
SDL_WinRTGetFSPathUTF8() functions.
SDL_GetPrefPath(), which on WinRT, is based on SDL_WinRTGetFSPathUTF8(), will
continue to return the app's 'local' folder, despite Windows 8.x
counterpart apps using the 'roaming' folder, in order to preserve compatibility
when 8.0-based Phone apps upgrade to 8.1-based Phone apps.
This patch makes sure that any SDL_MOUSEBUTTONDOWN, SDL_MOUSEBUTTONUP, and
SDL_MOUSEMOTION events, as triggered by a touch event in a WinRT app, set the
event's 'which' field to SDL_TOUCH_MOUSEID. Previously, this was getting set
to the same value as events from a real mouse, '0'.
Thanks to Diego for providing information on this bug, and to Tamas Hamor for
sending over a patch!
The crash would occur when a WinRT app explicitly tried to create an
SDL_Renderer using the "opengles2" renderer (via SDL_HINT_RENDER_DRIVER), but
OpenGL ES 2 / ANGLE .dlls weren't packaged in the app.
The "future-dev" branch of MSOpenTech's ANGLE/WinRT repository (at
https://github.com/msopentech/angle) includes support for Windows Phone 8.1.
This change allows it to be used in conjunction with SDL's OpenGL functions.
ANGLE for WinRT has at least two versions:
- an older version, which supports Windows 8.0 and 8.1. This is currently
the "winrt" branch in MSOpenTech's ANGLE repository (at
https://github.com/msopentech/angle)
- a newer version, which drops support for Windows 8.0, but is under more
active development (via MSOpenTech's "future-dev" branch), and which was
recently merged into the ANGLE project's official "master" branch
(at https://chromium.googlesource.com/angle/angle)
Both versions are setup using slightly different APIs. SDL/WinRT will now
attempt to detect which version is being used, and configure it appropriately.
The script was originally written for an SDL_gamecontrollerdb.h which had groups
of mappings separated by single lines starting with a "#". This was changed some
time ago to #endif/#if pairs. Because the script assumed only a single #endif in
the whole file it no longer worked correctly and only processed the first group.
The return value of SDL_malloc() was not checked and NULL therefore not handled.
Also added setting of error message for the other SDL_malloc() in this function.
Nitz
Variable entry going out of scope leaks the storage it points to, at:
/* Need to add a hint entry for this watcher */
hint = (SDL_Hint *)SDL_malloc(sizeof(*hint));
if (!hint) {
return;
}
Patch is attached.
The return value of SDL_malloc() was not checked and NULL therefore not handled.
NULL returned by SDL_GameControllerMapping()/SDL_GameControllerMappingForGUID()
now either means "no mapping" (as before) or "no memory" (just crashed before).
For consistency with the similar functions getting SDL_GameController as input.
Also NULL is no SDL_GameController and therefore can not have a mapping anyway.
- made keycode listings a bit easier to read
- listed VK_ keycode names, where appropriate
- removed a few pieces of dead + commented-out code
- applied a common 'WINRT_' prefix to internal function names
If the alert dialog could be canceled the Activity would not be finished here.
Also setting the property to "true" would be redundant because that is default.
Attributes on the host device's rotation were getting applied to offscreen
textures in an invalid manner. This was causing some apps to look different,
depending on how the device was rotated.
A negative periodic magnitude doesn't exist in Windows' and MacOS' FF APIs
The periodic magnitude parameter of the SDL Haptic API is based on the Linux
FF API, so it means they are not directly compatible:
'dwMagnitude' is a 'DWORD', which is unsigned.
Fixes Bugzilla #2701.
This modifies SDL_PauseAudio behavior to pause all audio devices instead of
just the default one (required on Android, at least for testmultiaudio on my
Nexus 4 which reported 2 audio devices).
It also changes SDL_PauseAudioDevice to retain the device lock from pause until
resume in order to save battery in mobile devices.
Philipp Wiesemann
I attached a patch for an incomplete implementation of the messagebox parts.
It was not tested on lots of devices yet and features a very fragile workaround to block the calling SDL thread while the dialog is handled on Android's UI thread. Although it works for testmessage.c I assume there are lot of situations were it may fail (standby, device rotation and other changes). Also not all flags and colors are implemented.
On the other hand most uses of the messagebox are to show an error on start and fragility (or working at all) may not matter there.
since the window system doesn't do it for us like other platforms.
This prevents sticky keys and missed keys when going in and out
of focus, for example Alt would appear to stick if switching away
from an SDL app with Alt-Tab and had to be pressed again.
CR: Sam
This helps when modern versions of The Gimp (and lots of other things)
produces a 32-bit bitmap with an alpha channel, or anything with "BI_BITFIELDS"
format, since that data is now embedded in the bitmap info header instead of
directly following it and we would accidentally skip over embedded versions of
it.
Fixes Bugzilla #2714.
Alex Szpakowski
SDL's Cocoa backend uses the CGDisplayMode API to get refresh rate information about a display mode, but CGDisplayModeGetRefreshRate will return 0 on most non-CRT monitors.
The only way I know of to get correct refresh rate information in OS X is via the CoreVideo DisplayLink API.
I have attached a patch which tries to use the CVDisplayLinkGetNominalOutputVideoRefreshPeriod function if CGDisplayModeGetRefreshRate fails, which fixes display mode refresh rate information on the monitors I tested.
The CVDisplayLink API requires linking with the CoreVideo framework, and the patch updates the various build files to do so.
+ Handle HidePreeditText IBus signal.
+ Use SDL_GetKeyboardFocus instead of SDL_GetFocusWindow.
+ Move the X11 IBus SetFocus calls to the X11_DispatchFocus functions.
+ Simplify the IBus ifdefs when handling X11 KeyEvents.
+ Remove inotify watch when SDL_IBus_Quit is called.
skaller
using gcc 4.2 (the default) on Mac OSX 10.6.8
CC build/SDL_dynapi.lo
In file included from /Users/johnskaller/SDL/src/dynapi/SDL_dynapi.c:31:
include/SDL_syswm.h:211:39: error: missing binary operator before token "("
The fault appears to be here:
#if defined(__OBJC__) && __has_feature(objc_arc)
that the __has_feature macro is not supported by gcc 4.2.
The code works fine with my clang 3.3svn.
hotgloupi
Configuring using "cmake -DSDL_STATIC=1 -DSDL_SHARED=0" generate and error in CMakeLists.txt at line 1334:
CMake Error at CMakeLists.txt:1334 (install):
install TARGETS given target "SDL2" which does not exist in this directory.
This install rule shouldn't be present when the DLL has been disabled
Tim McDaniel
This patch replaces all use of NSAutoreleasePool with the Apple recommended @autoreleasepool. @autoreleasepool is supposedly more efficient, and since it is scope based it can't be accidentally not released.
Tim McDaniel
On OSX, with revision 8729, the coordinate space for window position and the coordinate space for global mouse position don't match. For a non-fullscreen window, the window position is global relative to the bottom of the menubar. The global mouse position is relative to the top of the screen. This affects Cocoa_WarpMouse and potentially other things as well. Further, the coordinate system for window position is now affected by what screen it is on. For example, if I have two equal size screens oriented side by side such that the tops of the screens are equal in global space, with the menubar on one screen, and a window straddles the two screens, the window's y position makes no sense. The window's y position depends on what screen "most" of the window is on. So if I move the window horizontally just a bit, the y position of my window is now different by the size of the menubar, even though the window was not moved vertically.
I'd like to reiterate that this was a fairly fundamental change (and a breaking change for us). If SDL OSX is to really support multi-display configurations, this is especially problematic.
If the real concern is preventing windows from going under the menubar, then perhaps a solution involving something like overriding [NSWindow constrainFrameRect] would be less problematic than redefining the global window coord space for the main display.
Andreas Falkenhahn
SDL_RenderReadPixels() doesn't seem to work when trying to read pixels from a texture that has been created using SDL_TEXTUREACCESS_TARGET and has been selected as the render target using SDL_SetRenderTarget().
I am attaching a small program that demonstrates the issue. I get the following result here:
READ PIXEL RETURN: 0 --- COLOR CHECK: ff000000
But it should be:
READ PIXEL RETURN: 0 --- COLOR CHECK: ffff0000
Tested with SDL 2.0.3 on Windows 7.
Nitz
In SDL_CreateTextureFromSurface:
SDL_PixelFormat *dst_fmt;
/* Set up a destination surface for the texture update */
dst_fmt = SDL_AllocFormat(format);
temp = SDL_ConvertSurface(surface, dst_fmt, 0);
Here is need of NULL check for dst_fmt because there are chances of NULL return from SDL_AllocFormat(format);
Tobias Himmer
this patch adds a check to the CMake build script to detect whether the VideoCore API is available.
If it is found, it enables SDL_VIDEO_DRIVER_RPI and will also add the needed include/library directory flags to CMAKE_C_FLAGS so the subsequent check for GLES succeeds in picking up the headers.
Seems to work fine on Raspbian.
Patch from Benoit Pierre:
video: fix clipping handling in SDL_UpperBlitScaled
- honor destination clipping rectangle
- update both destination and source rectangles when clipping source
rectangle to source surface and destination rectangle to destination
clip rectangle
- don't change scaling factors when clipping
N.B.:
- when no scaling is involved (source and destination width/height are
the same), SDL_UpperBlit is used (so SDL_BlitScaled behaves like
SDL_BlitSurface)
- the final destination rectangle after all clipping is performed is
saved back to dstrect (like for SDL_UpperBlit)
There was a misconception that Linux's saturation and deadband parameters -
on which the corresponding SDL parameters were based - use only half of the
possible range.
Thanks, Elias!
Partially fixes Bugzilla #2686.
The _xgetbv intrinsic was being used in ARM builds of SDL/WinRT, which was
leading to linker errors. This commit limits _xgetbv use to the platforms on
which it is available, x86 and x64.
This will (eventually) make SDL_GetQueuedAudioSize() more accurate, and thus
reduce latency. Right now this isn't implemented anywhere, so we assume data
fed to the audio callback is consumed by the hardware and immediately played
to completion.
For versions of XAudio2 with an IXAudio2SourceVoice::GetState() that offers a
flags parameter, we can use XAUDIO2_VOICE_NOSAMPLESPLAYED, since we don't
need this information in our current calls. According to MSDN, this makes the
the call about 3x faster.
1) Moves all READMEs to docs/
2) Renames them to *.md, adds some Markdown with the idea to add a lot more
3) Moves the doxyfile config to doc/ and makes it parse the headers at ../include as well as the md files in docs.
4) Skips SDL_opengl*.h headers from the docs
5) Minor fixes to doxyfile
This requires at least Xcode 4.5 and the iOS 6 SDK to build, but it doesn't change the minimum supported runtime version (iOS 5.1). Less than 2% of iOS users are running iOS 5, so I hope developers aren't trying to build SDL using an SDK which doesn't support iOS 6/7...
Nitz
In GL_CreateTexture function:
if (GL_CheckError("glGenTexures()", renderer) < 0) {
SDL_free(data);
return -1;
}
Here only data is getting free but data->pixels getting leak.
So have to free data->pixels before free data.
Previously, SDL would always expose display modes and window dimensions in terms of pixels, and would add an extra 'fake' display mode on retina screens which would contain the non-retina resolution. Calling SDL_CreateWindow with the dimensions of that fake display mode would not work.
Now, SDL only exposes display modes and window dimensions in terms of points rather than pixels. If the SDL_WINDOW_ALLOW_HIGHDPI flag is passed into SDL_CreateWindow, then any OpenGL contexts created from that window will be sized in pixels rather than points (retrievable with SDL_GL_GetDrawableSize.) Window dimensions and mouse coordinates are still in terms of points rather than pixels even with that flag.
This matches the behavior of SDL in OS X more closely, and lets users choose whether to make use of retina displays and lets them handle it properly.
Damian Kaczmarek
Basically this bug is probably not a common use case. My goal is to allow rendering totally without a window, for example to a screenshot and I need to rely on SDL_SetRenderTarget to properly work for a purely software renderer created by SDL_CreateSoftwareRenderer.
