Two issues:
1. First, due to an inverted conditional in the input dispatcher, we were
reporting touches as long touches and vice-versa to the power manager.
2. Power manager user activity cheek event suppression also suppresses touch
events (but not long touch or up events). As a result, if cheek event
suppression was enabled, touches would not poke the user activity timer.
However due to the above logic inversion, this actually affected long
touches. Net result, if cheek suppression was enabled in the power manager
and you held your thumb on the screen long enough, the phone would
go to sleep!
Cheek event suppression is commonly turned on when making a phone call.
Interestingly, it does not seem to get turned off afterward...
This change fixes the logic inversion and exempts touches from the cheek
suppression. The reason we do the latter is because the old behavior
was actually harmful in other ways too: a touch down would be suppressed
but not a long touch or the touch up. This would cause bizarre behavior
if you touched the screen while it was dimmed. Instead of brightening
immediately, it would brighten either when you lifted your finger or
300ms later, whichever came first.
Bug: 3154895
Change-Id: Ied9ccec6718fbe86506322ff47a4e3eb58f81834
Rewrote interceptKeyBeforeQueueing to make the handling more systematic.
Behavior should be identical except:
- We never pass keys to applications when the screen is off and the keyguard
is not showing (the proximity sensor turned off the screen).
Previously we passed all non-wake keys through in this case which
caused a bug on Crespo where the screen would come back on if a soft key
was held at the time of power off because the resulting key up event
would sneak in just before the keyguard was shown. It would then be
passed through to the dispatcher which would poke user activity and
wake up the screen.
- We propagate the key flags when broadcasting media keys which
ensures that recipients can tell when the key is canceled.
- We ignore endcall or power if canceled (shouldn't happen anyways).
Changed the input dispatcher to not poke user activity for canceled
events since they are synthetic and should not wake the device.
Changed the lock screen so that it does not poke the wake lock when the
grab handle is released. This fixes a bug where the screen would come
back on immediately if the power went off while the user was holding
one of the grab handles because the sliding tab would receive an up
event after screen turned off and release the grab handles.
Fixed a couple of issues where media keys were being handled inconsistently
or not at all, particularly in the case of the new PAUSE, PLAY
and RECORD keys.
Bug: 3144874
Change-Id: Ie630f5fb6f128cfdf94845f9428067045f42892c
This patch makes the dispatcher drop all of its state when it is
disabled (when the screen turns off). This ensures that the dispatcher
does not get stuck thinking a pointer is still down if the screen
turned off while the user was touching the display (such as a fat touch
while hitting the power button).
Bug: 3098344
Change-Id: If50ef5804870aa1acd3179fd4b40e3cda58dd39d
Fixed a bug where we would lose the first touch point when swiping out of
the virtual key area.
Fixed a bug where we would not send an ACTION_MOVE event in cases where
individual pointers went down/up and the remaining pointers actually moved.
This is important since many applications do not handle pointer movements
during ACTION_POINTER_DOWN or ACTION_POINTER_UP. In the case of
ACTION_POINTER_UP the movement was completely lost since all pointers were
dispatched using their old location rather than the new location.
Improved motion event validation to check for duplicate pointer ids.
Added an input source constant that was missing from the NDK api but
defined in the framework api.
Added a timestamp when reporting added/removed devices in EventHub.
Bug: 3070082
Change-Id: I3206a030f43b7616e2f48006e5a9d522c4d92e56
Compute the actual number of indices in the GAMEPAD_KEYCODES instead of
the pure size in bytes.
Bug: 3121536
Change-Id: I71edbd8bf6eff2c8cc0ea5c6845362b3d1e06466
Merge commit 'f2c406030874b355ca9e4e67cc0e3aff6103c23e'
* commit 'f2c406030874b355ca9e4e67cc0e3aff6103c23e':
Fix bug where home presses were not poking user activity.
Useful for tweaking touch screen alignment without having to modify the
kernel device driver x/y axis bounds.
Change-Id: I6ca43d3c138548f9dfb76aa33150a0c853698fb6
We now poke user activity twice: once upon dequeueing an event
for dispatch and then again just before we dispatch it. The second
poke is to compensate for the fact that it can take a few seconds to
identify the dispatch target (if the application is responding slowly)
but we want to keep the display from going to sleep for X amount of time
after the app gets a chance to actually receive the event. This mirrors
pre-Gingerbread behavior.
Removed some unnecessary code that filters user activity pokes when sending
events to KeyGuard. We don't need this because KeyGuard already tells the
power manager to disable user activity.
