It turns out that there's no reason to have both I* and Bn* versions
of the createBufferQueue method, so I removed the Bn* version.
Change-Id: I66aeb09e10458ae540ddf1f38d2d0154ea8f315b
Adds a test that puts the BufferQueue into its own process and
connects to it over remote binder interfaces. This exposed the fact
that while IGBC was technically binderized, it didn't actually work
when flattened, so this change also fixes that.
Change-Id: I728cdb662a4273ddd3440ed6040a12560313fe68
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
* Basic tests only. Needs more complicated queue/dequeue tests.
* Also needs consumer-side tests to really be thorough.
Change-Id: I1099dd56d65b6e9dfa15377726d6054ce657c0ca
While currently untested, this should allow to move the
BuffereQueue in the consumer process and have everything
work as usual.
Bug: 9265647
Change-Id: I9ca8f099f7c65b9a27b7e7a3643b46d1b58eacfc
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
When acquiring a buffer, SurfaceFlinger now computes the expected
presentation time and passes it to the BufferQueue acquireBuffer()
method. If it's not yet time to display the buffer, acquireBuffer()
returns PRESENT_LATER instead of a buffer.
The current implementation of the expected-present-time computation
uses approximations and guesswork.
Bug 7900302
Change-Id: If9345611c5983a11a811935aaf27d6388a5036f1
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
This change adds some infrastructure for testing the BufferQueue class. It
also includes a test that tests the new check in BufferQueue::acquireBuffer
that prevents the consumer from acquiring more than one buffer beyond the max
acquired buffer count that was set.
Change-Id: I38554ad3f9a53d2ddeba7ef0deee35ec2e2f9775