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.
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.
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)."