This optimization is currently disabled until Launcher is
modified to take advantage of it. The optimization can be
enabled by turning on RENDER_LAYERS_AS_REGIONS in the
OpenGLRenderer.h file.
Change-Id: I2fdf59d0f4dc690a3d7f712173ab8db3848b27b1
Reorganization of getResource to allow for other densities accidentally
overrode the default return code for getResource from BAD_VALUE to
BAD_INDEX. This corrects the default return to BAD_VALUE which restores
other things to working.
Bug: 3155824
Change-Id: I13dafff85bc6978c5f5435fc09ab0474c7885c4d
Two issues:
1. First, due to an inverted conditional in the input dispatcher, we were
reporting touches as long touches and vice-versa to the power manager.
2. Power manager user activity cheek event suppression also suppresses touch
events (but not long touch or up events). As a result, if cheek event
suppression was enabled, touches would not poke the user activity timer.
However due to the above logic inversion, this actually affected long
touches. Net result, if cheek suppression was enabled in the power manager
and you held your thumb on the screen long enough, the phone would
go to sleep!
Cheek event suppression is commonly turned on when making a phone call.
Interestingly, it does not seem to get turned off afterward...
This change fixes the logic inversion and exempts touches from the cheek
suppression. The reason we do the latter is because the old behavior
was actually harmful in other ways too: a touch down would be suppressed
but not a long touch or the touch up. This would cause bizarre behavior
if you touched the screen while it was dimmed. Instead of brightening
immediately, it would brighten either when you lifted your finger or
300ms later, whichever came first.
Bug: 3154895
Change-Id: Ied9ccec6718fbe86506322ff47a4e3eb58f81834
Rewrote interceptKeyBeforeQueueing to make the handling more systematic.
Behavior should be identical except:
- We never pass keys to applications when the screen is off and the keyguard
is not showing (the proximity sensor turned off the screen).
Previously we passed all non-wake keys through in this case which
caused a bug on Crespo where the screen would come back on if a soft key
was held at the time of power off because the resulting key up event
would sneak in just before the keyguard was shown. It would then be
passed through to the dispatcher which would poke user activity and
wake up the screen.
- We propagate the key flags when broadcasting media keys which
ensures that recipients can tell when the key is canceled.
- We ignore endcall or power if canceled (shouldn't happen anyways).
Changed the input dispatcher to not poke user activity for canceled
events since they are synthetic and should not wake the device.
Changed the lock screen so that it does not poke the wake lock when the
grab handle is released. This fixes a bug where the screen would come
back on immediately if the power went off while the user was holding
one of the grab handles because the sliding tab would receive an up
event after screen turned off and release the grab handles.
Fixed a couple of issues where media keys were being handled inconsistently
or not at all, particularly in the case of the new PAUSE, PLAY
and RECORD keys.
Bug: 3144874
Change-Id: Ie630f5fb6f128cfdf94845f9428067045f42892c