This change adds an implementation of a cache that stores key/value
pairs of unstructured binary blobs.
Change-Id: Idd01fdabedfa3aed6d359a6efb0592967af52651
Split out all the UTF-8/16/32 handling code from String8/16 to its own
file to allow better reuse of code.
Change-Id: If9ce63920edc75472c38da4adce0d13cda9ad2f7
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
The LHS was ignored when using:
String8 + String8
String8 + (const char*)
Add unit tests for above.
Bug: 2898473
Change-Id: Ic8fe7be668b665c36aaaa3fc3c3ffdfff0fbba25
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