This change makes BufferQueue derive the min undequeued buffer count from a max
acquired buffer count that is set by the consumer. This value may be set at
any time that a producer is not connected to the BufferQueue rather than at
BufferQueue construction time.
Change-Id: Icf9f1d91ec612a079968ba0a4621deffe48f4e22
This change is a clean up of some of the handling of the maximum number of
buffers that are allowed at once. It mostly renames a few member variables and
methods, but it includes a couple small refactorings.
Change-Id: I9959310f563d09583548d4291e1050a7bbc7d87d
This is a compatibility shim for one product whose drivers
are depending on SurfaceComposerClient::getDisplayInfo(
int, DisplayInfo*) when it really shouldn't.
Revert this patch when the problem has been resolved.
Bug: 7065398
Change-Id: I6542691b81fd1b1e1d79500a62e82d40a3d51db7
Use only display tokens in the API to refer to new displays.
Don't require the caller to specify the display when creating
a surface (since in general a surface could be shown on
any display).
This is intended to be a minimum change just to update the API.
Note that SurfaceFlinger still uses DisplayID in a few places
internally that might cause some features not to work properly
when there are multiple displays (LayerScreenshot, for example).
Change-Id: I3d91eec2da406eefd97bcd53655d403ad865a7e6
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
BufferItemConsumer allows for acquiring BufferQueue's BufferItems,
which contain all the data and metadata the BufferQueue has for a
given graphics buffer.
This consumer is useful when direct access to the native buffer_handles
is needed by the client.
Also includes a minor cleanup of CpuConsumer's use of 'virtual'.
Bug: 6243944
Change-Id: If7dc4192b15ac499555f1eda42a85140f2434795
This change fixes SurfaceTexture::freeBufferLocked so that it calls the base
class implementation.
Change-Id: I45d76fb2eb02c1fa6e4e917823ead83e2086bd15
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 introduces a new class LightFlattenable<> which is
a protocol to flatten simple objects that don't require
binders or file descriptors; the benefit of this protocol is that
it doesn't require the objects to have a virtual table and give us
a consitant way of doing this.
we also introduce an implementation of this protocol for
POD structures, LightFlattenablePod<>.
Parcel has been update to handle this protocol automatically.
Sensor, Rect, Point and Region now use this new protocol.
Change-Id: Icb3ce7fa1d785249eb666f39c2129f2fc143ea4a
- displays are represented by a binder on the client side
- c++ clients can now create and modify displays
Change-Id: I203ea5b4beae0819d742ec5171c27568f4e8354b
This change refactors the FramebufferSurface class to inherit from the new
ConsumerBase class.
Bug: 6620200
Change-Id: I46ec942ddb019658e3c5e79465548b171b2261f2
this attribute can be set through a regular transaction using
SurfaceComposerClient (just like any other attribute, eg: position or size)
Change-Id: I701a47c677ea6442ca713728a93335328cd2b172
no change of functionality -- the old behavior is implemented
on top of this new protocol.
this new protocol will allow, eventually, to pass informations
about displays and layer stacks.
Change-Id: Ic6c2295e61ec8ecbc8ce01ab7664e35d928202fc
There was an issue in Surface::lock where failure to lock a surface
resulted in two bad things happening:
- success was returned to the caller (it was apparently locked).
- an uninitialised pointer was returned as the buffer.
Change-Id: I8b0df81400e0fa0542a8bb993d76923ac96b686e
When updateTexImage acquires a buffer but then aborts (due to an error
or the buffer being rejected), it releases the newly-acquired buffer.
It was passing the buffer slot's fences to releaseBuffer, even though
they hadn't been created after the acquire yet. This wasn't a bug,
since the fences would be cleared just after the buffer slot was last
released, but explicitly passing null fences makes this clearer.
Change-Id: I087f2ec3fd02c40f57782c1fca24eb9567e2943d