Bug: 3101397
Change-Id: I8c3a77601fdef8f584e84cfdd11aa79da0ff51db
Merge commit '9e0e054388689fd618c84a283c28ee484477b44d'
* commit '9e0e054388689fd618c84a283c28ee484477b44d':
Fix a native crash in input dispatcher when windows are removed.
Manual merge from Gingerbread.
This change adds a new window type for secure system overlays
created by the system itself from non-secure system overlays that
might be created by applications that have the system alert permission.
Secure views ignore the presence of secure system overlays.
Bug: 3098519
Change-Id: Id876736fd8bf332ff9a5428bde59f5268aa49c3a
This change adds a new window type for secure system overlays
created by the system itself from non-secure system overlays that
might be created by applications that have the system alert permission.
Secure views ignore the presence of secure system overlays.
Bug: 3098519
Change-Id: I8f8398f4fdeb0469e5d71124c21bedf121bd8c07
Added new key maps for external keyboards. These maps are intended to
be shared across devices by inheriting the "keyboards.mk" product
makefile as part of the device's product definition.
One of the trickier changes here was to unwind some code in
MetaKeyKeyListener that assumed that only the low 8 bits of the meta key
state were actually used. The new code abandons bitshifts in favor
of simple conditionals that are probably easier to read anyways.
The special meta key state constants used by MetaKeyKeyListener
are now (@hide) defined in KeyEvent now so as to make it clearer that they
share the same code space even if those codes are not valid for KeyEvents.
The EventHub now takes care of detecting the appropriate key layout
map and key character map when the device is added and sets system
properties accordingly. This avoids having duplicate code in
KeyCharacterMap to probe for the appropriate key character map
although the current probing mechanism has been preserved for legacy
reasons just in case.
Added support for tracking caps lock, num lock and scroll lock and
turning their corresponding LEDs on and off as needed.
The key character map format will need to be updated to correctly support
PC style external keyboard semantics related to modifier keys.
That will come in a later change so caps lock doesn't actually do
anything right now except turn the shiny LEDs on and off...
Added a list of symbolic key names to KeyEvent and improved the toString()
output for debug diagnosis. Having this list in a central place in the
framework also allows us to remove it from Monkey so there is one less
thing to maintain when we add new keycodes.
Bug: 2912307
Change-Id: If8c25e8d50a7c29bbf5d663c94284f5f86de5da4
Added support for calibrating touch size for devices that report
size as an area measurement rather than as a width.
Fixed some bugs.
Bug: 3096045
Change-Id: I30a12e73752883516ed054f8af407204bca45814
Fixed some issues with Monkeys turning off their own screens. Ook ook!
Added some more comments to explain what's going on.
Change-Id: Id2bc0466161a642a73ef7ef97725d1c81e984b12
Copies the input state to the destination window and sends synthesic
cancelation events to the source window.
Change-Id: Ia75820b0d756ed5d6cd22dce7830251ac85141ed
Added the concept of a "trusted" event to distinguish between events from
attached input devices or trusted injectors vs. other applications.
This change enables us to move certain policy decisions out of the
dispatcher and into the policy itself where they can be handled more
systematically.
Cherry pick of b931a1b4 from gingerbread into master.
Change-Id: I700a5f07b8b227878cea9437a289a45a245c0424
Merge commit '41aabeb51305d19747687f246080f44fc2a74435'
* commit '41aabeb51305d19747687f246080f44fc2a74435':
Added more robust tracking and cancelation of events.
Added the concept of a "trusted" event to distinguish between events from
attached input devices or trusted injectors vs. other applications.
This change enables us to move certain policy decisions out of the
dispatcher and into the policy itself where they can be handled more
systematically.
Change-Id: I4d56fdcdd31aaa675d452088af39a70c4e039970
This change fixes several issues where events would be dropped in the
input dispatch pipeline in such a way that the dispatcher could not
accurately track the state of the input device.
Given more robust tracking, we can now also provide robust cancelation
of input events in cases where an application might otherwise become
out of sync with the event stream due to ANR, app switch, policy decisions,
or forced focus transitions.
Pruned some of the input dispatcher log output.
Moved the responsibility for calling intercept*BeforeQueueing into
the input dispatcher instead of the input reader and added support for
early interception of injected events for events coming from trusted
sources. This enables behaviors like injection of media keys while
the screen is off, haptic feedback of injected virtual keys, so injected
events become more "first class" in a way.