Pablo Mayobre
When generating a signed app with SDL 2.0.3 an issue comes up, watching at the Error Log points out that the issue lies in the src/main/android/SDL_android_main.c where the process name is defined as "SDL_app", this name turns into an erroneous name so it should be changed to "app_process"
chasesan
When using SDL_RenderCopyEx, I get a problem on some platforms where the output is offset by +/-1 on other platforms and not on others. I tried it with a center of both 0,0 (and offsetting by width/height) and NULL (for centered).
The rotation involved is 90, and/or -90 rotation. The rotation was a constant, no arithmetic was involved when inputting it into SDL_RenderCopyEx.
This occurred with 32x32, 24x24, and 16x16 texture sizes. I apologize that I don't have more precise information, as I received the information as a bug report myself. But I have tracked the problem down to here.
My program requires pixel perfect alignment on several different platforms, so this is something of a showstopper for me.
--
Sylvain
It appears the RenderCopyEx is done as expected,
this is the red rectangle which is not correctly positionned !
So, here's patch with a 0.5 float increment, like for opengles2, for DrawLines, and also Draw Points.
binarycrusader
Since changeset 358696c354a8, SDL 2.0 has been broken on Solaris when compiling with the Solaris Studio compiler (which uses the pthread implementation of SDL_AtomicLock).
Notably, it gets stuck at the MemoryBarrierRelease in SDL_GetErrBuf:
6585 # 218
6586 if (!tls_errbuf && !tls_being_created) {
6587 SDL_AtomicLock_REAL ( & tls_lock );
6588 if (!tls_errbuf) {
6589 SDL_TLSID slot;
6590 tls_being_created = SDL_TRUE;
6591 slot = SDL_TLSCreate_REAL ( );
6592 tls_being_created = SDL_FALSE;
6593 { SDL_SpinLock _tmp = 0 ; SDL_AtomicLock_REAL ( & _tmp ) ; SDL_AtomicUnlock_REAL ( & _tmp ) ; };
^^^ loops forever above
6594 tls_errbuf = slot;
6595 }
6596 SDL_AtomicUnlock_REAL ( & tls_lock );
6597 }
Running: testthread
(process id 28926)
^Cdbx: warning: Interrupt ignored but forwarded to child.
signal INT (Interrupt) in __nanosleep at 0xfe52a875
0xfe52a875: __nanosleep+0x0015: jae __nanosleep+0x23 [ 0xfe52a883, .+0xe ]
Current function is SDL_Delay_REAL
204 was_error = nanosleep(&tv, &elapsed);
(dbx) where
[1] __nanosleep(0xfeffe848, 0xfeffe850, 0xfe75a5ac, 0xfe5169d8), at 0xfe52a875
[2] nanosleep(0xfeffe848, 0xfeffe850), at 0xfe516a3b
=>[3] SDL_Delay_REAL(ms = 0), line 204 in "SDL_systimer.c"
[4] SDL_AtomicLock_REAL(lock = 0xfeffe88c), line 104 in "SDL_spinlock.c"
[5] SDL_GetErrBuf(), line 225 in "SDL_thread.c"
[6] SDL_ClearError_REAL(), line 216 in "SDL_error.c"
[7] SDL_InitSubSystem_REAL(flags = 0), line 116 in "SDL.c"
[8] SDL_Init_REAL(flags = 0), line 244 in "SDL.c"
[9] SDL_Init(a = 0), line 89 in "SDL_dynapi_procs.h"
[10] main(argc = 1, argv = 0xfeffe948), line 65 in "testthread.c"
As far as I can tell, this is because pthread_spin_trylock() always returns EBUSY for this particular lock; since it works in other places, I'm suspicious.
Different Solaris Studio compiler versions seem to make no difference.
I've verified this is broken on Linux as well if SDL_spinlock.c is modified to use the pthread implementation.
This appears to be because pthread_spin_init() and pthread_spin_destroy() are not used with the locks as required.
Wei Mingzhi
surface->map should be invalidated in SDL_SetSurfacePalette(), otherwise the palette would not be effective when blitting to another non-8bit surface which we previously blitted to.
Alex Szpakowski
Some minor changes to the Mac-specific backend code:
- Fixed up some code style issues (mostly brace style inconsistencies).
- Fixed a compiler warning in SDL_cocoaevents.m.
- Removed some useless code now that the 10.7 SDK is required to build SDL.
- Removed Gestalt(gestaltSystemVersion, ...) call and switched to NSAppKitVersionNumber for version checking code. Using Gestalt with gestaltSystemVersion will give 0x1090 in Mac OS 10.10+, and the whole Gestalt function was deprecated in Mac OS 10.8.
Alex Szpakowski
Now that SDL on iOS requires CoreMotion to be linked, some of the Xcode projects included with the SDL source (such as the iOS tests and the iOS app template) as well as the premake and automake scripts need to be updated.
I've attached a patch which does so. It also fixes the SDL Xcode project to build for 64-bit ARM as well as armv7 by default (or whatever the default ARM targets are for the Xcode version used), which is what the iOS app template expects.
Alex Szpakowski
Since this commit https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/59b543340d63 , calling SDL_DestroyWindow will crash the program if the window has an active OpenGL context.
This is because the Cocoa_DestroyWindow code sets the window's driverdata to NULL and then calls [context setWindow:NULL], which tries to access the window's driverdata, resulting in a null pointer dereference.
I have attached a patch which fixes the issue by moving the line which sets the driverdata to NULL to after the lines which call functions that use the driverdata pointer.
Notes:
- Support for the 'Guide' button does not seem to be possible, as
XInputGetStateEx is not available on WinRT.
- Haptic support appears to be working on WinRT now!
- SDL/WinRT does not allow calls to LoadLibrary or LoadLibraryEx. The calls
to those were removed by this change, but only when compiling for WinRT.
Non-WinRT Windows will continue to detect and load XInput via LoadLibrary and
GetProcAddress calls.
If the EGL extension EGL_KHR_create_context is available, we can use it to
set the core/compatability profile and the minimum OpenGL version.
Use this if it is available to get the context requested by the GL attributes.
SDL/WinRT currently uses a separate XInput backend from SDL/Win32, as WinRT
has no support for DirectInput. This change makes SDL/WinRT's XInput
code snag some recently-changed bits from the Win32-specific,
DirectInput + XInput backend, in order to get the SDL_GameController API
working again on WinRT, insofar that axes map to the correct parts.
TODO:
- test all buttons, making sure WinRT maps buttons the same way that Win32 does
- consider making the Win32 and WinRT codebases share more stuff, minus
the sort of duplication happening via this change. Maybe simulate, or
stub-out, DirectInput calls when on WinRT?
Todd Seiler
Call Stack:
#0 0x0000000101c29291 in Cocoa_StartTextInput at /Users/Todd/Desktop/codes/sources/SDL/src/video/cocoa/SDL_cocoakeyboard.m:512
#1 0x0000000101c110c5 in SDL_SetKeyboardFocus at /Users/Todd/Desktop/codes/sources/SDL/src/events/SDL_keyboard.c:643
#2 0x0000000101c32be4 in SetupWindowData at /Users/Todd/Desktop/codes/sources/SDL/src/video/cocoa/SDL_cocoawindow.m:981
#3 0x0000000101c32d2a in Cocoa_CreateWindowFrom at /Users/Todd/Desktop/codes/sources/SDL/src/video/cocoa/SDL_cocoawindow.m:1092
#4 0x0000000101c99999 in SDL_CreateWindowFrom_REAL at /Users/Todd/Desktop/codes/sources/SDL/src/video/SDL_video.c:1338
#5 0x0000000101ce1484 in SDL_CreateWindowFrom at /Users/Todd/Desktop/codes/sources/SDL/src/dynapi/SDL_dynapi_procs.h:547
#6 0x0000000100018a5e in SceneRenderer at /Users/Todd/Desktop/codes/sources/tseiler_Todds-MacBook-Pro_3405/AppName/src/SceneRenderer.cpp:138
#7 0x0000000100017ca5 in SceneRenderer at /Users/Todd/Desktop/codes/sources/tseiler_Todds-MacBook-Pro_3405/AppName/src/SceneRenderer.cpp:145
#8 0x000000010000cd96 in App::execute(int, char**) at /Users/Todd/Desktop/codes/sources/tseiler_Todds-MacBook-Pro_3405/AppName/src/App.cpp:28
#9 0x0000000100004402 in main at /Users/Todd/Desktop/codes/sources/tseiler_Todds-MacBook-Pro_3405/AppName/src/main.cpp:8
This issue occurred when using Ogre3D Graphics engine on Mac (cocoa) to create the window. Then handing the window handle off to SDL_CreateWindowFrom().
In Ogre3D application you do the following:
window_ = root_->initialise(true, "Ogre Window 2");
loadOgreResources();
Ogre::WindowEventUtilities::addWindowEventListener(window_, this);
#if OGRE_PLATFORM == OGRE_PLATFORM_APPLE
NSWindow* Data = 0;
window_->getCustomAttribute("WINDOW", &Data);
sdl_window_ = SDL_CreateWindowFrom((void*)Data);
#endif
It results in a crash in this function:
SDL_cocoakeyboard.m
void
Cocoa_StartTextInput(_THIS)
{
SDL_VideoData *data = (SDL_VideoData *) _this->driverdata;
NSAutoreleasePool *pool = [[NSAutoreleasePool alloc] init];
SDL_Window *window = SDL_GetKeyboardFocus();
NSWindow *nswindow = nil;
if (window)
nswindow = ((SDL_WindowData*)window->driverdata)->nswindow;
// ...
}
The crash occurred because "driverdata" was nil. Before this function call, a call to SetupWindowData is called:
SDL_cocoawindow.m
static int
SetupWindowData(_THIS, SDL_Window * window, NSWindow *nswindow, SDL_bool created)
{
// ...
if ([nswindow isKeyWindow]) {
window->flags |= SDL_WINDOW_INPUT_FOCUS;
SDL_SetKeyboardFocus(data->window);
}
/* Prevents the window's "window device" from being destroyed when it is
* hidden. See http://www.mikeash.com/pyblog/nsopenglcontext-and-one-shot.html
*/
[nswindow setOneShot:NO];
/* All done! */
[pool release];
window->driverdata = data;
return 0;
}
As you can see: "window->driverdata = data" is performed after the "SDL_SetKeyboardFocus()" call, which eventually leads to "Cocoa_StartTextInput()" where the crash occurs.
Alex Szpakowski
SDL's code for exposing the accelerometer as a joystick on iOS currently uses UIAccelerometer, which was superseded by the CoreMotion framework and deprecated since iOS 5.
The UIAccelerometer code still works (for now), but it also throws deprecation warnings whenever SDL is built for iOS, since SDL's deployment target is no longer below iOS 5.
I've created a patch which replaces the old UIAccelerometer code with a replacement based on the CoreMotion framework. It has identical functionality (to SDL users), however iOS apps are now required to link to the CoreMotion framework when using SDL.
This adds support for all XInput devices, exposed through the SDL joystick API.
The button and axis reporting for XInput devices has been changed to match DirectInput and other platforms.
The game controller xinput mapping has been updated so this change is seamless.
There is a new hint, SDL_HINT_XINPUT_USE_OLD_JOYSTICK_MAPPING, for any applications that have hardcoded the old xinput button and axis set. This hint will be removed in SDL 2.1.
Rainer Deyke
If 'SDL_OpenAudio' is called with 'obtained == NULL', 'prepare_audiospec' performs a bad 'memcpy' with the destination and source pointing to the same block of memory. The problem appears to be on in 'SDL_OpenAudio', which calls open_audio_device with 'obtained = desired' when 'obtained == NULL'. 'open_audio_device' cannot deal with 'desired' and 'obtained' pointing to the same block of memory but can deal with 'obtained == NULL'
Testing:
* For each theme in Windows 7, Windows 7 Basic, and Windows 7 Classic:
- Ran testsprite2
- Pressed Ctrl-G to grab the mouse
- Alt-tabbed away, verified mouse is no longer grabbed
- Alt-tabbed back, verified that mouse was grabbed
- Alt-tabbed away
- Clicked in the window, verified mouse was grabbed
- Alt-tabbed away
- Grabbed the title bar and dragged the window around successfully, verified that mouse was grabbed when move modal loop completed
- Alt-tabbed away
- Clicked the minimize button on the title bar, the window was successfully minimized
- Clicked on the icon in the task bar, the window was restored and the mouse grabbed again
- Alt-tabbed away
- Clicked the close button on the title bar, the window was successfully closed
I added -Wshadow and then turned it off again because of massive variable shadowing in the blit macros.
