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.