Bug: 5049148
Finished stylus support, including support for indirect stylus
and mouse tools.
Added TILT axis. When stylus tilt X/Y is available, it is transformed
into an orientation and tilt inclination which is a more convenient
representation and a simpler extension to the exiting API.
Touch devices now only report touch data using a single input
source. Previously touch devices in pointer mode would report
both absolute touch pad data and cooked pointer gestures.
Now we just pick one. The touch device switches modes as needed
when the focused application enables/disables pointer gestures.
This change greatly simplifies the code and reduces the load
on the input dispatcher.
Fixed an incorrect assumption that the value of ABS_(MT_)DISTANCE
would be zero whenever the stylus was in direct contact. It appears
that the correct way to determine whether the stylus is in direct
contact (rather than hovering) is by checking for a non-zero
reported pressure.
Added code to read the initial state of tool buttons and axis values
when the input devices are initialized or reset. This fixes
problems where the input mapper state might have the wrong initial
state.
Moved responsibility for cancelling pending inputs (keys down,
touches, etc.) to the InputDispatcher by sending it a device reset
notification. This frees the InputReader from having to synthesize
events during reset, which was cumbersome and somewhat brittle
to begin with.
Consolidated more of the common accumulator logic from
SingleTouchInputMapper and MultiTouchInputMapper into
TouchInputMapper.
Improved the PointerLocation output.
Change-Id: I595d3647f7fd7cb1e3eff8b3c76b85043b5fe2f0
Bug: 5064702
Introduced the concept of an InputListener to further decouple
the InputReader from the InputDispatcher. The InputListener
exposes just the minimum interface that the InputReader needs
to communicate with the outside world. The InputReader
passes arguments to the InputListener by reference, which makes
it easy to queue them up.
Consolidated all of the InputReader locks into one simple global
Mutex. The reason this wasn't done before was due to potential
re-entrance in outbound calls to the InputDispatcher. To fix this,
the InputReader now queues up all of the events it wants to send
using a QueuedInputListener, then flushes them outside of the
critical section after all of the event processing is finished.
Removing all of the InputMapper locks greatly simplifies the
implementation.
Added tests for new stylus features such as buttons, tool types,
and hovering.
Added some helpers to BitSet32 to handle common code patterns
like finding the first marked bit and clearing it.
Fixed a bug in VelocityTracker where the wrong pointer trace
could get cleared when handling ACTION_POINTER_DOWN. Oops.
Changed PointerCoords so it no longer stores useless zero
axis values. Removed editAxisValue because it is not very
useful when all zero value axes are absent and therefore
cannot be edited in place.
Added dispatch of stylus hover events.
Added support for distance and tool types.
Change-Id: I4cf14d134fcb1db7d10be5f2af7b37deef8f8468
Adding SurfaceEncoder which can be used to encode
custom frame data. In a sense, it is reverse
of what SurfaceTexture does.
SurfaceEncoder takes in frames from a native window and
passes them to an encoder, thus acting like a MediaSource.
It uses GRAlloc buffers underneath for passing data.
The client side sets the geometry, format in the beginning,
which cannot be changed while the recording is going on.
Currently, there is no common pixel format that both
GRAlloc and HAL understand.
Also, the encoder cannot encode using the data from the GRAlloc
buffers.
The SurfaceEncoder_test examines mainly the buffer passage
since true encoding cannot be done at this point.
SimpleDummyRecorder 'reads' the frames in the same thread
as the start(), whereas DummyRecorder 'reads' in a separate
thread much like the MPEG4Writer. The test with DummyRecorder
is much closer to the real encoding implementation.
Related to bug id: 4529323
Change-Id: I58ec19a150f8fe4d6195196dc44f55002b46c7c8
Bug: 4364920
Velocity damping proved to be a bad idea because it would
cause a significant ramp in velocity at the beginning of
a gesture, instead of the desired smooth behavior. Oh well.
Change-Id: Ie631946f47ef2492bd71fbed1ab44bbb39a875a8
Added a new PointerIcon API (hidden for now) for loading
pointer icons.
Fixed a starvation problem in the native Looper's sendMessage
implementation which caused new messages to be posted ahead
of old messages sent with sendMessageDelayed.
Redesigned the touch pad gestures to be defined in terms of
more fluid finger / spot movements. The objective is to reinforce
the natural mapping between fingers and spots which means there
must not be any discontinuities in spot motion relative to
the fingers.
Removed the SpotController stub and folded its responsibilities
into PointerController.