Feel free to go through that code and fix these if you want. Just uncomment CheckWarnShadow in configure.in if you want to try this.
bill
In SDL_wave.c, BEXT wave files with "bext" instead of "fmt " are choked on
if (chunk.magic != FMT) {
SDL_SetError("Complex WAVE files not supported");
was_error = 1;
goto done;
}
BEXT files http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broadcast_Wave_Format actually playback the same as regular waves. All they have is (A LOT OF) extra header info.
To open them, just SKIP the "bext" chunk, and the "fmt " chunk will be a couple of hundred bytes later.
The "fmt " chunk is also bloated, but if you skip past the extra information to the "data" chunk, there is nothing different about a BEXT wave file than a "normal" one.
You can then load the data and proceed as normal.
callow.mark
Compiling with SDL_VIDEO_RENDER_OGL=0, SDL_VIDEO_OPENGL=0, SDL_VIDEO_OPENGL_WGL=0, SDL_VIDEO_RENDER_OGL_ES2=1, SDL_VIDEO_OPENGL_ES2=1 and SDL_VIDEO_OPENGL_EGL=1 set in SDL_config_windows.h fails.
A patch is attached. See bug #2570 for reasons you might want to compile this way.
Zachary L
SDL_hapticlist and SDL_hapticlist_tail are not set correctly when quitting the subsystem. This matters because they are represented as global variables. In the case you quit and reinitialize the subsystems, problems with dangling pointers arise.
For instance, SDL_hapticlist_tail will not be null on second initialization and because of the check on line 298, it will fail to set SDL_hapticlist appropriately. This can cause a few things to go wrong, like feeding SDL_strcmp a null fname which can cause a segfault.
Alex Szpakowski
Now that SDL for iOS requires at least iOS 5.1 at runtime, there are several old codepaths in the UIKit backend which can be removed. I've attached a patch which does so.
Alvin
The new OpenGL ES 2.0 YUV Texture support does not correctly display padded, non-contiguous YUV data.
I am using SDL2 95bd3d33482e (as provided by 'hg id --id') from Mercurial.
The YUV data I am using is provided by the FFMPEG family of libraries. According to FFMPEG's documentation, "The linesize [pitch] may be larger than the size of usable data -- there may be extra padding present for performance reasons."
The dimensions of the video file that I am using are 480x360. What I get from FFMPEG is a Ypitch of 512, and Upitch and Vpitch are both 256.
When I pack new Y, U and V buffers with only the "usable" data (Ypitch is 480 and Upitch and Vpitch are both 240), and use those new buffers, the image is display correctly.
It appears that the Ypitch, Upitch and Vpitch parameters are not being used by SDL_UpdateYUVTexture().
I use SDL_PIXELFORMAT_YV12 for my YUV texture, however, the same results are seen when I use SDL_PIXELFORMAT_IYUV.
Not sure if this is related or not, but when I render the YUV texture (padded and unpadded) to a RGB24 texture, the resulting image is greyscale (or could by just the Y channel).
The URL field for this bug entry is set to my email (SDL mailing list archive) which includes an example image of what I see when rendering padded, non-contiguous YUV data.
sfalexrog
On systems with vsnprintf call SDL_SetError fails when passed a NULL as an argument. SDL's implementation checks for NULL (as seen in the commit: https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/835403a6aec8), but system implementation may crash.
Author: Sam Clegg <sbc@chromium.org>
Date: Fri Jun 20 12:52:11 2014
Fix win32 build which was failing due to missing PRIs64.
This change adds definitions for the C99 PRIs16 and PRIu64
which are missing from <stdint.h> on at last win32 and
possibly other platforms.
These already existed in testgesture.c so I removed them
from there also.
Add V=1 to the make command line will show the full commands but by default
we just show the tool-type and the output file. This is generally much easier
on the eye and makes warnings and errors more clearly visible.
Sylvain
If you play with the TouchScreen with +3 fingers randomly / pressing simultaneously all fingers.
You triggers FINGER DOWN events, but not always all the associated FINGER UP events.
So, after a while SDL_GetNumFingers() can report a wrong number of fingers pressed !
The explanation is hidden there : http://developer.android.com/reference/android/view/MotionEvent.html
Each pointer has a unique id that is assigned when it first goes down (indicated by ACTION_DOWN or ACTION_POINTER_DOWN).
A pointer id remains valid until the pointer eventually goes up (indicated by ACTION_UP or ACTION_POINTER_UP) or when the gesture is canceled (indicated by ACTION_CANCEL).
in ACTION_CANCEL :
The current gesture has been aborted. You will not receive any more points in it. You should treat this as an up event, but not perform any action that you normally would.
Constant Value: 3 (0x00000003)
Melker Narikka
Local files that are dropped onto a window under X11
are not going through a URI decoding step, resulting in the following
in my test application:
Dropped file /home/meklu/Pictures/Screenshot%20from%202013-10-30%2014:04:50.png
Couldn't load /home/meklu/Pictures/Screenshot%20from%202013-10-30%2014:04:50.png
Expected result:
Dropped file /home/meklu/Pictures/Screenshot from 2013-10-30 14:04:50.png
Loaded /home/meklu/Pictures/Screenshot from 2013-10-30 14:04:50.png successfully
I've attached a patch that fixes the issue by doing URI decoding in-place on
the file string buffer.
Ronie Salgado
The GL Renderer current context tracking fails when one window is used with an SDL renderer but another separate window is used with a user handled OpenGL context.
Attached is a small program that reproduces this bug, at least in some Linux machines where an OpenGL renderer is provided by default.
Expected Output:
-"First window" should be blue.
-"Second window" should be green.
Gotten Output:
- "First window" black.
- "Second window" blue.
What happened:
The renderer created for the "first window" ends rendering into the "second window" OpenGL context.
Bug location:
SDL_render_gl.c - line 286 on hg:
static SDL_GLContext SDL_CurrentContext = NULL;
When making SDL_GL_MakeCurrent from the user perspective, that variable or the GL renderer is not notified about the OpenGL context change.
Solution proposal:
- Move the current GL context cache into another place global.
J?rgen Tjern?
If you #define NO_SDL_GLEXT before including SDL_opengl.h, it still includes the platform-provided glext.h. The comments indicate that this define is intended to be used when you provide your own glext.h (quote from SDL_opengl.h: "Define this if you have your own version of glext.h and want to disable the version included in SDL_opengl.h.")
This is a problem because glext.h depends on the contents of gl.h, and it's practical to let SDL_opengl.h pick the right #include for gl.h for our platform.
Brad Smith
Attached is patch from the OpenBSD ports tree to add 24-bit support to the sndio backend and to make use of the sio_open() option SIO_DEVANY.
Diego
The Xcode Instruments Leak tool reports a leak from IODisplayCreateInfoDictionary in Cocoa_GetDisplayName.
This happened after upgrading to Xcode 5.
Frank Praznik
Add a gamepad mapping entry for Bluetooth DualShock 4 controllers on Linux.
The button mapping is the same as the USB controller, but the GUID is
different.
Stefan P?schel
if the variable NDK_MODULE_PATH is set to a relative path (like "../"),
compiling of a static SDL lib fails with an error similar to this:
make: *** No rule to make target
`..//android_libs/SDL/..//android_libs/SDL/src/main/android/SDL_android_main.c',
needed by
`obj/local/armeabi/objs/SDL2_static/__//android_libs/SDL/src/main/android/SDL_android_main.o'.
Stop.
Regarding the shared lib, this is already prevented by a "subst" command
in the /Android.mk, which removes all occurences of "$(LOCAL_PATH)/".
The attached patch does the same with the additional
"SDL_android_main.c", which is included for build the static SDL lib.
Added missing files to SDL2 project
Added missing Visual Studio 2008 tests to the solution
Added output paths which match the 2010+ projects
Added SDL project references instead of old style project dependencies
Removed post-build copy step and added data files to projects
It was simpler to just have the polling (actually: hotplug detection)
functions return immediately if it's not an appropriate time to poll.
Note that previously, if any joystick/controller was opened, we would poll
every time anyhow, skipping this function.
* Test programs use project references instead of hard-coding SDL library dependencies
* Test data files are copied only when needed.
* Copying SDL2.dll is no longer necessary
* Fixed /SAFESEH warning
* Fixed attempted rebuild of SDL every time a test program is run
SDL2 reports the following message when we type the "/" on br-abnt2 keyboards:
The key you just pressed is not recognized by SDL. \
To help get this fixed, please report this to the SDL mailing list \
<sdl@libsdl.org> X11 KeyCode 97 (89), X11 KeySym 0x2F (slash).
That's because the corresponding entry in the scancodes table is
marked with value SDL_SCANCODE_UNKNOWN.
This commit fixes that adding the value SDL_SCANCODE_SLASH for this entry.
- Removed USE_GETTICKCOUNT code; it's never used now.
- Reduced the number of preprocessor checks for WinRT.
- Renamed timeSetPeriod() so it doesn't look like a Win32 API call.
An existing hint lets apps that don't need the timer resolution changed avoid
this, to save battery, etc, but this fixes several problems in timing, audio
callbacks not firing fast enough, etc.
Fixes Bugzilla #2944.
This makes the X error handler used for GL context creation handle *all* errors
and provide the user with specific error messages when SDL_GL_CreateContext
fails.
CR: icculus@icculus.org
Alex Szpakowski
Patch to fix the y component of the position of fullscreen windows in OS X.
In Mac OS X with the latest Mercurial code, when a window is in exclusive-fullscreen the y component of its position is offset by the same amount that is normally taken up by the menubar, resulting in a black bar at the top of the screen.
The recent changes to the internal ConvertNSRect function make it treat the bottom of the menubar as 0 for the y component of window positions, even when the window is fullscreen and 'above' the menubar.
I have attached a patch which fixes the issue by only making the window position relative to the menubar in windowed modes.
Eric Wasylishen
Steps to reproduce:
- Run testwm2 app in the SDLTest Xcode project
- Press Control+R to enable relative mouse mode. The mouse cursor should disappear.
- Press Control+Enter to enter fullscreen.
- Expected: a black screen with no cursor visible. Observed: a black screen, but the mouse cursor is visible in the middle of the screen. It doesn't move when I move the mouse.
Reproduced with latest sdl2 hg (changeset f6010ead184f) on OS X 10.9.2. Can't reproduce the problem on OS X 10.6.8 or 10.7.5.
I'm speculating that this really an Apple bug.. but anyway, the attached workaround seems to fix it for me, and I think it's fairly safe.
A more obvious idea, sticking a call SDL_SetCursor(NULL) at the end of Cocoa_SetWindowFullscreen, didn't work.
Eric Wasylishen
The problem seems to be the spaces handling code in -setFullscreenSpace: (SDL_cocoawindow.m) is incorrectly reporting that the SDL_WINDOW_FULLSCREEN -> windowed transition has already happened.
i.e. I saw this case was getting hit when trying to leave SDL_WINDOW_FULLSCREEN:
"else if (state == isFullscreenSpace) {
return YES; /* already there. */
}"
With the attached patch, both Control+Enter (SDL_WINDOW_FULLSCREEN toggle) and Option+Enter (SDL_WINDOW_FULLSCREEN_DESKTOP toggle) work in an sdl test app (I tried testwm2). Tested on OS X 10.9.2.
snake5creator
When starting application with the usual "double click on file" method on Windows, only holding the last click, an unnecessary MOUSEBUTTONDOWN event is sent before the initial MOUSEMOTION event, and mouse button state is stuck in the sense that it takes a subsequent button release, followed by another press for the system to resume sending events (beginning with the next button release / MOUSEBUTTONUP event).
Input event log with held double-click startup: http://i.imgur.com/nypGKR2.png
Without: http://i.imgur.com/yaIqAvV.png
From Melesie
I noticed that when user switches from fullscreen mode to windowed mode and exits application while in windowed mode, Windows performs an additional change of display settings, even though desktop resolution is the same as current one. This causes short black screen to show up. The only way I know of avoiding this is to explicitly switch to default display settings found in registry. MSDN documentation for ChangeDisplaySettingsEx states:
Passing NULL for the lpDevMode parameter and 0 for the dwFlags parameter is the easiest way to return to the default mode after a dynamic mode change.