Change-Id: Iec6ff1dd21e5f3c7feb80ea4feb5382bd090dbd9
- Register buffers with Gralloc when unflattening a GraphicBuffer (rather than
doing it in the Surface class).
- Add support for a GraphicBuffer that wraps an android_native_window_t*.
Change-Id: I029ac086111bbac800e5ca37eb505f558b718cd8
Merge commit 'f10929fb350395c21edd2cba7641479afe75e750'
* commit 'f10929fb350395c21edd2cba7641479afe75e750':
Minor fix for InputReader support for non-touchscreen devices.
Merge commit 'e11b76d3efb056edea301d53a354d0730adf3520'
* commit 'e11b76d3efb056edea301d53a354d0730adf3520':
Minor logging changes to input dispatcher to help with debugging.
This change narrows the opportunity for a race condition setting the
resource Configuration while devices are being updated.
Change-Id: I58efa563f4129ab0fce7108511d16a99dff7e451
Added dumpsys reporting to EventHub.
Made the formatting a bit clearer.
Added 'Locked' suffix to some internal methods of EventHub.
Change-Id: Ic449560bcce378f6361895d27c66854e9724abb0
Merge commit '57fa3e8b4c94125ddb5be015dd7fbde4a458894f'
* commit '57fa3e8b4c94125ddb5be015dd7fbde4a458894f':
Support haptic feedback for virtual keys defined in key layout.
This feature is currently used to enable dragging the start and end
selection handles of a TextView at the same time. Could be used for
other things later.
Deleted some dead code in ArrowKeyMovementMethod and CursorControllers.
Change-Id: I930accd97ca1ca1917aab8a807db2c950fc7b409
Older glibc version do not include BSD htole32 and htole64 which are
present in bionic. This worksaround a sim-eng build issue by only
using htole32/htole64 if the host is not little endian.
Change-Id: Ia8d0d36285f3c34c51a331790458e52a21c2925f
Redesigned the input dispatcher's ANR timeout mechanism so it is much
closer to Froyo's policy. ANR is only ever signalled if the dispatcher
is waiting on a window to finish processing its previous event(s) and
there is new pending input.
In the old code, we tracked the dispatch timeout separately for each
input channel. This was somewhat complicated and also resulted in the
situation where applications could ANR long after the user had pushed
them into the background.
Change-Id: I666ecada0952d4b95f1d67b9f733842b745c7f4b
As part of this change, consolidated and cleaned up the Looper API so
that there are fewer distinctions between the NDK and non-NDK declarations
(no need for two callback types, etc.).
Removed the dependence on specific constants from sys/poll.h such as
POLLIN. Instead looper.h defines events like LOOPER_EVENT_INPUT for
the events that it supports. That should help make any future
under-the-hood implementation changes easier.
Fixed a couple of compiler warnings along the way.
Change-Id: I449a7ec780bf061bdd325452f823673e2b39b6ae
There are 16 events logged in the event log:
SF_APP_DEQUEUE_BEFORE
SF_APP_DEQUEUE_AFTER
SF_APP_LOCK_BEFORE
SF_APP_LOCK_AFTER
SF_APP_QUEUE
SF_REPAINT
SF_COMPOSITION_COMPLETE
SF_UNLOCK_CLIENTS
SF_SWAP_BUFFERS
SF_REPAINT_DONE
SF_FB_POST_BEFORE
SF_FB_POST_AFTER
SF_FB_DEQUEUE_BEFORE
SF_FB_DEQUEUE_AFTER
SF_FB_LOCK_BEFORE
SF_FB_LOCK_AFTER
all events log the buffer conserned and a timestamp in microseconds.
by default the logging is not enabled, to turn it on:
adb shell service call SurfaceFlinger 1006 i31 1
adb shell setprop debug.graphic_log 1
The effect is immediate in SurfaceFlinger, but applications need to be
restarted.
Change-Id: Ifc2e31f7aed072d9a7dede20ff2ce59231edbec1
This change is essentially a rewrite of the main input dispatcher loop
with the target identification folded in. Since the input dispatcher now
has all of the window state, it can make better decisions about
when to ANR.
Added a .5 second deadline for processing app switch keys. This behavior
predates Gingerbread but had not previously been ported.
Fixed some timing inaccuracies in the ANR accounting that could cause
applications to ANR sooner than they should have.
Added a mechanism for tracking key and motion events that have been
dispatched to a window so that appropriate cancelation events can be
synthesized when recovering from ANR. This change helps to keep
applications in sync so they don't end up with stuck buttons upon
recovery from ANRs.
