Sideband streams are essentially a device-specific buffer queue that
bypasses the BufferQueue system. They can be used for situations with
hard real-time requirements like high-quality TV and video playback
with A/V sync. A handle to the stream is provided by the source HAL,
and attached to a BufferQueue. The sink HAL can read buffers via the
stream handle rather than acquiring individual buffers from the
BufferQueue.
Change-Id: Ib3f262eddfc520f4bbe3d9b91753ed7dd09d3a9b
this means they only have access to the consumer end of
the interface. we had a lot of code that assumed consumers
where holding a BufferQueue (i.e.: both ends), so most of
this change is untangling in fix that
Bug: 9265647
Change-Id: Ic2e2596ee14c7535f51bf26d9a897a0fc036d22c
While currently untested, this should allow to move the
BuffereQueue in the consumer process and have everything
work as usual.
Bug: 9265647
Change-Id: I9ca8f099f7c65b9a27b7e7a3643b46d1b58eacfc
this is the first step of a series of improvements to
BufferQueue. A few things happen in this change:
- setSynchronousMode() goes away as well as the SynchronousModeAllowed flag
- BufferQueue now defaults to (what used to be) synchronous mode
- a new "controlled by app" flag is passed when creating consumers and producers
those flags are used to put the BufferQueue in a mode where it
will never block if both flags are set. This is achieved by:
- returning an error from dequeueBuffer() if it would block
- making sure a buffer is always available by replacing
the previous buffer with the new one in queueBuffer()
(note: this is similar to what asynchrnous mode used to be)
Note: in this change EGL's swap-interval 0 is broken; this will be
fixed in another change.
Change-Id: I691f9507d6e2e158287e3039f2a79a4d4434211d
When acquiring a buffer, SurfaceFlinger now computes the expected
presentation time and passes it to the BufferQueue acquireBuffer()
method. If it's not yet time to display the buffer, acquireBuffer()
returns PRESENT_LATER instead of a buffer.
The current implementation of the expected-present-time computation
uses approximations and guesswork.
Bug 7900302
Change-Id: If9345611c5983a11a811935aaf27d6388a5036f1
Instead of representing the buffer-queue as a vector of buffer
indices, represent them as a vector of BufferItems (copies).
This allows modifying the buffer slots independent of the queued
buffers.
As part of this change, BufferSlot properties that are only
been relevant in the buffer-queue have been removed.
Also, invalid scalingMode in queueBuffer now returns an error.
ConsumerBase has also changed to allow reuse of the same
buffer slots by different buffers.
Change-Id: If2a698fa142b67c69ad41b8eaca6e127eb3ef75b
Signed-off-by: Lajos Molnar <lajos@google.com>
Related-to-bug: 7093648
This moves the call to ConsumerBase::abandon from the ConsumerBase dtor to
ConsumerBase::onLastStrongRef. The abandon call relies on virtual methods to
perform the clean-up, so calling it from the ConsumerBase dtor after the
derived classes dtors ran was skipping some of the clean-up. The
onLastStrongRef method should get called just before the most derived class's
dtor gets called.
Bug: 8349135
Change-Id: I836946826927cc1ed69c049049f525f92b17a269
None of these should change behavior, except for removing some
incorrect log messages when using a virtual display.
- HWComposer::getAndResetReleaseFenceFd() checks the HWC version, so
no need to do that in the DisplayDevice::onSwapBuffersCompleted().
However, it should check that mFramebufferSurface is not NULL like
it is for virtual displays.
- Comment that FramebufferSurface::dump() overrides the non-virtual
ConsumerBase::dump(), and fix it so the right thing happens
regardless of the static type of the pointer/reference the callee
has. FramebufferSurface::dump() could be removed right now, but I'd
need to bring it back in a later change.
- Use the right enum for validating display type ids.
- Don't try to send hotplug events for virtual displays.
- Mark virtual displays as connected so HWComposer::prepare() doesn't
think something is wrong when it gets a non-NULL layer list.
- Remove unused FramebufferSurface methods.
Bug: 8384764
Change-Id: Id28a2f9be86b45f4bb7915fdf7752157035f4294
The C++ class names don't match what the classes do, so rename
ISurfaceTexture to IGraphicBufferProducer, and SurfaceTexture to
GLConsumer.
Bug 7736700
Change-Id: Ia03e468888025b5cae3c0ee1995434515dbea387
This prevents strong reference cycles when the listener implementation also
holds a strong pointer to the ConsumerBase
Bug: 7425644
Change-Id: I1514b13a32b18d421c902dddebec0765a989c55c
This needs the ConsumerBase mutex locked, but wasn't locking it. Two
of the four places that called it already held the lock so were fine.
Now addReleaseFence() takes the lock itself, and I added
addReleaseFenceLocked() for the two already-locked callers, since in
one of them dropping the lock would be inconvenient.
Bug: 7289269
Change-Id: I7a5628adb516f8eec782aa6c14128202f96d7b0a
This change moves some common fence handling code into the base class for
BufferQueue consumer classes. It also makes the ConsumerBase class initialize
a buffer slot's fence with the acquire fence every time a buffer is acquired.
Change-Id: I0bd88bc269e919653b659bfb3ebfb04dd61692a0
This change makes SurfaceTexture inherit from ConsumerBase. It removes all of
the functionality from SurfaceTexture that is now provided by the base class.
This includes fixes for two bugs that were found after checking this change in
the first time and then reverting it.
Change-Id: Ie2d9f4f27cfef26fdac341de3152e842b01a58d2
This change makes SurfaceTexture inherit from ConsumerBase. It removes all of
the functionality from SurfaceTexture that is now provided by the base class.
Change-Id: I4a881df42810a14ee32d4ef7c8772a8f2510f4c7
This change refactors the FramebufferSurface class to inherit from the new
ConsumerBase class.
Bug: 6620200
Change-Id: I46ec942ddb019658e3c5e79465548b171b2261f2