This would have been a one-line patch to the documentation (specifying that
captures only work as long as the left mouse button is pressed), but I didn't
like that, so I got a little crazy about this instead.
There were several good arguments for this: it's how Windows works with
WM_NCHITTEST, SDL doesn't need to manage a list of rects, it allows more
control over the regions (how do you use rects to cleanly surround a circular
button?), the callback can be more optimized than a iterating a list of
rects, and you don't have to send an updated list of rects whenever the
window resizes or layout changes.
This should be a "long" which on a 64-bit system is likely to be > 32-bits,
causing XGetICValues() to write past the end of the variable (and stack).
Fixes Bugzilla #2513.
All WinRT builds of SDL will now output, "SDL2.dll". Previously, the Windows
8.x/RT builds would output, "SDL.dll", and Windows Phone 8 builds would output,
"SDL_WinPhone.dll". The change to "SDL2.dll" puts WinRT dll naming in-line with
that seen on Win32.
SDL/WinRT's MSVC project files will now appear as either "SDL2-WinRT" or
"SDL2-WinPhone", when displaying in MSVC.
This set of changes should not break any older WinRT or Windows Phone 8 app
builds that rely on MSVC's Project-to-Project reference system to build SDL2 for
the correct platform(s), and to install SDL2 dll files into the apps' output
packages. App builds that reference SDL dll files directly should, however,
now reference "SDL2.dll".
It seems like a net improvement in all the scenarios Sam and I could
think of, and looking at hg history it was added for fullscreen
window management specifically. Much of that code has changed since
then, but maybe it needs to stay there for that and simply be moved
to a fullscreen condition check.
It would solve this issue:
https://bugzilla.libsdl.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2439
As well as cases where on SteamOS, we hide/show specific Steam
overlay windows while expecting them to stay in the background, since
changing the window stacking order really angers the NVIDIA driver.
CR: Sam.
(Most of its complaints here are that these ints can be negative, although
they wouldn't been in sane cases. Checking sanity is what assertions do, and
it placates the analyzer appropriately.)
These scenarios can happen when a GPU is switched, its driver updated, or in
some virtual machines (such as Parallels) are suspended and then resumed. In
these cases, all GPU resources will already be lost, and it's up to the app to
recover.
For now, SDL's D3D11 renderer will handle this by freeing all GPU resources,
including all textures, and then sending a SDL_RENDER_TARGETS_RESET event.
It's currently up to an app to intercept this event, destroy all of its
textures, then recreate them from scratch.
SDL_WINDOWEVENT_FOCUS_LOST is now sent when an app's native window is hidden.
Likewise, SDL_WINDOWEVENT_FOCUS_GAINED is sent when an app's window is shown.
This mimicks behavior seen on iOS and Android.
SDL_WINDOWEVENT_MINIMIZED and SDL_WINDOWEVENT_RESTORED are now sent when the
app's native window is hidden and shown. Previously, these were sent when an
app was suspended and resumed. On Windows 8.x/RT, an app may be sent to the
background without being suspended, which previously meant that
SDL_WINDOWEVENT_MINIMIZED might never have been sent. (On Windows Phone 8,
however, this seems to be different, whereby apps sent to the background appear
to always get suspended.)
SDL_APP_WILLENTERBACKGROUND is now sent as soon as the app is told that it is
about to go to the background. SDL_APP_DIDENTERBACKGROUND is sent via a WinRT
'deferral operation', which is how WinRT gives apps a bit of extra time
(multiple seconds worth) to prepare for an app-backgrounding.
The distinction may be important as the deferral operation's code is always run
in a separate thread. For Direct3D-only apps, this means that between the
two SDL app-backgrounded events, SDL_APP_WILLENTERBACKGROUND will be the only
one run from the main thread. Given that some WinRT operations can only be done
on the main thread (operations to the CoreWindow fall into this category), this
could be important.
It is important to note that pre-deferral code may only have a very short bit of
time to execute code, less so than code run in the deferral operation (where
SDL_APP_DIDENTERBACKGROUND is sent from), which usually gets several seconds to
run.
SDL/WinRT did have support for OpenGL ES 2 via an older version of ANGLE/WinRT,
however its API changed a few months ago, and SDL/WinRT would crash when trying
to use it. It would also occasionally crash when using the older version.
This changeset should make SDL/WinRT work with the latest version, as
available via MS Open Tech's git repository of it at
https://github.com/msopentech/angle
Older versions of ANGLE/WinRT (from either https://github.com/stammen/angleproject
or https://bitbucket.org/DavidLudwig/angleproject) will need to be updated to
MS Open Tech's latest version.
It's been hardcoded out forever now, but I've now forcibly removed it with
the preprocessor so static analysis doesn't complain about it for now.
Eventually I want to rewrite or remove this code.
This is actually a false-positive, in this case, since Clang doesn't know
that SDL_SetError() only ever returns -1. Feature request to improve that,
with explanation about these specific SDL patches, is here:
http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=19208
Rotation detection and handling should now work across all, publicly-released,
WinRT-based platforms (Windows 8.0, Windows 8.1, and Windows Phone 8.0).
This changeset prevents IDXGISwapChain::ResizeBuffers from being invoked on
Windows Phone 8, a function that isn't available on the platform (but is
available on other Windows platforms). The call would fail, which ultimately
led to a crash.
This changeset also attempts to make sure that the D3D11 swap chain is created
at the correct size, when using Windows Phone 8.
Still TODO: make sure rotation-querying works across relevant Windows
platforms (that support Direct3D 11.x).
Fix to allow using SDL when compiling with v110_xp or v120_xp -- compiling with VS2012/VS2013 with the XP targeting option.
In order to ensure that we can target Windows XP we compile with the v120_xp toolset instead of v120. This means that we use an earlier SDK version and it means that winapifamily.h is not available. Compiling for this old SDK can be detected using the _USING_V110_SDK71_ define which is set through the %(PreprocessorDefinitions) option.
Eventually we'll probably move the version checking to higher level code and report the actual version of context that got created, but to avoid breakage we'll leave it like this for now.
The D3D11 renderer is now slightly faster than D3D9 on my Windows 8 machine (testsprite2 runs at 3400 FPS vs 3100 FPS)
This will need tweaking to fix the Windows RT build.
SDL was expected that each SDL_DisplayMode had a driverdata field that was SDL_malloc'ed, and was calling SDL_free on them. This change moves WinRT's driverdata content into a SDL_malloc'ed field.
Pressing the hardware back button on a Windows Phone 8 device will now cause SDL to emit a pair of key-down and key-up events, with the SDL scancode, SDL_SCANCODE_AC_BACK.
By default, if WinRT's native back-button-press events are not explicitly marked as 'handled', then Windows Phone will terminate the app. More details on Microsoft's reasoning behind this can be found on MSDN, at http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windowsphone/develop/jj247550(v=vs.105).aspx
To mark back-button-press events as 'handled', set SDL_HINT_WINRT_HANDLE_BACK_BUTTON to 1. Setting it to anything else will cause these events to not be marked as 'handled'.
Due to limitations in Windows Phone's APIs, SDL will emit a virtual key-up event immediately after the back button's key-down event is registered. Unfortunately, Windows Phone 8 only allows one to register for back-button-press events, and not back-button-release events.
This change is only relevant for Windows 8, 8.1, and RT apps, and only for those that are network-enabled. Such apps must feature a link to a privacy policy, which must be displayed via the Windows Settings charm. This is needed to pass Windows Store app-certification.
Using SDL_SetHint, along with SDL_HINT_WINRT_PRIVACY_POLICY_URL and optionally SDL_HINT_WINRT_PRIVACY_POLICY_LABEL, will cause SDL/WinRT to create a link inside the Windows Settings charm, as invoked from within an SDL-based app.
Network-enabled Windows Phone apps do not need to set this hint, and should provide some sort of in-app means to display their privacy policy. Microsoft does not appear to provide an OS-integrated means for displaying such on Windows Phone.
The destination target's alpha wasn't getting set correctly in many cases. Among other problems, this prevented some alpha-blended textures from displaying correctly in Windows Phone 8's multitasking screen.
The d3d11 renderer now uses the same blending settings found in the d3d9 renderer.
The projection and view matrices are now computed ahead of time, as they both get computed in the same spot, and typically not often. If this does, however, become a performance problem later on, this change can always be reverted.
Previously, the shaders would get compiled separately, the output of which would need to be packaged into the app. This change should make SDL's dll be the only binary needed to include SDL in a WinRT app.
SDL 2.x recently accepted patches to enable OpenGL ES 2 support via Google's ANGLE library. The thought is to try to eventually merge SDL/WinRT's OpenGL code with SDL-official's.
Leszek Godlewski
As described in the other thread
(http://lists.libsdl.org/pipermail/sdl-libsdl.org/2013-November/091997.html),
I've run into a case of SDL2 not recognizing a wireless Xbox 360
controller receiver properly on Debian Linux amd64 testing.
Apparently, the generated GUID is slightly different.
Device in question:
Bus 001 Device 015: ID 045e:0291 Microsoft Corp. Xbox 360 Wireless
Receiver for Windows
BurnSpamAddress
Steps to reproduce:
1. Grab the cursor with SDL_SetCursorGrab()
2. Alt-tab away from the window
3. Click on the titlebar of the window
This will cause the window to disappear underneath the taskbar!
This appears to be a general issue with ClipCursor() on windows, i.e. I am getting the same behavior if I call ClipCursor() directly.
It is caused by a feedback loop between the ClipCursor function and the modal resize/move event loop that handles mouse-based sizing on Windows.
Ghassan Al-Mashareqa
The SDL_ceil function is implemented incorrectly when HAVE_CEIL is not defined (HAVE_LIBC not defined).
The following code:
double val = SDL_ceil(2.3);
printf("%g", val);
prints "2.0", as STD_ceil is defined as:
double
SDL_ceil(double x)
{
#ifdef HAVE_CEIL
return ceil(x);
#else
return (double)(int)((x)+0.5);
#endif /* HAVE_CEIL */
}
This functions is used in the SDL_BuildAudioResampleCVT function of the audio subsystem (SDL_audiocvt.c), and causes a bug in that function.
Lets Android take care of which is the primary pointer (the one acting as the
mouse in SDL), reorganized the Java side code as well to make it easier to
understand.
Joe LeVeque
Line 3 of SDL_VS2013.sln file reads "# Visual Studio 2012" instead of "# Visual Studio 2013" which causes Windows to associate the file with Visual Studio 2012, if installed, instead of Visual Studio 2013.
Ryan C. Gordon
To keep the directory layout sane, we should probably move this one piece of source to the linux catch-all directory, instead of making it look like this is part of an SDL "input" subsystem.
Marcus von Appen
clang provides support for optimized atomics.
The attached patch enables the cmake build system to take clang into account on checking for atomics.
norfanin
The MMX path in SDL_fillrect.c uses the SSE intrinsic _mm_stream_pi. The function or symbol provided by the compiler will not be present because the SSE header may not get included. The linker will complain about an undefined reference.
Since this is the only intrinsic used here (and someone forgot to create one for MOVQ), I think the MMX path can be removed completely. At least I don't see another way to move 64-bits from an MMX register to memory.
If it works correctly you should see a square moving from the upper left to the lower right, with a little yellow box at the top of the moving square.
You can pass --target as a command line option to have it use a render target instead of rendering directly to the screen. The output should be identical in this case.
philhassey
On OS/X after calling SDL_SetWindowBordered right mouse clicks no longer register.
Steps to Reproduce:
1. Open a windowed window on OS/X. (With the border on.)
2. e.button.button will give values 1,2,3 depending on which mouse button I click.
3. Call SDL_SetWindowBordered to disable the border.
4. e.button.button will only give values 1,2. 3 (right mouse button) stops coming through.
Expected result:
I expect all mouse buttons to register.
Haiku uses most of the standard pthread API, with a few #ifdefs where we
still need to fallback onto the old BeOS APIs.
BeOS, however, does not support pthreads (or maybe doesn't support it well),
so I'm unplugging support for the platform with this changeset. Be Inc went
out of business in 2001.
Ivan Rubinson
As it turns out, it was impossible to render a texture flipped diagonally (both vertically and horizontally) with one RenderCopyEx call.
With help from #SDL @ freenode, we came up with a fix.