Added more comments to describe the tricky parts of PollLoop.
Change-Id: I13dffca27acb436fc383980db536abc4d8b9e6f1
Added the MotionEvent.FLAG_WINDOW_IS_OBSCURED flag which is set by the
input manager whenever another visible window is partly or wholly obscured
the target of a touch event so that applications can filter touches
accordingly.
Added a "filterTouchesWhenObscured" attribute to View which can be used to
enable filtering of touches when the view's window is obscured.
Change-Id: I936d9c85013fd2d77fb296a600528d30a29027d2
Finished the input device capability API.
Added a mechanism for calibrating touch devices to obtain more
accurate information about the touch contact area.
Improved pointer location to show new coordinates and capabilities.
Optimized pointer location display and formatting to avoid allocating large
numbers of temporary objects. The GC churn was causing the application to
stutter very badly when more than a couple of fingers were down).
Added more diagnostics.
Change-Id: Ie25380278ed6f16c5b04cd9df848015850383498
system_server can potentially monitor uevent devices that are
of no use to it. For instance, an accelerometer implementation
as uevents. This would cause the process to be busy when
unnecessary. If a device cannot be classified, don't monitor it.
Change-Id: I489cc453bdce7cb376102cba67a9ea470e13292d
The code now takes into account the time when the event was generated.
So with a 60Hz throttling rate, it ensures that a motion event will not
be delayed due to throttling by any more than 1/60th of second past
the time it was generated.
Change-Id: Iaea1d4f76e79036b4a18873485230731c3cd63c3
system_server can potentially monitor uevent devices that are
of no use to it. For instance, an accelerometer implementation
as uevents. This would cause the process to be busy when
unnecessary. If a device cannot be classified, don't monitor it.
Change-Id: Ib2c93105e7d746d9c1a7414bea8bab3fb8c0b70a
On single-touch devices, pointer up/down is signalled by a BTN_TOUCH
key event. Previously we handled BTN_TOUCH immediately but some drivers
may produce the sequence BTN_TOUCH, ABS_X, ABS_Y, SYN_REPORT on pointer down
which caused us to emit a bad initial pointer down location.
Now we wait for SYN_REPORT before reporting the up or down.
On multi-touch devices, pointer up can be signalled by as little as
the sequence SYN_MT_REPORT, SYN_REPORT. This change ensures that we
handle this case.
Added support for reading ABS_MT_PRESSURE when available.
Corrected mapping of touchMajor/touchMinor on single touch devices.
Minor code cleanup.
Change-Id: Ic7ec4811241ed85a06e59b8a839ca05180d491d4
Sometimes the wrong fd was accessed when the device was addressed
by device id.
The earlier implementation assumed that two arrays were in sync
but one of them was compacted when devices were removed. Instead
of that dependency the device now keeps track of it's file descriptor.
Change-Id: Ib0f320603aafb07ded354bc3687de9759c9068f2
Previously, the input dispatcher assumed that the input channel's
receive pipe file descriptor was a sufficiently unique identifier for
looking up input channels in its various tables. However, it can happen
that an input channel is disposed and then a new input channel is
immediately created that reuses the same file descriptor. Ordinarily
this is not a problem, however there is a small opportunity for a race
to arise in InputQueue.
When InputQueue receives an input event from the dispatcher, it
generates a finishedToken that encodes the channel's receive pipe fd,
and a sequence number. The finishedToken is used by the ViewRoot
as a handle for the event so that it can tell the InputQueue when
the event has finished being processed.
Here is the race:
1. InputQueue receives an input event, assigns a new finishedToken.
2. ViewRoot begins processing the input event.
3. During processing, ViewRoot unregisters the InputChannel.
4. A new InputChannel is created and is registered with the Input Queue.
This InputChannel happens to have the same receive pipe fd as
the one previously registered.
5. ViewRoot tells the InputQueue that it has finished processing the
input event, passing along the original finishedToken.
6. InputQueue throws an exception because the finishedToken's receive
pipe fd is registered but the sequence number is incorrect so it
assumes that the client has called finish spuriously.
The fix is to include a unique connection id within the finishedToken so
that the InputQueue can accurately confirm that the token belongs to
the currently registered InputChannel rather than to an old one that
happened to have the same receive pipe fd. When it notices this, it
ignores the spurious finish.
I've also made a couple of other small changes to avoid similar races
elsewhere.
This patch set also includes a fix to synthesize a finished signal
when the input channel is unregistered on the client side to
help keep the server and client in sync.
