Enables -Weverything and -Werror, with just a few exceptions for
warnings we can't (or shouldn't need to) work around.
Cherry pick of I034abec27bf4020d84af60d7acc1939c59986dd6 plus a
couple of minor changes to CpuConsumer.cpp to make it work with a
prior change:
Uncomment CC_LOGV on line 46
Change C-style cast to static_cast on line 71
Change-Id: Iaec610477ea0122317b0578fb74caf2383d4cf08
so we can do NULL checks again, and update calls to IInterface::asBinder()
to use the new static version.
Change-Id: Ia7b10eb38ca55b72278bfd33d3bf647f338b4e6a
Bug: 15116722
- Adds a sticky transform field that can be set from a
SurfaceFlinger client Surface. This transform is
added to any transform applied to the Surface.
Change-Id: Idaa4311dfd027b2d2b8ea5e2c6cba2da5779d753
This adds an allocateBuffers method to BufferQueue, which instructs
it to allocate up to the maximum number of buffers allowed by the
current configuration. The goal is that this method can be called
ahead of render time, which will prevent dequeueBuffers from blocking
in allocation and inducing jank.
This interface is also plumbed up to the native Surface (and, in
another change, up to the Java Surface and ThreadedRenderer).
Bug: 11792166
Change-Id: I4aa96b4351ea1c95ed5db228ca3ef98303229c74
Adds a new method, IGBP::detachNextBuffer, that effectively does
dequeue + request + detach in a single call, but does not need to
know anything about the dequeued buffer, and will not block on
dequeue. This is mostly for the upcoming StreamSplitter to use in
its onBufferReleased callback.
Change-Id: Ie88a69de109003acebaa486a5b44c8a455726550
Add a callback to the producer side, onBufferReleased, which will be
called every time the consumer releases a buffer back to the
BufferQueue. This will enable a buffer stream splitter to work
autonomously without having to block on dequeueBuffer.
The binder object used for the callback replaces the generic IBinder
token that was passed into IGraphicBufferProducer::connect to detect
the death of the producer. If a producer does not wish to listen for
buffer release events, it can pass in an instance of the
DummyProducerListener class defined in IProducerListener.h, if it even
cares about death events (BufferQueue doesn't enforce the token being
non-NULL, though perhaps we should).
Change-Id: I23935760673524abeafea2b58dccc3583b368710
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
Adds detachBuffer and attachBuffer calls to both the producer and
consumer sides of BufferQueue. Buffers may be detached while dequeued
by the producer or acquired by the consumer, and when attached, enter
the dequeued and acquired states, respectively.
Bug: 13173343
Change-Id: Ic152692b0a94d99e0135b9bfa62747dab2a54220
This change adds an entire field to note whether the timestamp was
auto-generated by Surface or supplied by the application.
The value is used when deciding whether or not to drop frames based
on buffer presentation timestamps. If a desired presentation time
was set explicitly, BufferQueue will use that value to decide if a
frame should be dropped. If the timestamp was generated by Surface
at the time the buffer was queued, the timestamp is ignored.
Bug 10151804
Change-Id: Ibd571a7578351063b813cbdad2ddbeed70655ba5
Fallout from the Flattenable change, update all its uses.
Additionnaly, fix/tighten size checks when (un)flatten()ing
things.
Removed the assumption by some flattenables (e.g.: Fence)
that the size passed to them would be exact (it can
and will be larger in some cases)
The code in Parcel is a bit complicated so that we don't
have to expose the full implementation (and also to
keep the code smallish).
Change-Id: I0bf1c8aca2a3128491b4f45510bc46667e566dde
we can now queue/dequeue a buffer in asynchrnous mode by using the
async parameter to these calls. async mode is only specified
with those calls (it is not modal anymore).
as a consequence it can only be specified when the buffer count
is not overidden, as error is returned otherwise.
Change-Id: Ic63f4f96f671cb9d65c4cecbcc192615e09a8b6b
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
This change eliminates the uses of a NULL sp<Fence> indicating that no waiting
is required. Instead we use a non-NULL but invalid Fence object for which the
wait methods will return immediately.
Bug: 7892871
Change-Id: I5360aebe3090422ef6920d56c99fc4eedc642e48
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