"Terminating app due to uncaught exception 'NSInternalInconsistencyException', reason: 'backgroundWindows not nil in enterFullScreenTransitionWithOptions:animated:activatingIt:'"
To reproduce this, run testsprite2, press Alt-Enter once, again while it's animating to fullscreen, and then again while it's animating out of fullscreen.
philhassey
Overview: While SDL_SetTextInputRect works perfectly to move my window out of the way of the virtual keyboard using SDL2/Android, on iOS this function has no effect.
Steps to Reproduce: Call SDL_SetTextInputRect with a rect near the bottom of the screen before calling SDL_StartTextInput.
Actual Results: The iOS virtual keyboard is displayed after calling SDL_StartTextInput, but the screen is not shifted to reveal the TextInputRect region.
Expected Results: The screen should be shifted to reveal the TextInputRect region (like with SDL2/Android.)
This patch implements SDL_SetTextInputRect for uikit/iOS.
It sets up notification handlers to respond to changes in the display of the keyboard. These handlers then change the frame of the view so it is moved out of the way of the keyboard as per SetTextInputRect.
This fixes behavior with the new Mac OS X fullscreen space code, as well as improve behavior on Linux desktops.
The default for normal fullscreen mode is still to minimize because we're likely doing a mode switch and don't want to stick around as a borderless window in the background.
I still haven't figured out why my application is being minimized when I try to raise, it but my previous workaround is causing issues.
For now the correct way to raise and/or restore the window is as follows:
if ( !(SDL_GetWindowFlags( window ) & SDL_WINDOW_MINIMIZED) )
{
SDL_RaiseWindow( window );
}
if ( SDL_GetWindowFlags( window ) & SDL_WINDOW_MINIMIZED )
{
SDL_RestoreWindow( window );
}
I will investigate the window state change rules more fully in the future.
CR: Alfred Reynolds
When we get a kCGEventTapDisabledByTimeout or
kCGEventTapDisabledByUserInput, the event tap would perform an invalid
memory access. void pointers are so fun.
This code only runs if you explicitly build with SDL_MAC_NO_SANDBOX.
Patrice Mandin
I encountered a problem trying to load a 8-bit paletted BMP file using SDL. This file was generated using GIMP 2.8. It has a big BITMAPINFOHEADER (0x6c bytes for biSize field), and thus the palette is incorrectly setup.
Lorenzo Pistone
this patch adds support for the horizontal wheel in Windows. It is shamelessly copied off the vertical wheel code, but I guess that that is a value added in consistency.
Thanks to Denis Bernard!
Also, changed the Android manifest so the app doesn't quit with orientation
changes, and made testgles.c exit properly on Android.
This bumps the build SDK level to 12 (up from 10). Runtime requirements remain
the same (at API level < 12 joystick support is disabled).
Also enables building SDL for armv7 and x86.
A port of the ANGLE library (OpenGL ES 2.0 for Direct3D) to WinRT, via https://github.com/stammen/angleproject, is used as a base.
To enable, clone 'angleproject' into the directory one above where SDL/WinRT is, open the file SDL/include/SDL_config_winrt.h, and uncomment the #defines that begin with 'SDL_VIDEO_OPENGL'. From there, apps can create an OpenGL capable SDL_Window via the flag, SDL_WINDOW_OPENGL, and an OpenGL ES 2 context via SDL_GL_CreateContext. The Direct3D 11.1 renderer cannot be used alongside SDL_WINDOW_OPENGL. Only Windows 8/8.1 is supported for now. Shaders may need to be precompiled, in some (all?) cases.
Joseph Carter
Whitespace in a makefile is consequential. In fact, it's part of the syntax. And at least a few versions of make puke on Makefiles with lines indented with spaces, not tabs. Obviously GNU make used on Debianish systems is not strictly among them, or this would fail. Even so, I cannot resist the urge to pedantically fix this, if only to get rid of the bright syntax error red coloration in vim. :)
Joseph Carter
test/testdrawchessboard.c checks out of hg with DOS line endings on non-dos systems. Fixed via:
perl -pi -e 's/\r//g' test/testdrawchessboard.c
norfanin
The audio_enumerateAndNameAudioDevicesNegativeTests test in testautomation_audio.c reports a failure for SDL_GetAudioDeviceName when called on a driver that has only the default device. SDL_GetNumAudioDevices reports 1, but SDL_GetAudioDeviceName does not check if the index passed by the caller is in that range in this case. For positive numbers anyway.
This can be reproduced with the dummy driver on Windows and Linux.
Daniel Ribeiro Maciel
CMake is not adding src/core/linux/*.c to the build, linking to SDL results in errors:
(...)/libSDL2-2.0.so.1.0.1: undefined reference to `SDL_UDEV_AddCallback'
(...)/libSDL2-2.0.so.1.0.1: undefined reference to `SDL_UDEV_Poll'
(...)/libSDL2-2.0.so.1.0.1: undefined reference to `SDL_UDEV_Init'
(...)/libSDL2-2.0.so.1.0.1: undefined reference to `SDL_UDEV_Quit'
(...)/libSDL2-2.0.so.1.0.1: undefined reference to `SDL_UDEV_DelCallback'
(...)/libSDL2-2.0.so.1.0.1: undefined reference to `SDL_UDEV_Scan'
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
Mai Lavelle
I've recently tried to create multiple windows and process key events for them, and found that key events weren't being generated for most of the windows. After some investigating I've observed the following effects. All but the most recently created window experience these effects...
- a focus lost event is generated immediately after the focus gained event, even tho window still has focus
- key events report window id 0 rather than the id of the window which has focus, SDL thinks no window has focus?
- giving focus to a non SDL window and then selecting an SDL window causes events to be generated as expected, but only until focus changes again
Focus change events are queued and delayed (200 ticks) before they are dispatched. The problem occurs when a focus out and focus in event are received on the same tick. When these delayed events are dispatched they will be sent in the order determined by the window list rather than the order in which they are received.
The focus out dispatch is implemented by calling SDL_SetKeyboardFocus(NULL). This will remove focus from any window, regardless of whether it is the one originally targeted by the X11 event.
Since SDL_SetKeyboardFocus() will always dispatch a focus lost event as needed, the easiest solution is simply to only call SDL_SetKeyboardFocus(NULL) when SDL_GetKeyboardFocus() matches the target window.
The first bug had mouse motion events not getting sent out on non-touch devices, if and when a mouse button wasn't pressed.
The second bug caused virtual mouse motion events to get sent out-of-order on touch devices: the motion event would get sent after the touch occurred, rather than before.
To enable the Debug Layer, set the hint, SDL_HINT_RENDER_DIRECT3D11_DEBUG to '1'.
The Debug Layer will be turned off by default, both in Release and Debug builds (of SDL).
Alex Szpakowski
I actually made a mistake when creating the previous patch file... I forgot to include a crucial line which changed.
I've attached a new patch which just changes the line I forgot, since the other part has already been applied to the repository.
I tested this one by doing a clean rebuild of SDL, and it works with the new patch.
J?nis R?cis
Reopening as compilation with ANSI C throws lots of unnecessary warnings, both using MinGW and using Linux GCC. (BTW, what happened? MinGW is broken to all hell. sdl2-config does not even link SDLMain anymore?)
I think this may have been lost somewhere, so again: GCC supports inlining via __inline__ in all known versions of GCC, regardless of the C standard in use. Please don't assume that __STRICT_ANSI__ implies no inlining support.
Nitz
I was going through the SDL_IntersectRectAndLine function and wondered to see the ComputeOutCode function implementation.
The problem in this algo is, x and y axis are getting check with respect to 0, Which is wrong, it should be get checked with respect to rectangle x and y axis.
C.W. Betts
The recommended way of getting a file name that POSIX file APIs can open in OS X when using an NSString is -[NSString fileSystemRepresentation]. However, the current filesystem API in hg uses -[NSString UTF8String].
Denis Bernard
Background information: http://developer.android.com/reference/android/hardware/SensorEvent.html#values
Steps to reproduce: compile testjoystick.c as an android app (change screen size according to your device). While running the app, also run:
adb logcat -c; adb logcat -s 'SDL:*' 'SDL/APP:*'
When tilting the device left/right, the joystick moves in the opposite direction of what one would expect. Or at least, the behaviour is not consistent with the Y axis.
Also when the device sits on a table (obviously not moving), the Z axis value oscillates between -32000 and +32000 (by overflow):
I/SDL/APP ( 1994): Joystick 0 axis 2 value: 32511
I/SDL/APP ( 1994): Joystick 0 axis 2 value: 32575
I/SDL/APP ( 1994): Joystick 0 axis 2 value: 32383
I/SDL/APP ( 1994): Joystick 0 axis 2 value: -32386
I/SDL/APP ( 1994): Joystick 0 axis 2 value: -32450
I/SDL/APP ( 1994): Joystick 0 axis 2 value: -32578
This is caused by the accelerometer yielding a constant value around 9.81 for Z and feeding something like 0.9 to 1.1 to the joystick driver, resulting in the overflow.
Proposed fix in SDLActivity.java (swap X and subtract G from Z reading)
Andreas Ertelt
The problem in question is caused by changeset 7771 (http://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/5486e579872e / https://bugzilla.libsdl.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2121)
The redefinition of __inline__ (introduced by the addition of begin_code.h:128's "|| __STRICT_ANSI__") results in mingw's gcc throwing multiple
warning: always_inline function might not be inlinable [-Wattributes]
as well as a whole bunch of redefinitions of mingw internals which break linking of projects including the SDL2 headers.
manuel.montezelo
Since the bug report[1] in 2006 Debian is shipping the patch attached.
[1] http://bugs.debian.org/375822
Maybe nowadays you don't propagate that library for linking, so maybe the patch should be dropped, but at the moment I do not have an easy/quick way to check it.
So I am submitting this report in the case that you consider it useful (even if maybe the patch itself has to be reworked), or otherwise learn if the patch is unneeded or even harmful.
Sean McKean
I am running Ubuntu 12.04 (GL version 1.4 Mesa 8.0.4) , and on drawing a set of lines through the renderer through SDL_RenderDrawLines() (looped or not) or SDL_RenderDrawRect() I notice a pixel missing. For RenderDrawLines() it seems to be the second point in the sequence; for RenderDrawRect() it is the lower-right. This can be fixed by specifying SDL_RenderDrawPoint(s), but wouldn't it be easier to specify each pixel in a GL_POINTS glBegin/End loop in the OpenGL code, just to make sure?
I also ran the same program on Android; the rendering seemed to be correct, which uses glDrawArrays.
Kevin Wells
Overview:
SDL_RenderClear is only clearing part of a texture when it is the render target and a different size than the screen.
Steps to Reproduce:
1) This only occurs with the render driver set to direct3d, so: SDL_SetHint(SDL_HINT_RENDER_DRIVER,"direct3d")
Also, my window was 1280x720.
2) Create a texture for a render target with a resolution of 1024x1024:
texture=SDL_CreateTexture(main_window.renderer,SDL_PIXELFORMAT_RGBA8888,SDL_TEXTUREACCESS_TARGET,1024,1024);
SDL_SetTextureBlendMode(texture,SDL_BLENDMODE_BLEND);
3) Target the texture for rendering: SDL_SetRenderTarget(main_window.renderer,texture);
4) Set the draw color to whatever you want (problem occurs with both 0,0,0,0 and 0,0,0,255 among others) and then clear the render target:
SDL_SetRenderDrawColor(main_window.renderer,0,0,0,0);
SDL_RenderClear(main_window.renderer);
Actual Results:
Only about the top 3/4s of the texture gets cleared on calling SDL_RenderClear. The bottom 1/4 or so does not clear.
Expected Results:
Entire render target should be cleared.
Marcus von Appen
The autotools-based code uses X_CFLAGS and some hackish x_includes code to add some necessary includes to SDL_CFLAGS for proper X11 and OpenGL include handling.
At the moment, the cmake-baed build code does not do that. Below is a patch, which provides the necessary changes to add a proper include to the SDL_CFLAGS.
J?nis R?cis
Brief history:
We recently ported a game from SDL 1.2 to SDL 2. While doing Windows testing, I soon discovered that the game exits without opening a window with my cross-compiled SDL2.dll, but works great with the SDL2.dll from the MinGW SDK on libsdl.org. It was as simple as swapping out the DLLs to make it work.