Bug: 2834068
Change-Id: I1de34a36249ab74c359c2c67a57e333543400f7b
Also fixed bug where old touch screen size could be reported by
getMotionRange if an orientation change occurred but the user has not
yet touched the screen.
Bug: 2877345
Change-Id: I7878f47458f310ed6ebe6a5d1b2c9bec2c598ab9
Added a new asynchronous injection mode and made the existing
synchronization mechanism more robust.
Change-Id: Ia4aa04fd9b75ea2461a844c5b7933c831c1027e6
Refactored the input reader so that each raw input protocol is handled
by a separate subclass of the new InputMapper type. This way, behaviors
pertaining to keyboard, trackballs, touchscreens, switches and other
devices are clearly distinguished for improved maintainability.
Added partial support for describing capabilities of input devices
(incomplete and untested for now, will be fleshed out in later commits).
Simplified EventHub interface somewhat since InputReader is taking over
more of the work.
Cleaned up some of the interactions between InputManager and
WindowManagerService related to reading input state.
Fixed swiping finger from screen edge into display area.
Added logging of device information to 'dumpsys window'.
Change-Id: I17faffc33e3aec3a0f33f0b37e81a70609378612
This significantly re-works the native key dispatching code to
allow events to be pre-dispatched to the current IME before
being processed by native code. It introduces one new public
API, which must be called after retrieving an event if the app
wishes for it to be pre-dispatched.
Currently the native code will only do pre-dispatching of
system keys, to avoid significant overhead for gaming input.
This should be improved to be smarted, filtering for only
keys that the IME is interested in. Unfortunately IMEs don't
currently provide this information. :p
Change-Id: Ic1c7aeec8b348164957f2cd88119eb5bd85c2a9f
Added several new coordinate values to MotionEvents to capture
touch major/minor area, tool major/minor area and orientation.
Renamed NDK input constants per convention.
Added InputDevice class in Java which will eventually provide
useful information about available input devices.
Added APIs for manufacturing new MotionEvent objects with multiple
pointers and all necessary coordinate data.
Fixed a bug in the input dispatcher where it could get stuck with
a pointer down forever.
Fixed a bug in the WindowManager where the input window list could
end up containing stale removed windows.
Fixed a bug in the WindowManager where the input channel was being
removed only after the final animation transition had taken place
which caused spurious WINDOW DIED log messages to be printed.
Change-Id: Ie55084da319b20aad29b28a0499b8dd98bb5da68
And also:
- APIs to show and hide the IME, and control its interaction with the app.
- APIs to tell the app when its window resizes and needs to be redrawn.
- API to tell the app the content rectangle of its window (to layout
around the IME or status bar).
There is still a problem with IME interaction -- we need a way for the
app to deliver events to the IME before it handles them, so that for
example the back key will close the IME instead of finishing the app.
Change-Id: I37b75fc2ec533750ef36ca3aedd2f0cc0b5813cd
Also other cleanup and fixes:
- We now properly set the default window format to 565.
- New APIs to set the window format and flags from native code.
- Tweaked glue for simpler handling of the "destroy" message.
- Um, other stuff.
Change-Id: Id7790a21a2fa9a19b91854d225324a7c1e7c6ade
This factors out the boiler-plate code from the sample
app to a common glue code that can be used for everyone
writing this style of app: a dedicated app thread that
takes care of waiting for events and processing them.
As part of doing this, ALooper has a new facility to allow
registration of fds that cause ALooper_pollOnce() to return
the fd that has data, allowing the app to drive the loop
without callbacks. Hopefully this makes some people feel better. :)
Also do some other cleanup of the ALooper API, plus some
actual documentation.
Change-Id: Ic53bd56bdf627e3ba28a3c093faa06a92be522b8
Removed old input dispatch code.
Refactored the policy callbacks.
Pushed a tiny bit of the power manager state down to native.
Fixed long press on MENU.
Made the virtual key detection and cancelation a bit more precise.
Change-Id: I5d8c1062f7ea0ab3b54c6fadb058c4d5f5a9e02e
On omap3 h/w we force opaque formats to RGB_565 instead of RGBX_8888
because the GL driver doesn't support it. RGBX_8888 is always remapped
to RGBA_8888.
Change-Id: I0bfabeb98c8d3a399079e6797cf2a0ee95915324
Not yet hooked up to anything in the NDK, but requires renaming
the existing android_native_window_t type everywhere.