Change-Id: Ib647dbd7a57a7f30dd9c6e2c260df51d7bbdd18e
Replaced VelocityTracker with a faster and more accurate
native implementation. This avoids the duplicate maintenance
overhead of having two implementations.
The new algorithm requires that the sample duration be at least
10ms in order to contribute to the velocity calculation. This
ensures that the velocity is not severely overestimated when
samples arrive in bursts.
The new algorithm computes the exponentially weighted moving
average using weights based on the relative duration of successive
sample periods.
The new algorithm is also more careful about how it handles
individual pointers going down or up and their effects on the
collected movement traces. The intent is to preserve the last
known velocity of pointers as they go up while also ensuring
that other motion samples do not count twice in that case.
Bug: 4086785
Change-Id: I95054102397c4b6a9076dc6a0fc841b4beec7920
1. Single finger tap performs a click.
2. Single finger movement moves the pointer (hovers).
3. Button press plus movement performs click or drag.
While dragging, the pointer follows the finger that is moving
fastest. This is important if there are additional fingers
down on the touch pad for the purpose of applying force
to an integrated button underneath.
4. Two fingers near each other moving in the same direction
are coalesced as a swipe gesture under the pointer.
5. Two or more fingers moving in arbitrary directions are
transformed into touches in the vicinity of the pointer.
This makes scale/zoom and rotate gestures possible.
Added a native VelocityTracker implementation to enable intelligent
switching of the active pointer during drags.
Change-Id: I7b7ddacc724fb1306e1590dbaebb740d3130d7cd
Added the concept of pointer properties in a MotionEvent.
This is currently used to track the pointer tool type to enable
applications to distinguish finger touches from a stylus.
Button states are also reported to application as part of touch events.
There are no new actions for detecting changes in button states.
The application should instead query the button state from the
MotionEvent and take appropriate action as needed.
A good time to check the button state is on ACTION_DOWN.
As a side-effect, applications that do not support multiple buttons
will treat primary, secondary and tertiary buttons identically
for all touch events.
The back button on the mouse is mapped to KEYCODE_BACK
and the forward button is mapped to KEYCODE_FORWARD.
Added basic plumbing for the secondary mouse button to invoke
the context menu, particularly in lists.
Added clamp and split methods on MotionEvent to take care of
common filtering operations so we don't have them scattered
in multiple places across the framework.
Bug: 4260011
Change-Id: Ie992b4d4e00c8f2e76b961da0a902145b27f6d83
First step of improving app screen size compatibility mode. When
running in compat mode, an application's windows are scaled up on
the screen rather than being small with 1:1 pixels.
Currently we scale the application to fill the entire screen, so
don't use an even pixel scaling. Though this may have some
negative impact on the appearance (it looks okay to me), it has a
big benefit of allowing us to now treat these apps as normal
full-screens apps and do the normal transition animations as you
move in and out and around in them.
This introduces fun stuff in the input system to take care of
modifying pointer coordinates to account for the app window
surface scaling. The input dispatcher is told about the scale
that is being applied to each window and, when there is one,
adjusts pointer events appropriately as they are being sent
to the transport.
Also modified is CompatibilityInfo, which has been greatly
simplified to not be so insane and incomprehendible. It is
now simple -- when constructed it determines if the given app
is compatible with the current screen size and density, and
that is that.
There are new APIs on ActivityManagerService to put applications
that we would traditionally consider compatible with larger screens
in compatibility mode. This is the start of a facility to have
a UI affordance for a user to switch apps in and out of
compatibility.
To test switching of modes, there is a new variation of the "am"
command to do this: am screen-compat [on|off] [package]
This mode switching has the fundamentals of restarting activities
when it is changed, though the state still needs to be persisted
and the overall mode switch cleaned up.
For the few small apps I have tested, things mostly seem to be
working well. I know of one problem with the text selection
handles being drawn at the wrong position because at some point
the window offset is being scaled incorrectly. There are
probably other similar issues around the interaction between
two windows because the different window coordinate spaces are
done in a hacky way instead of being formally integrated into
the window manager layout process.
Change-Id: Ie038e3746b448135117bd860859d74e360938557
These definitions have been moved to system/core.
Change-Id: I021b6b5f2fd72d538b5ccdcb33860ebd3004d9ad
Signed-off-by: Iliyan Malchev <malchev@google.com>
query() does not modify the object's data, so it needs to be a const method
Change-Id: I67c40a3c865461e6f1cc2193fd2d74286ff6ac8f
Signed-off-by: Iliyan Malchev <malchev@google.com>
Added a new PointerIcon API (hidden for now) for loading
pointer icons.