Running the game in Wine showed that the game actually does run, up until the call to SDL_CreateWindow, which fails and leads the game to print out an error:
Failure to create window (LoadLibrary("OPENGL32.DLL"): (null))
Which basically says that there was no error, but maybe that's a Wine quirk.
The error string originates in SDL_windowsopengl.c, in WIN_GL_LoadLibrary, which contains this piece of code:
wpath = WIN_UTF8ToString(path);
_this->gl_config.dll_handle = LoadLibrary(wpath);
SDL_free(wpath);
if (!_this->gl_config.dll_handle) {
char message[1024];
SDL_snprintf(message, SDL_arraysize(message), "LoadLibrary(\"%s\")",
path);
return WIN_SetError(message);
}
After some digging, I discovered the culprit: WIN_UTF8ToString returns NULL. Why? Because it calls iconv_open from an iconv.dll that does not support the UCS-2-INTERNAL encoding. Why does the official SDL2.dll work? Because it calls no external iconv functions at all.
It turns out that the Fedora MinGW infrastructure (from which I obtained the conventiently prebuilt iconv.dll) does not provide a DLL from libiconv, but instead provides a DLL from a minimal Windows library called win-iconv. Which knows a good bit, but doesn't know anything about UCS-2-INTERNAL:
http://code.google.com/p/win-iconv/source/browse/trunk/win_iconv.c#155
So there are two problems here:
1) The error message is clearly useless, because LoadLibrary is an innocent bystander. Instead wpath should probably checked for NULL, and a more appropriate error should be set. Ideally something that makes it clear than an external iconv is causing trouble.
2) SDL doomed itself at the ./configure step, by finding an existing iconv and happily using it without confirming support for the mandatory encodings required by SDL.
There are certainly a few easy ways out of the situation (although I didn't yet manage to figure out how to prevent ./configure from looking for external iconv), but this had me completely stomped for a good while, so I figured it's worth writing down if anything.
(Search also found this, which talks a little about using UTF-16LE instead of UCS-2-INTERNAL: https://bugzilla.libsdl.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2075)
Denis Bernard
Background information: http://android-developers.blogspot.fr/2010/09/one-screen-turn-deserves-another.html and http://developer.android.com/reference/android/hardware/SensorEvent.html
Right now, the Android accelerometer event handler feeds raw accelerometer data to the SDL Joystick driver. The result is that for landscape-only applications, the axis need to be swapped if running on a portrait device (like a phone), and vice-versa: running a portrait only app on a landscape device like a tablet.
The purpose of this patch is to perform coordinate remapping of the accelerometer data before feeding it to the SDL joystick driver so that the X axis of the joystick is always aligned with the X axis of the display, same for the Y axis.
This has been tested on applications that support screen orientation changes as well as applications with fixed screen orientations, both on phones and tablets.
Andreas Ertelt
SDL_dxjoystick.c is setting the classguid for device (dis)connect events to USB Devices in general:
dbh.dbcc_classguid = GUID_DEVINTERFACE_USB_DEVICE;
Wouldn't it make more sense to have it just subscribe to Hid device events? This would mean less meaningless events reaching the application.
Marcus von Appen
Revision eecbcfed77c9 of the SDL hg repo introduces the new
SDL_GetSystemRAM() function, which breaks the build on FreeBSD. Find
attached a patch, which unbreaks the build and also should (for most
cases) properly implement the sysctl support it.
norfanin
Fixes the version check for some functions that are only present with the MSVC 2013 CRT libraries.
I did my testing wrong and failed to see that 2012 doesn't have these functions. Microsoft implemented them in their upcoming 2013 version, though. The attached patch changes it to the check for the next version.
I also removed the HAVE_ITOA because that would require linking with oldnames.lib and it's easier to just let the SDL implementation take over.
Joseph Carter
There's a whole set of configure tests for BSD's libusbhid, and they only matter on BSD. However, if you have the library on Linux, it gets pulled in as library bloat. And it's bloat of the highest order since not a single function call to the library is ever made unless you're on a *BSD.
Denis Bernard
This patch to Android.mk adds support for static linking of libSDL for Android applications. A patched readme with static build instructions is also provided.
It does not break existing build environments setup according to the README-android.txt since the static library version will not be built in not required.
The static build uses the Android NDK module system (see docs/IMPORT-MODULE.html in the NDK folder and step 5 in the instructions below).
Instructions:
1. Copy the android-project directory wherever you want to keep your projects
and rename it to the name of your project.
2. Create a symlink to SDL/src/main/android/SDL_android_main.c as
<project>/jni/src/SDL_android_main.c
3. Rename <project>/jni/src/Android_static.mk to <project>/jni/src/Android.mk
(overwrite the existing one)
4. Edit <project>/jni/src/Android.mk to include your source files
5. create and export an environment variable named NDK_MODULE_PATH that points
to the parent directory of this SDL directory. e.g.:
export NDK_MODULE_PATH="$PWD"/..
6. Edit <project>/src/org/libsdl/app/SDLActivity.java and remove the call to
System.loadLibrary("SDL2") line 42.
7. Run 'ndk-build' (a script provided by the NDK). This compiles the C source
Although this requires an environment variable to be setup, it can be added once and for all to the main Android.mk of the project.
T. Joseph Carter
As discussed (possibly to death), the Linux joystick driver does not actually report events for added or removed joysticks when you haven't got udev support.
We simply cannot know about removed joysticks without udev. But we can (and we should) report adding them. This brings the legacy case in line with pretty much the rest of SDL's joystick drivers.
This reverts http://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/7cdeb64faa72 and fixes it in
the correct way. If you call SDL_SetWindowPosition on a fullscreen
window, it would update the x & y variables for the window, but not
actually move the window (since it was fullscreen). That would make the
internal state of the SDL_Window incorrect, causing
SDL_WarpMouseInWindow to offset incorrectly.
This makes it so SDL_SetWindowPosition updates the `windowed' x & y
coordinates, which take effect when you revert from fullscreen.
norfanin
Some of the tests keep using the pointers of a destroyed SDL_Window when the common event handling handled the close event. The event handler itself does not NULL the pointer after the destruction.
The attached patch adds a loop in the handler that will assign NULL to the destroyed window. It also adds checks to some of the tests so they skip those windows by checking for NULL.
On Android available touch devices are now added with video initialization (like
the keyboard). This fixes SDL_GetNumTouchDevices() returning 0 before any touch
events happened although there is a touch screen available. The adding of touch
devices after a touch event was received is still active to allow connecting
devices later (if this is possible) and to provide a fallback if the new init
did not work somehow. For the implementation JNI was used and API level 9 is
required. There seems to be nothing in the Android NDK's input header (input.h)
to implement everything on C side without communication with Java side.
This can break builds of existing SDL/WinRT apps. To fix, remove the reference to SDL_winrt_main.cpp, then add a reference to the renamed file, SDL_winrt_main_NonXAML.cpp. If you get a build error about a missing .winmd file, enable the /ZW compiler flag for that one file (at minimum).
1. remove references to SDL's project files from the Visual Studio Solution. To note, these project files have been renamed, and will show up in Visual Studio with the text, "load failed".
2. add the SDL project files back into the Visual Studio Solution
3. for each project that should link to SDL, add a reference to it. This can be done by right-clicking on it in Visual Studio, selecting "References...", clicking "Add New Reference", checking the box next to the SDL project, then closing each dialog by clicking OK.
SDL_mixer, SDL_ttf, and SDL_image for WinRT have been updated, and will be pushed to my Bitbucket repos with these changes having been made. If you do not pull in these changes, be sure to re-add to them the reference to the SDL project, as described above.
XAudio2 2.8's header file, xaudio2.h, doesn't compile in plain C code for WinRT
apps, not automatically at least. Initially, this file was adapted to compile
as C++, however these changes are now deprecated in favor of some preprocessor
based hacks that should get xaudio2.h to compile (while making sure XAudio2
still works).
This change should allow apps to render correctly in Portrait mode, at minimum,
Support for orientation changes is pending.
Thanks to Pierre-Yves for assistance!
This is part of an overall effort to use the name, "WinRT", rather than "WindowsRT" (or "Windows RT"), as the shorthand name often seems to mean something different than the longhand name. (WinRT is an API, Windows RT is a product name)
This change removes some code that attempted to allow non-standard window sizes, the idea of which was to do display scaling, and a hackish one at that. If display scaling is needed, use SDL_Renderer as appropriate.
- moved SDL_WinRTApp.* from src/video/windowsrt/ to src/core/winrt/, and renamed them to SDL_winrtapp.* (to mimick case-sensitivity used elsewhere in SDL)
- renamed all "windowsrt" directories (in src) to "winrt", as the shorthand name is used more often (and, IMO, "WinRT" != "Windows RT", not entirely at least)
norfanin
SetupWindowData in SDL_windowswindow.c doesn't initialize two members of SDL_WindowData with NULL. This is an issue because other parts of the SDL code seem to make the assumption that this is the case. WIN_DestroyWindowFramebuffer for example uses data->mdc and data->hbm if they're not NULL.
Lloyd Bryant
SDL_CreateTexture() is succeeding (i.e. returning a valid pointer) when the requested horizontal or vertical size of the texture exceeds the maximum allowed by the render. This results in hard-to-understand errors showing up when later attempting to use that texture (such as with SDL_SetRenderTarget()).
Added a reference to SDL_Direct3D9GetAdapterIndex to SDL_test_common.c so SDL will fail to compile if the new symbol isn't included properly.
CR: Jorgen
norfanin
Adds a condition so only the MSVC 2012 compiler defines the macros for the functions of its version.
Attaching a patch that adds a condition so that the HAVE_X supported by MSVC 2012 only get defined with that compiler. MSVC 2008 and 2010 will then build without any modification to the SDL source code.
Also moved HAVE_M_PI to a separate check. The Microsoft headers require _USE_MATH_DEFINES to be defined before they define the constants.
aBothe
I tried to experiment a bit with SDL2 and OpenGL today and noticed that something caused some weird flickering when resizing my nicely drawn SDL2/OpenGL window:
Just after resizing, the background went black and I had to let my OpenGL code redraw the contents..
However, after some hours spent with googling I found out that in OpenGL examples where this CWBackPixel flag was not used when creating X windows, there was no flickering while resizing the window.
See http://www.sbin.org/doc/Xlib/chapt_04.html @ "The Window Background" for more info.
# Date 1379621782 -3600
# Thu Sep 19 21:16:22 2013 +0100
Work around a false-positive in the X11 mouse wheel code
This false positive occurs when one particular button on my mouse is
pressed. The kernel which I'm using is patched to cause a release event to
be synthesised immediately when the mouse says that this button is pressed
because the mouse doesn't signal release until the button is next pressed.
(Also documents a false negative, observed with the horizontal scroll wheel
on the same mouse.)
X11_RestoreWindow() had a call ordering problem that prevented activation, and X11_RaiseWindow() wasn't attempting activation. Windows and OS X both activate in these cases.
CR: saml
SDL provides an SDL_VIDEO_X11_VISUALID environment variable that lets you override
window visuals, but it wasn't being checked for OpenGL windows.
CR: Sam.
We can't use _try/_except without the C runtime, and we can't use inline
asm with the Win64 compiler. We'll need to move this to an .asm file or
something later.
kikuchan
Some joysticks with high sampling rate need to be read() more fast,
otherwise it delay user inputs due to internal queue.
Especially, an app that issues SDL_PollEvent() not so frequent
Dmitry Marakasov
Unlike SDL_Rect (typedef struct SDL_Rect {} SDL_Rect), SDL_Point (typedef struct {} SDL_Point) structure is unnamed. This feels inconsistent and makes it impossible to use forward declaration for SDL_Point, having to include whole SDL_rect.h instead.
norfanin
When SDL_vsnprintf handles the %x format specifier, a boolean is set to signal forced lower case. It also should be able to signal forced upper case for the %X specifier. A boolean is not sufficient anymore. The attached patch adds an enum for the three cases: lower, upper and no change.
Pallav Nawani
This effects all SDL_Logxxx functions. On android, the debug output has a priority that is 1 higher than intended, ie, if you try SDL_LogInfo, the log has the priority of Warn instead.
SDL_syssem.c:159 comparison of unsigned expression >= 0 is always true
Solved by comparing unsigneds directly
SDL_systimer.c:164: warning: control may reach end of Compile
Solved by returning the default value if all else fails.
