The transaction flags were atomically read-and-cleared to determine if
a transaction was needed, in the later case, mStateLock was taken to
keep the current state still during the transaction. This left a small
window open, where a layer could be removed after the transaction flags
were checked but before the transaction was started holding the lock.
In that situation eTraversalNeeded would be set but only seen during the
next transaction cycle; however, because we're handling this transaction
(because of another flag) it will be commited, "loosing" the information
about the layer being removed -- so when the next transaction cycle due
to eTraversalNeeded starts, it won't notice that layers have been removed
and won't populated the ditchedLayers array.
Bug: 4483049
Change-Id: Ibb5989312f871339928ee1aa3f9567770d72969b
Client::mLayers could be accessed from different threads.
On one side from Client::attachLayer() which is currently
called from a binder thread; on the other side from
Client::detachLayer() which is always called from the main
thread.
This could lead to a corruption of Client::mLayers.
We fix this issue by adding an internal lock to Client.
Bug: 4483046
Change-Id: I5262bf1124d9a65ec6f8ffd8e367356fc33a7536
6d0f6cb Revert "Fix [3513017] in lockscreen but showing empty launcher (live wallpaper) only"
6154412 Revert "partially fix [3306150] HTML5 video with H/W acceleration blackout (DO NOT MERGE)"
37c2a37 fix [3408713] Dialog window invisible sometimes
It looks like there is a surface leak, it's unclear where it is.
Without those reverts, this would cause a leak of the associated buffers
which is far more problematic. this change might hide the surface leak.
Bug: 4078032
Change-Id: Iedcda3ffcdd2f69d41047b5c3134c1e867ff90d7
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.
This is a poor's man precursor to the h/w composer HAL.
Basically we detect when a window is full screen and in
that case we bypass surfaceflinger's composition step, which
yields to much improved performance.
Change-Id: Ie03796ae81a1c951949b771c9323044b980cb347
3097475: Animation setting should control the screen on animation
3096779: CRT power-on animation can briefly show the top app instead of lockscreen
There is now a parameter that controls wether the ON and/or OFF animation are
performed. we also always clear the screen to black on power off, to make
sure it won't briefly appear on power on.
HOWEVER, 3096779 is not 100% fixed in the case where we're doing the animation
because there is a race, where SF doesn't wait (b/c it doesn't know) for the
framework to have redrawn the lockscreen.
Change-Id: Ie0f02c9225fcdf24b1e8907e268eb7da2c5b0a03
the core screenshot function now can capture the screen at any lower resolution
performing bilinear filtering.
we also now have some client code to interface with the screenshot service.
it's now possible to request a screenshot at a lower resolution.
Change-Id: I33689bba98507ab928d0898b21596d0d2fe4b953
screenshots are taken using ISurfaceComposer::captureScreen() which returns
the size of the screenshot and an IMemoryHeap containing the data.
screenshots have limitations:
- they will always fail if a secure window is up on screen
- require GL_OES_framebuffer_object extension
- in some situation, video planes won't been captured
Change-Id: I741c68a2d2984fb139039301c3349e6780e2cd58
moved surfaceflinger, audioflinger, cameraservice
all native services should now reside in this location.
Change-Id: Iee42b83dd2a94c3bf5107ab0895fe2dfcd5337a8