"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.