SDL_androidgl.c:41:1: warning: type specifier missing, defaults to 'int'
SDL_androidgl.c:47:1: warning: control reaches end of non-void function
Solved by adding void return type to the function implementation
Make it so XInput devices are listed before DirectInput devices, and that the XInput
devices are sorted by userid in ascending numeric order (so device 0 comes first).
Now multiple XInput controllers map correctly to device indexes instead of grabbing
the first available userid, and are completely separated out from DirectInput.
Also, the hardcoded limitation on number of DirectInput devices is gone. I don't
expect there to really ever be more than eight joysticks plugged into a machine, but
it was a leftover limitation for a static array we didn't actually use anymore.
Fixes Bugzilla #1984. (etc?)
If ac_x_libraries is empty it means that the library's found in the default path,
so we skip adding it to the XLIB variable as it screws up the search path.
- also adds OS X specific magic for bundled apps adding an Info.plist property of name SDL_FILESYSTEM_BASE_DIR_TYPE to the following values will change the bahaviour.
* bundle -- use the bundle directory e.g. "/Applications/MyGame/Blah.app/"
* parent -- use the bundle parent directory e.g. "/Applications/MyGame/"
* resource -- use the bundle resource directory (default) e.g. "/Applications/MyGame/Blah.app/Contents/Resources/"
- detect that you tried to open a gamecontroller in xinput mode and failed, then re-get the mapping for the dinput variant you did open (and most likely now just fail the open)
CR: SamL
This entire function is kind of a mess and more complicated than needed, but I don't want to refactor it too heavily tonight. May look at improving how the indexes are assigned more significanly later. The way it handles not finding a valid "gamepad" type device is also super broken, it leaves in place the xinput bindings but opens the controller with dinput and ends up with completely wrong mappings, not solving that now, but fixing the bug where we'd very frequently not find a controller due to gaps in assigned player numbers should mostly avoid it.
Andreas
The issue comes down to this line on MSDN:
"TranslateMessage produces WM_CHAR messages only for keys that are mapped to ASCII characters by the keyboard driver."
"WM_KEYDOWN and WM_KEYUP combinations produce a WM_CHAR or WM_DEADCHAR message. WM_SYSKEYDOWN and WM_SYSKEYUP combinations produce a WM_SYSCHAR or WM_SYSDEADCHAR message."
Except for WM_CHAR, none of these messages are used in SDL. Hence TranslateMessage should be dropped entirely and proper handling be included in the WM_KEYDOWN event.
Currently TranslateMessage is called for every message even if it must not be called in certain cases (like "An application should not call TranslateMessage if the TranslateAccelerator function returns a nonzero value.").
WM_CHAR message handling should remain for external processes posting these messages - additionally, WM_UNICHAR should be added.
I made a patch for src/video/windows/SDL_windowsevents.c that seems to work fine. It doesn't solve the "missing" composition for Khmer, but at least input for languages that cannot be mapped to ASCII characters (and for which IME is not used) will now work on Windows.
Jianyu Guan
I found I make a big mistake that when dstA==0, I just simply let *dstp=*srcp and forgot to make dstRGB = srcRGB*srcA.
The if consition "(*dstp & amask) == 0" in BlitRGBtoRGBPixelAlphaMMX and BlitRGBtoRGBPixelAlphaMMX3dNow should be removed.
I see the Remarks of function SDL_BlitSurface shows that "when SDL_BLENDMODE_BLEND, we have dstA = srcA + (dstA * (1-srcA))". however, I tested some pictures but the result implies "dstA=arcA" actually. I stepped into the source code, and found after I set SDL_BLENDMODE_BLEND for the source surface, the final blit function is BlitRGBtoRGBPixelAlphaMMX when I use SDL_BlitSurface on my computer. And I found these codes:
else if (alpha == amask) {
/* opaque alpha -- copy RGB, keep dst alpha */
*dstp = (*srcp & chanmask) | (*dstp & ~chanmask);
The same code is used in BlitRGBtoRGBPixelAlphaMMX3DNOW and BlitRGBtoRGBPixelAlpha. So I think they still keep dst alpha.
Best regards,
Jianyu Guan
If the app is in landscape mode and the user presses the power button, a pause
is followed immediately by a surfaceChanged event because the lock screen
is shown in portrait mode. This triggers a "false" resume.
So, we just pause and resume following the onWindowFocusChanged events.
Also, wait for SDL_APP_WILLENTERBACKGROUND and SDL_APP_DIDENTERBACKGROUND before
blocking the event pump.
Some more recent compilers emit SSE aligned store instructions for the loop,
causing crashes if the destination buffer isn't aligned on a 32-bit boundary.
This would also crash on platforms like ARM that require aligned stores.
This fixes a crash inside SDL_FillRect that happens with the official x64 mingw
build.
The Windows Phone 8.1 'MessageDialog' API only seems to support two buttons,
despite the documentation for such mentioning support for three. Trying to use
three or more buttons leads to an exception being thrown. As such, any attempt
to use more than two buttons via SDL_ShowMessageBox (on Windows Phone 8.1) will
lead to no message box getting shown, and the call returning an error.
The Win32 MessageBox and dialog APIs are not available in WinRT apps, to note.
More extensive message dialog support might be available at some point, if and
when XAML support is more fully fleshed-out. I'm not certain of this, though.
When a Windows Phone 8.0 app was rotated to anything but Portrait mode, touch
input coordinates, as well as virtual mouse coordinates, were usually getting
reported as coming from the wrong part of the screen.
If a Windows Phone 8.1 device was rotated to anything but Portrait mode,
the Direct3D 11 renderer's output wouldn't get aligned correctly with the
screen.
This change removes the "Shared" component from the Windows 8.1 and Windows
Phone 8.1 project files, then renames the projects to use a file structure
that's the same as used for the Windows 8.0 and Windows Phone 8.0 projects.
This change now places WinRT projects in the following directories:
VisualC-WinRT\WinRT81_VS2013\ -- Windows 8.1 project files
VisualC-WinRT\WinPhone81_VS2013\ -- Windows Phone 8.1 project files (NEW, as of this change)
VisualC-WinRT\WinRT80_VS2012\ -- Windows 8.0 project files
VisualC-WinRT\WinPhone80_VS2012\ -- Windows Phone 8.0 project files
Windows 8.0 and Windows Phone 8.0 projects, as well as apps or libs that
reference these, should be unaffected by this change.
Windows 8.1 and Windows Phone 8.1 based apps or libs that reference SDL's
projects directly will need to have their old references removed, then
replaced with new ones that point to the updated structure.
This is a step towards supporting "Universal" Windows apps, when building for
Windows Phone. SDL can now build against the Windows Phone 8.1 SDK, and apps
linked to it can run, however further work and testing is required as some
previously Phone-only code appears to no longer be applicable for
Windows Phone 8.1. The Windows 8.1 code paths does seem to be preferable, but
should probably be tested and updated on a finer-grained basis.
If in doubt, use the Windows Phone 8.0 projects for now, as located in
VisualC-WinRT/WinPhone80_VS2012/
TODO:
- look at any Windows Phone specific code paths in SDL, and see if Phone 8.1
should use the Windows Phone code path(s), or the Windows 8.x or 8.1 paths
The Win32 APIs, VerifyVersionInfoW and VerSetConditionMask, are not currently
available for use in WinRT apps. This change primarily #if[n]defs-out some
calls to them.
This commit also includes some base-level support for Universal apps.
TODO:
- add support for Windows Phone 8.1
- add support for satellite libs: SDL_image, SDL_ttf, and SDL_mixer
Setting the tag type will let libtool work even when it cannot infer
the type of the code being built. One way libtool may fail to infer
the tag type is if one uses a mock compiler (such as for static
analysis).
This allows the joystick hotplug to function without the main event loop
(specifically: without SDL_INIT_VIDEO), and moves explicit polling for
joysticks where it belongs at the low-level: in SDL_SYS_JoystickDetect().
This lets apps call SDL_JoystickUpdate() to get hotplug events and keep
SDL_NumJoysticks() correct, as expected. As SDL_PumpEvents() (and
SDL_PollEvents, etc) calls SDL_JoystickUpdate(), existing apps will function
as before.
Thanks to "raskie" on the forums for pointing this out!
This fixes a bug where we'd offset positions by the height of the dock, if it
was along the bottom of the screen.
Fixes https://bugzilla.libsdl.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2509
Thanks to Alex Szpakowski for bug & patch.
It used to be that SDL_SetWindowPosition was relative to the top of the screen,
which didn't make sense. In addition, borderless windows can be positioned
*below* the menubar, so SDL_SetWindowPosition(win, 0, 0) on a borderless window
would hide ~30ish pixels of the window below the menubar.
This fixes an issue where an empty cliprect is treated the same as a NULL
cliprect, causing the render backends to disable clipping.
Also adds a new API, SDL_RenderIsClipEnabled(render) that allows you to
differentiate between:
- SDL_RenderSetClipRect(render, NULL)
- SDL_Rect r = {0,0,0,0}; SDL_RenderSetClipRect(render, &r);
Fixes https://bugzilla.libsdl.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2504
All WinRT projects have been merged into a single directory, "VisualC-WinRT",
with platform-specific variants in subdirectories off of it. This structure
has been applied to a few major SDL satellite libraries as well (SDL_image,
SDL_mixer, and SDL_ttf).
Currently, only Windows 8.0/RT and Windows Phone 8.0 targets are supported.
Windows 8.1/RT/Phone targets are planned.
Projects that use SDL_image/WinRT, and link to it via Visual Studio's
project-to-project reference system, will need to be updated, to reflect the
changes in the project structure. This can be done by:
1. removing the MSVC project(s) for SDL/WinRT
2. re-added the MSVC project(s) for SDL/WinRT
3. right-clicking on the app, or projects that use those libraries, choosing
References, removing the references to any of these projects (they'll likely
be highlighted with an exclamation mark), then re-adding them
To note, the satellite libraries that reference SDL/WinRT have been updated
already. The changes for those libraries will be pushed to hg.libsdl.org
shortly.
TODO:
- add support for Windows 8.1 and Windows Phone 8.1 targets, using
Microsoft's new "Universal" app support, if possible. These will be added to
a new subdirectory, or subdirectories (if more than one sets of projects are
needed, hopefully not), of "VisualC-WinRT".
- investigate NuGet support, which could allow Visual C++ to download
new copies of SDL/WinRT, its satellite libraries, and their dependencies,
from remote servers.
It's picking up the system headers instead of the RPi build files.
Theoretically, we _can_ support Wayland on this platform, though, as there
_is_ a Raspberry Pi port out there...
Thomas Schatz
The dynamic library (extracted from SDL2-2.0.3.dmg and put in /Library/Frameworks/) references the __Block_copy symbol in /usr/lib/libSystem.B.dylib, which cannot be found:
dlopen(/Library/Frameworks/SDL2.framework/SDL2, 6): Symbol not found: __Block_copy
Referenced from: /Library/Frameworks/SDL2.framework/SDL2
Expected in: /usr/lib/libSystem.B.dylib
From what I could gather __Block_copy seems to be related to the blocks extension to the C programming language introduced by Apple since OSX-10.6 (see: http://thirdcog.eu/pwcblocks/). If this is indeed the case, I don't think the SDL2-2.0.3.dmg on the website is at all compatible with OSX-10.5 countrary to what is announced.
cplu
When I double click on a window, the "clicks" field (newly added since 2.0.2) in SDL_MouseButtonEvent is 1 instead of 2.
However, when I "tripple" click, "clicks" field is then 2.
I'v look into the source code in SDL_windowsevents.c and found that when a double click event comes, WIN_WindowProc will get a WM_LBUTTONDBLCLK msg. The message sequence of a double click is:WM_LBUTTONDOWN->WM_LBUTTONUP->WM_LBUTTONDBLCLK->WM_LBUTTONUP.
Bryan Cain
Using any SDL application with the Wayland backend under Weston, if the application sets a cursor with SDL_SetCursor, the cursor will work until the mouse pointer leaves the window. When the pointer re-enters the window, there will be no cursor displayed at all.
