Fades out the mouse pointer:
- after 15 seconds of inactivity normally
- after 3 seconds of inactivity in lights out mode
- after a non-modifier key down
- after a touch down
Extended the native Looper to support enqueuing time delayed
messages. This is used by the PointerController to control
pointer fade timing.
Change-Id: I87792fea7dbe2d9376c78cf354fe3189a484d9da
This change adds a new query to ANativeWindow for getting the minimum
number of buffers that must be left un-dequeued during the steady-state
operation of the ANativeWindow.
Change-Id: Ie8c461fc26b02ecde02ddb4f95bf763662cf1551
Related-Bug: 3356050
This change adds a null pointer check before dereferencing buffers in
a Surface list of known GraphicBuffer objects. If not all the buffers
have been dequeued before this list can legitimately contain NULL
entries.
Change-Id: I0e105b53a3f6f9a5404716b7bf150c793ff648a6
some of the conversion operators were not using the proper
pointer type when calling incStrong/decStrong, usually it
has no bad consequences, but for some implementation
of the ref-counted object it could lead to recording the wrong
owner id.
Change-Id: If574b9069b8a4cf6e0911a992c8f095aba799995
First slipt sp<> out of RefBase into StrongPointer.h so it can be reused
more easily and to make it clear that it doesn't require RefBase.
Note: the rest of the change only affects the system when DEBUG_REFS is enabled.
The main problem we fix here is that the owner id associated with each
reference could get out of date when a sp<> or wp<> was moved, for
instance when they're used in a Vector< >.
We fix this issue by calling into RefBase::moveReferences from
a template specialization for sp<TYPE> and wp<TYPE> of the
type helpers. RefBase::moveReferences() has then a chance to
update the owner ids.
There is a little bit of trickery to implement this generically in
RefBase, where we need to use a templatized functor that can turn
a sp<TYPE>* casted to a void* into a RefBase*.
Introduced a new debug option DEBUG_REFS_FATAL_SANITY_CHECKS
currently set to 0 by default as there seem to be an issue
with sp<ANativeWindow> which trips the sanity checks.
Change-Id: I4825b21c8ec47d4a0ef35d760760ae0c9cdfbd7f
Added support for tracking the mouse position even when the mouse button
is not pressed. To avoid confusing existing applications, mouse movements
are reported using the new ACTION_HOVER_MOVE action when the mouse button
is not pressed.
Added some more plumbing for the scroll wheel axes. The values are
reported to Views but they are not yet handled by the framework.
Change-Id: I1706be850d25cf34e5adf880bbed5cc3265cf4b1
Added API on InputDevice to query the set of axes available.
Added API on KeyEvent and MotionEvent to convert keycodes and axes
to symbolic name strings for diagnostic purposes.
Added API on KeyEvent to query if a given key code is a gamepad button.
Added a new "axis" element to key layout files to specify the
mapping between raw absolute axis values and motion axis ids.
Expanded the axis bitfield to 64bits to allow for future growth.
Modified the Makefile for keyboard prebuilts to run the keymap
validation tool during the build.
Added layouts for two game controllers.
Added default actions for game pad button keys.
Added more tests.
Fixed a bunch of bugs.
Change-Id: I73f9166c3b3c5bcf4970845b58088ad467525525
HAVE_ANDROID_OS was defined as "1" for targets, but never defined as "0"
for non-targets. Changing them to #ifdef should be safe and matches
all the other uses of HAVE_ANDROID_OS throughout the system.
Change-Id: I82257325a8ae5e4e4371ddfc4dbf51cea8ea0abb
This change makes it possible to extend the set of axes that
are reported in MotionEvents by defining new axis constants.
The MotionEvent object is now backed by its C++ counterpart
to avoid having to maintain multiple representations of the
same data.
Change-Id: Ibe93c90d4b390d43c176cce48d558d20869ee608
This change passes a reference to the IGraphicBufferAlloc binder object
to SurfaceTextureClient objects. When STC objects are created they
query their associated ISurfaceTexture object for the
IGraphicBufferAlloc that the SurfaceTexture uses to allocate buffers.
Having the SurfaceTextureClient hold this reference prevents the
GraphicBufferAlloc in SurfaceFlinger from freeing the allocated buffers
before the SurfaceTextureClient is done with them.
Change-Id: Ib8e30e8b37fdd60438cbb4cb7e9174d0ba6d661c
related-bug: 3362519
This changes the ANativeWindow API and the two implementations to reset
the window's crop rectangle to be uncropped when the window's buffer
geometry is changed.
Bug: 3359604
Change-Id: I64283dc8382ae687787ec0bebe6a5d5b4a0dcd6b
This is a temporary WAR for the case where dequeueBuffer is called when
all the buffers owned by a SurfaceTexture are not available - either
they're the current texture buffer or the next one. Currently, an error
is returned in that case, and this change just prevents that error from
being logged. In the future this will be fixed to not return an error
in that case.
Bug: 3356050
Change-Id: Ic6cc304881a63ce134cfd0bcb4265e3e3fa94b6a
...gallery while attaching picture to gmail message
In various places we could block switching the IME target incorrectly.
Change-Id: I7e647fb35f4ea6f2e39eb7efd911420ea9ee64fa
A previously exited Thread object refuses to run again, if the
thread-id of the caller, conincides with the thread-id it previously
used in the worker thread. Hence reset the previously used worker
thread-id to -1 when it exits.
Signed-off-by: Ritu Srivastava <rsrivast@sta.samsung.com>
Change-Id: I873925c312a43ec8a16392b98cc959042ff6bfd2
Signed-off-by: Madan Ankapura <mankapur@sta.samsung.com>
Generally we never want to lock a buffer for write access if it is at
the "head" on the surfaceflinger side. The only exception (1) is when
the buffer is not currently in use AND there is at least one queued
buffer -- in which case, SurfaceFlinger will never use said buffer
anymore, because on the next composition around, it will be able to
retire the first queued buffer.
The logic above relies on SurfaceFlinger always retiring
and locking a buffer before composition -- unfortunately this
didn't happen during a screenshot.
This could leave us in a situation where a buffer is locked by the
application for write, and used by SurfaceFlinger for texturing,
causing a hang.
Here, we fix this issue by never assuming the exception (1), it was
intended as an optimization allowing ANativeWindow::lockBuffer() to
return sooner and was justified when most of SF composition was
done in software. The actual buffer locking is now ensured by
gralloc. We could have handled screenshots in a similar way to
a regular composition, but it could have caused glitches on screen,
essentially, taking a screenshot could cause to skip a frame.
now that we removed the notion of a "inUse" buffer in surfaceflinger
a lot of code can be simplified / removed.
noteworthy, the whole concept of "unlockClient" wrt. "compositionComplete"
is also gone.
We used to guarantee that a layer in SurfaceFlinger would never be
destroyed before all references (to its ISurface) on the client
side would be released. At some point, this guarantee got
relaxed to allow to free gralloc resources sooner. This last
change was incorrect, because:
- in implementations with reference-counting the gralloc resources
wouldn't be released anyways, until all the mapping were gone
- in implementations without ref counting, the client side
would most likely crash or do something bad
- it also caused the SharedBufferStack slot to be reallocated
to another surface, which could be problematic if the client
continued to use the surface after the window manager destroyed it.
So, we essentially reinstate the guarantee that layers won't be
destroyed until after all references to their ISurface are
released.
NOTE: This doesn't entirely fix 3306150 because there is another
problem there where the Browser continues to use a surface after it
has been destroyed.
also improve SurfaceFlinger 'dumpsys' log
list the purgatory, which shows windows that have been closed,
but for which the client still has references.