This is so that it can be equivalent to the previously named
VideoDecoderOutputMetaData struct.
Bug: 13222807
Change-Id: I9463694f65436a7edb1f6b592efc0a6329232a27
- Fix kMetadataBufferTypeANWBuffer, so that it only relies on
system/core structures. This resolves potential linker issues if
the framework changes.
- Add fence to be passed with kMetadataBufferTypeANWBuffer.
- Add utility structures to access the metadata buffer layouts.
Related-bug: 19614055
Bug: 13222807
Bug: 12386081
Change-Id: I608958fd394b08cc3396bcbd5cdd350b87bc66f3
Move setDefaultBufferSize, setDefaultBufferFormat, and
setDefaultBufferDataSpace into ConsumerBase and remove them from
CpuConsumer and BufferItemConsumer.
Bug: 19977701
Change-Id: Ic68992464c5da6da7a41c4063a53029a69efcd1b
Introduce ACTION_BUTTON_PRESS and ACTION_BUTTON_RELEASE as actions to
signal a button press or release. If these actions happen
simulanteously with a DOWN or UP event then they're explicitly
ordered to happen after the DOWN or preceding the UP in order to send
them to the most recently targeted view.
Also, introduce new stylus button constants that differ from the
constants we use for mouse buttons.
Bug: 20704355
Change-Id: Ib960a5004db5429ad2fc8db020704773e2978327
This changes the way that SurfaceFlinger's shadow buffer management
works such that instead of tracking the size of the shadow queue in the
BufferQueue, SF tracks the last frame number it has seen, and passes
that into the acquireBuffer call. BufferQueueConsumer then ensures that
it never returns a buffer newer than that frame number, even if that
means that it must return PRESENT_LATER for an otherwise valid buffer.
Change-Id: I3fcb45f683ed660c3f18a8b85ae1f8a962ba6f0e
This completes the plumbing from ConsumerListener::onFrameReplaced into
SurfaceFlinger (and other consumers that may care).
Change-Id: I376e78ace95d6748e8662e6b4d47c0dfa697a300
SurfaceFlinger's (Layer's) shadow copy of the BufferQueue queue was
getting out of sync for a few reasons. This change fixes these by
doing the following:
- Adds a check to re-synchronize the shadow copy every time we
successfully acquire a buffer by first dropping stale buffers before
removing the current buffer.
- Avoids trying to perform updates for buffers which have been rejected
(for incorrect dimensions) by SurfaceFlinger.
- Adds IGraphicBufferConsumer::setShadowQueueSize, which allows the
consumer to notify the BufferQueue that it is maintaining a shadow
copy of the queue and prevents it from dropping so many buffers
during acquireBuffer that it ends up returning a buffer for which the
consumer has not yet received an onFrameAvailable call.
Bug: 20096136
Change-Id: I78d0738428005fc19b3be85cc8f1db498043612f
(cherry picked from commit 2e36f2283f)
Adds a NATIVE_WINDOW_BUFFER_AGE query, which returns the age of the
contents of the most recently dequeued buffer as the number of frames
that have elapsed since it was last queued.
Change-Id: Ib6fd62945cb62d1e60133a65beee510363218a23
(cherry picked from commit 49f810c72df8d1d64128e376757079825c8decd4)
Changes Surface::detachNextBuffer to return an sp<GraphicBuffer>
instead of an ANativeWindowBuffer* to ensure that reference counting
works correctly.
Bug: 20092217
Change-Id: I3979ea6121aaf14845f0554477b778770413581e
(cherry picked from commit 8b2daa3ca29492b181fb67840640d771c4a2b3ac)
Adds a new method IGBP::allowAllocation, which controls whether
dequeueBuffer is permitted to allocate a new buffer. If allocation is
disallowed, dequeueBuffer will block or return an error as it
normally would (as controlled by *ControlledByApp).
If there are free buffers, but they are not of the correct dimensions,
format, or usage, they may be freed if a more suitable buffer is not
found first.
Bug: 19801715
Change-Id: I0d604958b78b2fd775c2547690301423f9a52165
BufferQueue used to choose free buffers by scanning through its array
of slots and picking one based on timestamp. This changes that
mechanism to use a pair of free lists: one with buffers attached and
one without. This makes it easier to choose either type of free slot
depending on the needs of the current operation.
Fixes an issue with the first version of this change, found in bugs
20482952, 20443314, and 20464549.
Bug: 13175420
Change-Id: I9b6e83cfe8f9b4329a976025cb8e291d51fb6d4a
When the surface damage code went in, it incorrectly assumed that if
an application was doing CPU rendering, it would be using lock and
unlockAndPost instead of dequeue and queue, so it repurposed the dirty
region too aggressively. This change keeps it from clobbering the
dirty region if a CPU producer is attached.
Bug: 20431815
Change-Id: Id4dfd71378311ea822f0289f6de2d20a7bd84014