Fixed a starvation problem in the native Looper's sendMessage
implementation which caused new messages to be posted ahead
of old messages sent with sendMessageDelayed.
Redesigned the touch pad gestures to be defined in terms of
more fluid finger / spot movements. The objective is to reinforce
the natural mapping between fingers and spots which means there
must not be any discontinuities in spot motion relative to
the fingers.
Removed the SpotController stub and folded its responsibilities
into PointerController.
Change-Id: I5126b1e69d95252fda7f2a684c9287e239a57163
The idea is to assist with debugging by identifying cases in which
the input event stream is corrupted.
Change-Id: I0a00e52bbe2716be1b3dfc7c02a754492d8e7f1f
This patch adds a mechanism for capturing, filtering, transforming
and injecting input events at a very low level before the input
dispatcher attempts to deliver them to applications. At this time,
the mechanism is only intended to be used by the accessibility
system to implement built-in system-level accessibility affordances.
The accessibility input filter is currently just a stub.
It logs the input events receives and reinjects them unchanged,
except that it transforms KEYCODE_Q into KEYCODE_Z.
Currently, the accessibility input filter is installed whenever
accessibility is enabled. We'll probably want to change that
so it only enables the input filter when a screen reader is
installed and we want touch exploration.
Change-Id: I35764fdf75522b69d09ebd78c9766eb7593c1afe
this type is still used by partner's source trees.
we will get rid of it in next release's timeframe.
This reverts commit 7b49b976277cb3538242151e7dbd24681ddec73e.
API addition: The timestamps are represented as nanoseconds from some
arbitrary time point. Like the SurfaceTexture transform matrix, the
timestamp retrieved by getTimestamp is for the last frame sent to the
GL texture using updateTexImage().
Camera HAL change: Expect vendors to set these timestamps using
native_window_set_buffers_timestamp(). For now, they are
autogenerated by SurfaceTextureClient if set_buffers_timestamp() is
never called, but such timing is likely not accurate enough to pass a
CTS test.
bug:3300707
Change-Id: Ife131a0c2a826ac27342e11b8a6c42ff49e1bea7
Replaced VelocityTracker with a faster and more accurate
native implementation. This avoids the duplicate maintenance
overhead of having two implementations.
The new algorithm requires that the sample duration be at least
10ms in order to contribute to the velocity calculation. This
ensures that the velocity is not severely overestimated when
samples arrive in bursts.
The new algorithm computes the exponentially weighted moving
average using weights based on the relative duration of successive
sample periods.
The new algorithm is also more careful about how it handles
individual pointers going down or up and their effects on the
collected movement traces. The intent is to preserve the last
known velocity of pointers as they go up while also ensuring
that other motion samples do not count twice in that case.
Bug: 4086785
Change-Id: I2632321232c64d6b8faacdb929e33f60e64dcdd3
This change adds a query to the ANativeWindow interface for getting the
concrete type of the ANativeWindow.
Bug: 4086509
Change-Id: I64aa86d72fbca3b52a98e1fc35608737781a3178
1. Single finger tap performs a click.
2. Single finger movement moves the pointer (hovers).
3. Button press plus movement performs click or drag.
While dragging, the pointer follows the finger that is moving
fastest. This is important if there are additional fingers
down on the touch pad for the purpose of applying force
to an integrated button underneath.
4. Two fingers near each other moving in the same direction
are coalesced as a swipe gesture under the pointer.
5. Two or more fingers moving in arbitrary directions are
transformed into touches in the vicinity of the pointer.
This makes scale/zoom and rotate gestures possible.
Added a native VelocityTracker implementation to enable intelligent
switching of the active pointer during drags.
Change-Id: I5ada57e7f2bdb9b0a791843eb354a8c706b365dc
Associate each motion axis with the source from which it comes.
It is possible for multiple sources of the same device to define
the same axis. This fixes new API that was introduced in MR1.
(Bug: 4066146)
Fixed a bug that might cause a segfault when using a trackball.
Only fade out the mouse pointer when touching the touch screen,
ignore other touch pads.
Changed the plural "sources" to "source" in several places in
the InputReader where we intend to refer to a particular source
rather than to a combination of sources.
Improved the batching code to support batching events from different
sources of the same device in parallel. (Bug: 3391564)
Change-Id: I0189e18e464338f126f7bf94370b928e1b1695f2
This change adds a new 'method' to the ANativeWindow interface to check
whether buffers queued to the window will be sent directly to the system
window compositor.
Change-Id: I4d4b199e328c110b68b250029aea650f03c8724d
Bug: 3495535
Ensure that the joystick can always reach -1.0, 0.0 and 1.0 positions
even when noise filtering is applied. (Bug: 3514510)
Add support for a few more standard axes.