Change-Id: Iffee6ea39c93b8b34e20fb69e4d2c7c837e5ea2e
This change mainly unwinds a premature optimization in the
dispatch pipeline.
To test HOME injection, run 'adb shell input keyevent 3'.
Change-Id: I1c4b7377c205da7c898014b8b07fc6dc1d46e4dd
The native code now maintains a list of all keys that may use
default handling. If the app finishes one of these keys
without handling it, the key will be passed back off to Java
for default treatment.
Change-Id: I6a842a0d728eeafa4de7142fae573f8c11099e18
Set a default orientation of ROTATION_0.
Added some more careful checks based on whether we have valid
absolute axis information from the driver.
Reset key repeating during configuration changes since the keyboard
device may have been removed.
Change-Id: I685960828acffcb17595fc5683309e8064a76714
Target identification is now fully native.
Fixed a couple of minor issues related to input injection.
Native input enabled by default, can be disabled by setting
WindowManagerPolicy.ENABLE_NATIVE_INPUT_DISPATCH to false.
Change-Id: I7edf66ed3e987cc9306ad4743ac57a116af452ff
Sometimes the wrong fd was accessed when the device was addressed
by device id.
The earlier implementation assumed that two arrays were in sync
but one of them was compacted when devices were removed. Instead
of that dependency the device now keeps track of it's file descriptor.
Change-Id: I2b8a793d76b89ab464ae830482b309fe86031671
Provides the basic infrastructure for a
NativeActivity's native code to get an object representing
its event stream that can be used to read input events.
Still work to do, probably some API changes, and reasonable
default key handling (so that for example back will still
work).
Change-Id: I6db891bc35dc9683181d7708eaed552b955a077e
Added ANRs handling.
Added event injection.
Fixed a NPE ActivityManagerServer writing ANRs to the drop box.
Fixed HOME key interception.
Fixed trackball reporting.
Fixed pointer rotation in landscape mode.
Change-Id: I50340f559f22899ab924e220a78119ffc79469b7
Added more tests.
Fixed a regression in Vector.
Fixed bugs in pointer tracking.
Fixed a starvation issue in PollLoop when setting or removing callbacks.
Fixed a couple of policy nits.
Modified the internal representation of MotionEvent to be more
efficient and more consistent.
Added code to skip/cancel virtual key processing when there are multiple
pointers down. This helps to better disambiguate virtual key presses
from stray touches (such as cheek presses).
Change-Id: I2a7d2cce0195afb9125b23378baa94fd2fc6671c
Refactored the code to eliminate potential deadlocks due to re-entrant
calls from the policy into the dispatcher. Also added some plumbing
that will be used to notify the framework about ANRs.
Change-Id: Iba7a10de0cb3c56cd7520d6ce716db52fdcc94ff
The old dispatch mechanism has been left in place and continues to
be used by default for now. To enable native input dispatch,
edit the ENABLE_NATIVE_DISPATCH constant in WindowManagerPolicy.
Includes part of the new input event NDK API. Some details TBD.
To wire up input dispatch, as the ViewRoot adds a window to the
window session it receives an InputChannel object as an output
argument. The InputChannel encapsulates the file descriptors for a
shared memory region and two pipe end-points. The ViewRoot then
provides the InputChannel to the InputQueue. Behind the
scenes, InputQueue simply attaches handlers to the native PollLoop object
that underlies the MessageQueue. This way MessageQueue doesn't need
to know anything about input dispatch per-se, it just exposes (in native
code) a PollLoop that other components can use to monitor file descriptor
state changes.
There can be zero or more targets for any given input event. Each
input target is specified by its input channel and some parameters
including flags, an X/Y coordinate offset, and the dispatch timeout.
An input target can request either synchronous dispatch (for foreground apps)
or asynchronous dispatch (fire-and-forget for wallpapers and "outside"
targets). Currently, finding the appropriate input targets for an event
requires a call back into the WindowManagerServer from native code.
In the future this will be refactored to avoid most of these callbacks
except as required to handle pending focus transitions.
End-to-end event dispatch mostly works!
To do: event injection, rate limiting, ANRs, testing, optimization, etc.
Change-Id: I8c36b2b9e0a2d27392040ecda0f51b636456de25
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
opaque 32-bits windows are now allocated as RGBX_8888 buffers and
SurfaceFlinger always uses GL_MODULATE instead of trying to
optimize to GL_REPLACE when possible (makes no sense on
h/w accelerated GL).
we still have a small hack for devices that don't support
RGBX_8888 in their gralloc implementation where we revert to
RGBA_8888.
the framebuffer implementation doesn't do anything special with this
but the surfaceflinger implementation makes sure the surface is not used
by two APIs simultaneously.