I did some digging, and the reason for this is that SDL attaches the buffer to the cursor surface only once (during cursor creation) and assumes that it will stay attached. This is not how Wayland works, though - once the compositor is done rendering the buffer, it will release it, so it is no longer attached to the surface. When the cursor re-enters the window a second time, SDL sets the cursor to the same surface with no buffer attached, so no cursor is displayed.
This is fixed by the attached patch, which makes SDL attach the buffer to the surface when the cursor is set, not when it is created.
Bryan Cain
Wayland_CreateSystemCursor tries to load a cursor named "wait" for two of the system cursor categories. This causes a segmentation fault when one of these cursors is used, because "wait" is not an actual cursor name in X11/Wayland cursor themes.
I can't attach my patch since I'm on a mobile right now, but I can confirm that simply replacing "wait" with "watch" for both of its uses in Wayland_CreateSystemCursor (in SDL_waylandmouse.c) fixes the bug.
Ashley Whetter
RHEL6 and CentOS6 systems still use an old version of udev (147). It wasn't until udev 148 (Yep. 1 version off!) that the input class system changed from "ID_CLASS" to "ID_INPUT_{JOYSTICK,KEYBOARD,MOUSE,etc}" (http://lwn.net/Articles/364728/). Because SDL2 looks for the ID_INPUT_X field this means that it never detects any input devices on RHEL6 systems.
I've attached a patch which fixes the problem. If no input devices are detected with "ID_INPUT_X" then SDL will fallback to looking for the old style "ID_CLASS" udev field instead.
Because of the "big change" between udev versions I doubt it'll ever get upgraded on RHEL6, but because RHEL7 is on the way I don't know if this patch is worth merging. Hopefully it'll help anyone out that's having this problem though.
Sylvain
Someone provided a patch for this, recently on the mailing list :
-----
Hi,
it is possible to skip the bug in libX11 by using the defaults for
XNResourceName and XNResourceClass in `XCreateIC' (the table for the
"Input Context Values" [1] in libX11-doc shows that a default is
provided if it is not set).
diff -ur SDL2-2.0.3~/src/video/x11/SDL_x11window.c SDL2-2.0.3/src/video/x11/SDL_x11window.c
--- SDL2-2.0.3~/src/video/x11/SDL_x11window.c 2014-04-04 17:09:40.764307181 +0200
+++ SDL2-2.0.3/src/video/x11/SDL_x11window.c 2014-04-04 17:10:23.887765046 +0200
@@ -239,8 +239,7 @@
data->ic =
X11_XCreateIC(videodata->im, XNClientWindow, w, XNFocusWindow, w,
XNInputStyle, XIMPreeditNothing | XIMStatusNothing,
- XNResourceName, videodata->classname, XNResourceClass,
- videodata->classname, NULL);
+ NULL);
}
#endif
data->created = created;
Tito Latini
[1] http://www.x.org/releases/X11R7.7-RC1/doc/libX11/libX11/libX11.html#Input_Context_Values
Lasse ??rni
While enabling $1 gesture support in the Urho3D engine which uses SDL2 I detected some errors in the gesture code in SDL_gesture.c:
- In the function SDL_SaveAllDollarTemplates() the following line should use index variable j instead of i:
rtrn += SaveTemplate(&touch->dollarTemplate[i], dst);
- In the function SDL_SaveDollarTemplate() the following code should use index variable j instead of i:
if (touch->dollarTemplate[i].hash == gestureId) {
return SaveTemplate(&touch->dollarTemplate[i], dst);
- In the function SDL_SendGestureDollar() the x & y coordinates are being written to the mgesture structure, which results in garbage due to dgesture and mgesture being different data structures inside the union. The coordinates should be written to dgesture.x & dgesture.y respectively
Changes included:
- adding support for a few, additional, VirtualKey constants
- removing accesses to 'windows_scancode_table', as the table's contents
don't line up with WinRT virtual keys. Using Windows older VK_* constants
may, however, be a good alternative in a future update.
wikipreamble = (This is the legacy documentation for stable SDL2, the current stable version; [SDL3](https://wiki.libsdl.org/SDL3/) is the current development version.)
Requirements: Mac OS X v10.5 or later and the iPhone SDK.
Instructions:
1. Open SDL.xcodeproj (located in Xcode-iOS/SDL) in XCode.
2. Select your desired target, and hit build.
There are three build targets:
- libSDL.a:
Build SDL as a statically linked library
- testsdl
Build a test program (there are known test failures which are fine)
- Template:
Package a project template together with the SDL for iPhone static libraries and copies of the SDL headers. The template includes proper references to the SDL library and headers, skeleton code for a basic SDL program, and placeholder graphics for the application icon and startup screen.
FIXME: This needs to be updated for the latest methods
Here is the easiest method:
1. Build the SDL libraries (libSDL.a and libSDLSimulator.a) and the iPhone SDL Application template.
1. Install the iPhone SDL Application template by copying it to one of XCode's template directories. I recommend creating a directory called "SDL" in "/Developer/Platforms/iOS.platform/Developer/Library/XCode/Project Templates/" and placing it there.
2. Start a new project using the template. The project should be immediately ready for use with SDL.
Here is a more manual method:
1. Create a new iPhone view based application.
2. Build the SDL static libraries (libSDL.a and libSDLSimulator.a) for iPhone and include them in your project. XCode will ignore the library that is not currently of the correct architecture, hence your app will work both on iPhone and in the iPhone Simulator.
3. Include the SDL header files in your project.
4. Remove the ApplicationDelegate.h and ApplicationDelegate.m files -- SDL for iPhone provides its own UIApplicationDelegate. Remove MainWindow.xib -- SDL for iPhone produces its user interface programmatically.
5. Delete the contents of main.m and program your app as a regular SDL program instead. You may replace main.m with your own main.c, but you must tell XCode not to use the project prefix file, as it includes Objective-C code.
SDL for iPhone supports polling the built in accelerometer as a joystick device. For an example on how to do this, see the accelerometer.c in the demos directory.
The main thing to note when using the accelerometer with SDL is that while the iPhone natively reports accelerometer as floating point values in units of g-force, SDL_JoystickGetAxis reports joystick values as signed integers. Hence, in order to convert between the two, some clamping and scaling is necessary on the part of the iPhone SDL joystick driver. To convert SDL_JoystickGetAxis reported values BACK to units of g-force, simply multiply the values by SDL_IPHONE_MAX_GFORCE / 0x7FFF.
Your SDL application for iPhone uses OpenGL ES for video by default.
OpenGL ES for iPhone supports several display pixel formats, such as RGBA8 and RGB565, which provide a 32 bit and 16 bit color buffer respectively. By default, the implementation uses RGB565, but you may use RGBA8 by setting each color component to 8 bits in SDL_GL_SetAttribute.
If your application doesn't use OpenGL's depth buffer, you may find significant performance improvement by setting SDL_GL_DEPTH_SIZE to 0.
Finally, if your application completely redraws the screen each frame, you may find significant performance improvement by setting the attribute SDL_GL_RETAINED_BACKING to 1.
Each application installed on iPhone resides in a sandbox which includes its own Application Home directory. Your application may not access files outside this directory.
Once your application is installed its directory tree looks like:
MySDLApp Home/
MySDLApp.app
Documents/
Library/
Preferences/
tmp/
When your SDL based iPhone application starts up, it sets the working directory to the main bundle (MySDLApp Home/MySDLApp.app), where your application resources are stored. You cannot write to this directory. Instead, I advise you to write document files to "../Documents/" and preferences to "../Library/Preferences".
More information on this subject is available here:
Full-size, single window applications only. You cannot create multi-window SDL applications for iPhone OS. The application window will fill the display, though you have the option of turning on or off the menu-bar (pass SDL_CreateWindow the flag SDL_WINDOW_BORDERLESS).
Textures:
The optimal texture formats on iOS are SDL_PIXELFORMAT_ABGR8888, SDL_PIXELFORMAT_ABGR8888, SDL_PIXELFORMAT_BGR888, and SDL_PIXELFORMAT_RGB24 pixel formats.
Loading Shared Objects:
This is disabled by default since it seems to break the terms of the iPhone SDK agreement. It can be re-enabled in SDL_config_iphoneos.h.
Game Center integration requires that you break up your main loop in order to yield control back to the system. In other words, instead of running an endless main loop, you run each frame in a callback function, using:
int SDL_iPhoneSetAnimationCallback(SDL_Window * window, int interval, void (*callback)(void*), void *callbackParam);
This will set up the given function to be called back on the animation callback, and then you have to return from main() to let the Cocoa event loop run.
e.g.
extern "C"
void ShowFrame(void*)
{
... do event handling, frame logic and rendering
}
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
... initialize game ...
#if __IPHONEOS__
// Initialize the Game Center for scoring and matchmaking
InitGameCenter();
// Set up the game to run in the window animation callback on iOS
// so that Game Center and so forth works correctly.
<TITLE>Using SDL with Microsoft Visual C++</TITLE>
</HEAD>
<BODY>
<H1>
Using SDL with Microsoft Visual C++
</H1>
<H3>
by <AHREF="mailto:snowlion@sprynet.com">Lion Kimbro </A>and additions by <AHREF="mailto:james@conceptofzero.net">
James Turk</A>
</H3>
<p>
You can either use the precompiled libraries from <AHREF="http://www.libsdl.org/download.php"> the SDL Download web site </A>, or you can build SDL yourself.
</p>
<H3>
Building SDL
</H3>
<P>
Go into the VisualC directory and double-click on the Visual Studio solution for your version of Visual Studio, e.g. <CODE>SDL_VS2008.sln</CODE> This should open up the IDE.
</P>
<P>
There are different solution files for the various
versions of the IDE. Please use the appropiate version
2008, 2010 or 2012; the 2010EE and 2012EE files
should be used with the "Express Edition" releases.
</P>
<P>
Build the <CODE>.dll</CODE> and <CODE>.lib</CODE> files.
</P>
<P>
This is done by right clicking on each project in turn (Projects are listed in
the Workspace panel in the FileView tab), and selecting "Build".
</P>
<P>
You may get a few warnings, but you should not get any errors. You do have to
have at least the DirectX 9 SDK installed, however. The latest
version of DirectX can be downloaded from <AHREF="http://www.microsoft.com">Microsoft</A>.
</P>
<P>
Later, we will refer to the following .lib and .dll files that have just been
generated:
</P>
<ul>
<li> SDL2.dll</li>
<li> SDL2.lib</li>
<li> SDL2main.lib</li>
</ul>
<P>
Search for these using the Windows Find (Windows-F) utility inside the VisualC directory.
</P>
<H3>
Creating a Project with SDL
</H3>
<P>
Create a project as a Win32 Application.
</P>
<P>
Create a C++ file for your project.
</P>
<P>
Set the C runtime to "Multi-threaded DLL" in the menu: <CODE>Project|Settings|C/C++
tab|Code Generation|Runtime Library </CODE>.
</P>
<P>
Add the SDL <CODE>include</CODE> directory to your list of includes in the
menu: <CODE>Project|Settings|C/C++ tab|Preprocessor|Additional include directories </CODE>
.
<br>
<STRONG><FONTcolor="#009900">VC7 Specific: Instead of doing this I find it easier to
add the include and library directories to the list that VC7 keeps. Do this by
selecting Tools|Options|Projects|VC++ Directories and under the "Show
Directories For:" dropbox select "Include Files", and click the "New Directory
Icon" and add the [SDLROOT]\include directory (e.g. If you installed to
c:\SDL\ add c:\SDL\include). Proceed to change the
dropbox selection to "Library Files" and add [SDLROOT]\lib.</FONT></STRONG>
</P>
<P>
The "include directory" I am referring to is the <CODE>include</CODE> folder
within the main SDL directory (the one that this HTML file located within).
</P>
<P>
Now we're going to use the files that we had created earlier in the Build SDL
step.
</P>
<P>
Copy the following files into your Project directory:
</P>
<ul>
<li> SDL2.dll</li>
</ul>
<P>
Add the following files to your project (It is not necessary to copy them to
your project directory):
</P>
<ul>
<li> SDL2.lib </li>
<li> SDL2main.lib</li>
</ul>
<P>
(To add them to your project, right click on your project, and select "Add
files to project")
</P>
<P><STRONG><FONTcolor="#009900">Instead of adding the files to your project it is more
desireable to add them to the linker options: Project|Properties|Linker|Command
Line and type the names of the libraries to link with in the "Additional
Options:" box. Note: This must be done for each build
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