Add additional mapping modes for axes.
Some axes are inverted from standard interpretation
or are actually intended to be split into two distict axes
such as left/right trigger controls or accelerator/brake.
Add key layout file for a G25 racing wheel and XBox 360 controller
to tweak behavior. They work fine without them but the axis mappings
are not ideal.
Change-Id: I0fddd90309af4dc14d35f34fe99ed6e521c0b7c7
Added some plumbing to enable the policy to intercept motion
events when the screen is off to handle wakeup if needed.
Added a basic concept of an external device to limit the scope
of the wakeup policy to external devices only. The wakeup policy
for internal devices should be based on explicit rules such as
policy flags in key layout files.
Moved isTouchEvent to native.
Ensure the dispatcher sends the right event type to userActivity
for non-touch pointer events like HOVER_MOVE and SCROLL.
Bug: 3193114
Change-Id: I15dbd48a16810dfaf226ff7ad117d46908ca4f86
Fades out the mouse pointer:
- after 15 seconds of inactivity normally
- after 3 seconds of inactivity in lights out mode
- after a non-modifier key down
- after a touch down
Extended the native Looper to support enqueuing time delayed
messages. This is used by the PointerController to control
pointer fade timing.
Change-Id: I87792fea7dbe2d9376c78cf354fe3189a484d9da
This change adds a new query to ANativeWindow for getting the minimum
number of buffers that must be left un-dequeued during the steady-state
operation of the ANativeWindow.
Change-Id: Ie8c461fc26b02ecde02ddb4f95bf763662cf1551
Related-Bug: 3356050
Added API on InputDevice to query the set of axes available.
Added API on KeyEvent and MotionEvent to convert keycodes and axes
to symbolic name strings for diagnostic purposes.
Added API on KeyEvent to query if a given key code is a gamepad button.
Added a new "axis" element to key layout files to specify the
mapping between raw absolute axis values and motion axis ids.
Expanded the axis bitfield to 64bits to allow for future growth.
Modified the Makefile for keyboard prebuilts to run the keymap
validation tool during the build.
Added layouts for two game controllers.
Added default actions for game pad button keys.
Added more tests.
Fixed a bunch of bugs.
Change-Id: I73f9166c3b3c5bcf4970845b58088ad467525525
This change makes it possible to extend the set of axes that
are reported in MotionEvents by defining new axis constants.
The MotionEvent object is now backed by its C++ counterpart
to avoid having to maintain multiple representations of the
same data.
Change-Id: Ibe93c90d4b390d43c176cce48d558d20869ee608
This changes the ANativeWindow API and the two implementations to reset
the window's crop rectangle to be uncropped when the window's buffer
geometry is changed.
Bug: 3359604
Change-Id: I64283dc8382ae687787ec0bebe6a5d5b4a0dcd6b
The touch screen sometimes reports more than 10 pointers even though that's
all we asked for. When this happens, we start dropping events with more
than 10 pointers. This confuses applications and causes them to crash.
Raised the limit to 16 pointers.
Bug: 3331247
The default behavior was to identify all touch devices as touch screens.
External devices that are plugged in are more likely to be touch pads
not attached to a screen. Changed the default to be a touch pad
and renamed some internal constants to avoid confusion.
A certain mouse happens to also behave like a touch pad. That caused
problems because we would see multiple concurrent traces of motion events
coming from the same input device so we would batch them up.
Added code to ensure that we don't batch events unless they come from
the same *source* in addition to coming from the same *device*.
Due to batching or misbehaving drivers, it's possible for the set of
pointer ids to be different from what we expect when it comes time to
split motion events across windows. As a result, we can generate motion
events with 0 pointers. When we try to deliver those events, we cause
an error in the InputTransport so we tear down the InputChannel and kill
the application.
Added code to check out assumption about pointer ids and drop the
event gracefully instead.
Patched up the tests to take into account the change in default behavior
for identifying touch screens and touch pads.
Change-Id: Ic364bd4cb4cc6335d4a1213a26d6bdadc7e33505
InputReader::getSwitchState always returns AKEY_STATE_UNKNOWN
because SwitchInputMapper::getSources() returns 0 which cannot
match any source mask including AINPUT_SOURCE_ANY. As a result
initial lid switch detection is broken.
This change adds a new source constant AINPUT_SOURCE_SWITCH
that indicates that the source has switches.
Change-Id: I5321ecf0ce84f1c2b4535f6c163d3f4dcf9b7a9b