This change makes the camera HAL interface take an ANativeWindow interface from
which all the camera preview buffers will be allocated. The framework code
running in application processes now passes a Surface object rather than an
ISurface to the camera server via Binder when setting the preview surface. The
camera server then forwards that Surface object (which implements the
ANativeWindow interface) to the camera HAL, which uses it to communicate with
SurfaceFlinger to allocate the camera preview buffers.
Change-Id: Ie438f721559cd7de5e4f848a26d96360dda07b5f
this situation happened when the last buffer needed to be resized
(or allocated, the first time). the assumption was that the buffer
was in use by SF itself as the current buffer (obviously, this
assumption made no sense when the buffer had never been allocated, btw).
the system would wait until some other buffer became the "front" buffer.
we fix this problem by entirely removing the requirement that the
buffer being resized cannot be the front buffer. instead, we just
allocate a new buffer and replace the front buffer by the new one.
the downside is that this uses more memory (an extra buffer) for a
brief amount of time while the old buffer is being reallocated and
before it has actually been replaced.
Change-Id: I022e4621209474ceb1c671b23deb4188eaaa7285
Surfaces can now be parcelized and sent to remote
processes. When a surface crosses a process
boundary, it looses its connection with the
current process and gets attached to the new one.
Change-Id: I39c7b055bcd3ea1162ef2718d3d4b866bf7c81c0
the new native_window_set_buffers_geometry allows
to specify a size and format for all buffers to be
dequeued. the buffer will be scalled to the window's
size.
Change-Id: I2c378b85c88d29cdd827a5f319d5c704d79ba381
this method can be used to change the number of buffers
associated to a native window. the default is two.
Change-Id: I608b959e6b29d77f95edb23c31dc9b099a758f2f
this change introduces R/W locks in the right places.
on the server-side, it guarantees that setBufferCount()
is synchronized with "retire" and "resize".
on the client-side, it guarantees that setBufferCount()
is synchronized with "dequeue", "lockbuffer" and "queue"
the new TextureMagager class now handle texture creation and upload
as well as EGL image creation and binding to GraphicBuffers. This is
used indirectly by Layer and directly by LayerBuffer
the new BufferManager class handles the set of buffers used for a
Layer (Surface), it abstracts how many buffer there is as well as
the use of EGLimage vs. regular texture ops (glTexImage2D).
Change-Id: I2da1ddcf27758e6731400f6cc4e20bef35c0a39a
the reason for the above change is that waitForCondition() had become
large over time, mainly to handle error cases, using inlines to
evaluate the condition doesn't buys us much anymore while it increases
code size.
Change-Id: I2595d850832628954b900ab8bb1796c863447bc7
in the undoDequeue() case, 'tail' was recalculated from 'available' and 'head'
however there was a race between this and retireAndLock(), which could cause
'tail' to be recalculated wrongly.
the interesting thing though is that retireAndLock() shouldn't have any impact
on the value of 'tail', which is client-side only attribute.
we fix the race by saving the value of 'tail' before dequeue() and restore it
in the case of undoDequeue(), since we know it doesn't depend on retireAndLock().
Change-Id: I4bcc4d16b6bc4dd93717ee739c603040b18295a0
also increase the dirtyregion size from 1 to 6 rectangles.
Overall we now need 27KiB process instead of 4KiB
Change-Id: Iebda5565015158f49d9ca8dbcf55e6ad04855be3
Condition must be initialized with SHARED for the old behavior, where
they can be used accross processes.
Updated the two places android that require SHARED conditions.
PRIVATE conditions (and mutexes) use more efficient syscalls.
Change-Id: I9a281a4b88206e92ac559c66554e886b9c62db3a