We're not using IMemoryHeap as a transport anymore,
instead we're providing a CpuConsumer and use the
IGraphicBufferProducer version of the screenshot API.
However, some GPU drivers don't support properly
a GPU to CPU path, to work around this, we use a
temporary BufferQueue on the server side for the
GL rendering, and we use glReadPixels into the
CpuConsumer (we're now using a CPU to CPU path
which is always supported).
Currently this "wrapping" is always performed,
but it can be bypassed on devices that support
the GPU to CPU path.
This also addresses a DoS attack vector on
SurfaceFlinger, where an application could
consume all of SF's filedescriptors by creating
a lot of screenshots in a row.
Bug: 8390553
Change-Id: I9e81514c2a7711b9bb393f74305be7d2abe08f1c
ISurface was only used to get the IGraphicBufferProducer from
a Layer. It's now replaced by a BBinder subclass / IBinder and
is only used as a handle to the surface, to both refer to it
and manage its life-time.
Also cleaned-up a bit the ISurfaceComposer interface and
"create layer" code path.
Change-Id: I68d0e02d57b862cffb31d5168c3bc10cea0906eb
When disconnecting from BufferQueue, we now drain the queue
except the head (which means in the screenshot case we won't
have to block, but we might not have a buffer to show, this
will appear as an error in the log).
Bug: 8362363
Change-Id: If80989aac3c917beea2ebddf3cbb502849d394da
we check that the order in which we destroy GLConsumer wrt.
releasing the corresponding EGLSurface via eglMake(Un)Current
doesn't leak a buffer.
On at least 2 devices this test doesn't pass.
Change-Id: I63ab83951b4b0a977f38571158f948cbd9dc7cec
CpuConsumer cannot simply assume a slot's buffer is the same buffer
between acquire and release, and therefore it could be possible for
the same slot to get used for a second acquired buffer, if there's a
producer disconnect in between. This would cause a problem when the
first buffer is released by the consumer.
Instead, use an independent list of acquired buffers to properly track
their state.
Bug: 8291751
Change-Id: I0241ad8704e53d47318c7179b13daed8181b1fab
Writing a NULL Surface was being read as a non-NULL Surface with NULL
mGraphicBufferProducer. Before the SurfaceTextureClient -> Surface
refactoring, you'd get a NULL Surface, and some code relies on that.
Bug: 8291161
Change-Id: I477bfe8882693e53a5f604a3d2c9e3cfe24473b4
- SurfaceFlinger now supports to take a screenshot
directly into an IGraphicBufferProducer
- reimplement the IMemoryHeap screenshot on top
of the above
- reimplement LayerScreenshot such that its
BufferQueue is directly used as the destination
of the screenshot. LayerScreenshot is now a thin
wrapper around Layer
Bug: 6940974
Change-Id: I69a2096b44b91acbb99eba16f83a9c78d94e0d10
Temporary, to fix weekend build, until we get Nvidia code drop.
This reverts commit 9a867a8798
DO NOT MERGE
Change-Id: I7b5dbc4db46ef3d97dc8598057d5487d6971178b
We check that calling eglSwapBuffers() on an abandonned BufferQueue
return EGL_BAD_SURFACE -- this is to ensure consistancy between
drivers.
Change-Id: Ibb548e0cf767ceee69f2fc4a85811d15a6522277
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
In SurfaceFlingerConsumer, check to see if native fence sync is
enabled. If so, defer the texture binding step to Layer::onDraw.
Change-Id: I7d4034a31c0143207eea2509dfa13ef3820f9b8c
Rearranges updateTexImage() so that the SurfaceFlinger-specific
behavior is in a new SurfaceFlingerConsumer subclass.
SurfaceTexture behavior should not be altered. Instead of
acquire-bind-release we now do acquire-release-bind, but since
it's all done with the lock held there shouldn't be any
externally-visible change.
Change-Id: Ia566e4727945e2cfb9359fc6d2a8f8af64d7b7b7
This change makes ConsumerBase::onBuffersReleased hold a reference to all its
gralloc buffers until after the mutex is unlocked. This prevents slow
gralloc::free calls from causing lock contention with rendering threads.
Bug: 7675940
Change-Id: I0ec805d1b612afeeecfffec03f982371d27d93be
in this particular case, this OOB is always harmless
(and that's why it didn't get fixed from MR1), however,
it interfers with valgrind debugging.
Change-Id: Ic977e03287e59c4b124a89146c9023bd0cb540a8
This prevents strong reference cycles when the listener implementation also
holds a strong pointer to the ConsumerBase
Bug: 7425644
Change-Id: I1514b13a32b18d421c902dddebec0765a989c55c
This change fixes a number of small glitches that can occur when
multiple components in the same process are updating surfaces.
One would expect that updates to disjoint sets of surfaces would
not collide but this is not the case. The first component to
close the global transaction causes all pending updates to
be applied, including those that another component might not
have finished setting up if it also had an open transaction
at the same time.
Change-Id: I99345958581abbe0e1e325a5bcba37e8941a313a
This change adds support for displays that are not allowed to display surfaces
with the eSecure flag set. All non-virtual displays are considered secure,
while virtual displays have their secure-ness specified at creation time.
Bug: 7368436
Change-Id: I81ad535d2d1e5a7ff78269017e85b111f0098500
This change adds a transaction flag for WindowManager to indicate that a
transaction is being used to animate windows around the screen. SurfaceFlinger
will not allow more than one of these transactions to be outstanding at a time
to prevent the animation "frames" from being dropped.
Bug: 7353840
Change-Id: I6488a6e0e1ed13d27356d2203c9dc766dc6b1759