Change-Id: Id4ca8ef7093d68846abc2ac814327cc40a64b66b
We've gotten lucky to date: the previous calculation of bitmask array
sizes, (maxval+1)/8 only works properly when 'maxval' is one less than
a multiple of 8. Fortunately, this has either been the case for us,
or there has been sufficient 'unused' space at the end of the defined
max value range that we haven't wound up overreading/overwriting the
allocated buffers.
Change-Id: I563a93a86644ab9f19489565e06c28e06bb53abc
We now only consider a device to be a default keyboard if its name
has "-keypad". A hack, but whatever.
Also add some debug logging for the input state to help identify such
issues in the future.
Add a Flattenable interface to libutils which can be used to flatten
an object into bytestream + filedescriptor stream.
Parcel is modified to handle Flattenable. And GraphicBuffer implements
Flattenable.
Except for the overlay classes libui is now independent of libbinder.
Merge commit '425324e97bba75cd69bb6c81de6248529540e6fe'
* commit '425324e97bba75cd69bb6c81de6248529540e6fe':
Fix failure to open AVRCP input device due to EPERM.
Sleep for 100us and try to open the input device again if it fails, with a
maximum of 10 attempts.
We need the retry logic because setting permissions on a new input device is
racy. The init process watches for new input device (via uevent) and sets the
permission on them in devices.c:make_device(). However at the same time
EventHub.cpp watches for new input devices from the system_server process, and
immediately tries to open them. I can't see a simple way to avoid this race
condition.
As best as I can tell this race condition has always exisited.
There must have been some timing change that happened recently that causes us
to hit this race condition much more often. See repro notes in referenced bug.
Bug: 2375632
Surface::validate() could sometimes dereference a null pointer before checking it wasn't null.
This will prevent the application to crash when given bad parameters or used incorrectly.
However, the bug above probably has another cause.
we lost the concept of vertical stride when moving video playback to EGLImage.
Here we bring it back in a somewhat hacky-way that will work only for the
softgl/mdp backend.
Use EGLImageKHR instead of copybit directly.
We now have the basis to use streaming YUV textures (well, in fact
we already are). When/if we use the GPU instead of the MDP we'll
need to make sure it supports the appropriate YUV format.
Also make sure we compile if EGL_ANDROID_image_native_buffer is not supported
when running out of memory, a null handle is returned but the error code may not be set.
In that case we need to return NO_MEMORY instead of NO_ERROR, so that the calling code
won't try to dereference the null pointer.
This also fixes [2152536] ANR in browser
When SF is enqueuing buffers faster than SF dequeues them.
The update flag in SF is not counted and under some situations SF will only
dequeue the first buffer. The state at this point is not technically
corrupted, it's valid, but just delayed by one buffer.
In the case of the Browser ANR, because the last enqueued buffer was delayed
the resizing of the current buffer couldn't happen.
The system would always fall back onto its feet if anything -else- in
tried to draw, because the "late" buffer would be picked up then.
A window is created and the browser is about to render into it the
very first time, at that point it does an IPC to SF to request a new
buffer. Meanwhile, the window manager removes that window from the
list and the shared memory block it uses is marked as invalid.
However, at that point, another window is created and is given the
same index (that just go freed), but a different identity and resets
the "invalid" bit in the shared block. When we go back to the buffer
allocation code, we're stuck because the surface we're allocating for
is gone and we don't detect it's invalid because the invalid bit has
been reset.
It is not sufficient to check for the invalid bit, I should
also check that identities match.
When EGLImage extension is not available, SurfaceFlinger will fallback to using
glTexImage2D and glTexSubImage2D instead, which requires 50% more memory and an
extra copy. However this code path has never been exercised and had some bugs
which this patch fix.
Mainly the scale factor wasn't computed right when falling back on glDrawElements.
We also fallback to this mode of operation if a buffer doesn't have the adequate
usage bits for EGLImage usage.
This changes only code that is currently not executed. Some refactoring was needed to
keep the change clean. This doesn't change anything functionaly.
The ANR is caused by SurfaceFlinger waiting for buffers of a removed surface to become availlable.
When it is removed from the current list, a Surface is marked as NO_INIT, which causes SF to return
immediately in the above case. For some reason, the surface here wasn't marked as NO_INIT.
