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.
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 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.
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.
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.
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.
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
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!
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.
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")
If we are running in a container, like Flatpak[1] or pressure-vessel[2],
it's likely that we are using user namespaces,
therefore udev event notification via netlink won't work reliably.
Use their filesystem API to detect them and automatically fallback to
the inotify-based enumeration.
[1] <https://flatpak.org/>
[2]
<https://gitlab.steamos.cloud/steamrt/steam-runtime-tools/-/tree/master/pressure-vessel>
Signed-off-by: Ludovico de Nittis <ludovico.denittis@collabora.com>
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.
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).
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.
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)
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.