This change makes the code more robust by always (irregadless or errors) setting the NO_INIT status
in all code paths where a surface is removed from the list.
Additionaly added more information in the logs, should this happen again.
a new method, compostionComplete() is added to the framebuffer hal, it is used by surfaceflinger to signal the driver that the composition is complete, BEFORE it releases its client. This gives a chance to the driver to
Take 2. We needed to check that the usage flags are "good enough" as opposed to "the same".
This reverts commit 8f17a762fe9e9f31e4e86cb60ff2bfb6b10fdee6.
Appears to have been broken by:
commit 9779b221e999583ff89e0dfc40e56398737adbb3
Author: Mathias Agopian <mathias@google.com>
Date: Mon Sep 7 16:32:45 2009 -0700
fix [2068105] implement queueBuffer/lockBuffer/dequeueBuffer properly
For some reason we don't like to have "-lpthread" globally -- it's a no-op
on device builds, but required for many host tools and all sim binaries --
so adding the use of pthread calls requires adding the library explicitly.
Rewrote SurfaceFlinger's buffer management from the ground-up.
The design now support an arbitrary number of buffers per surface, however the current implementation is limited to four. Currently only 2 buffers are used in practice.
The main new feature is to be able to dequeue all buffers at once (very important when there are only two).
A client can dequeue all buffers until there are none available, it can lock all buffers except the last one that is used for composition. The client will block then, until a new buffer is enqueued.
The current implementation requires that buffers are locked in the same order they are dequeued and enqueued in the same order they are locked. Only one buffer can be locked at a time.
eg. Allowed sequence: DQ, DQ, LOCK, Q, LOCK, Q
eg. Forbidden sequence: DQ, DQ, LOCK, LOCK, Q, Q
This addresses a few parts of the bug:
- There was a small issue in the window manager where we could show a window
too early before the transition animation starts, which was introduced
by the recent wallpaper work. This was the cause of the flicker when
starting the dialer for the first time.
- There was a much larger problem that has existing forever where moving
an application token to the front or back was not synchronized with the
application animation transaction. This was the cause of the flicker
when hanging up (now that the in-call screen moves to the back instead
of closing and we always have a wallpaper visible). The approach to
solving this is to have the window manager go ahead and move the app
tokens (it must in order to keep in sync with the activity manager), but
to delay the actual window movement: perform the movement to front when
the animation starts, and to back when it ends. Actually, when the
animation ends, we just go and completely rebuild the window list to
ensure it is correct, because there can be ways people can add windows
while in this intermediate state where they could end up at the wrong
place once we do the delayed movement to the front or back. And it is
simply reasuring to know that every time we finish a full app transition,
we re-evaluate the world and put everything in its proper place.
Also included in this change are a few little tweaks to the input system,
to perform better logging, and completely ignore input devices that do not
have any of our input classes. There is also a little cleanup of evaluating
configuration changes to not do more work than needed when an input
devices appears or disappears, and to only log a config change message when
the config is truly changing.
Change-Id: Ifb2db77f8867435121722a6abeb946ec7c3ea9d3
what happened is that the efective pixel format is calculated by SF but Surface nevew had access to it directly.
in particular this caused query(FORMAT) to return the requested format instead of the effective format.
This change makes SurfaceHolder.setType(GPU) obsolete (it's now ignored).
Added an API to android_native_window_t to allow extending the functionality without ever breaking binary compatibility. This is used to implement the new set_usage() API. This API needs to be called by software renderers because the default is to use usage flags suitable for h/w.
* changes:
update most gl tests to use EGLUtils
added two EGL helpers for selecting a config matching a certain pixelformat or native window type
added NATIVE_WINDOW_FORMAT attribute to android_native_window_t
The major things going on here:
- The MotionEvent API is now extended to included "pointer ID" information, for
applications to keep track of individual fingers as they move up and down.
PointerLocation has been updated to take advantage of this.
- The input system now has logic to generate MotionEvents with the new ID
information, synthesizing an identifier as new points are down and trying to
keep pointer ids consistent across events by looking at the distance between
the last and next set of pointers.
- We now support the new multitouch driver protocol, and will use that instead
of the old one if it is available. We do NOT use any finger id information
coming from the driver, but always synthesize pointer ids in user space.
(This is simply because we don't yet have a driver reporting this information
from which to base an implementation on.)
- Increase maximum number of fingers to 10. This code has only been used
with a driver that reports up to 2, so no idea how more will actually work.
- Oh and the input system can now detect and report physical DPAD devices.