DisplayDevice now has a DisplaySurface instead of using
FramebufferSurface directly. FramebufferSurface implements
DisplaySurface, and so does the new VirtualDisplaySurface class.
DisplayDevice now always has a surface, not just for virtual displays.
In this change VirtualDisplaySurface is just a stub; buffers still go
directly from GLES to the final consumer.
Bug: 8384764
Change-Id: I57cb668edbc6c37bfebda90b9222d435bf589f37
None of these should change behavior, except for removing some
incorrect log messages when using a virtual display.
- HWComposer::getAndResetReleaseFenceFd() checks the HWC version, so
no need to do that in the DisplayDevice::onSwapBuffersCompleted().
However, it should check that mFramebufferSurface is not NULL like
it is for virtual displays.
- Comment that FramebufferSurface::dump() overrides the non-virtual
ConsumerBase::dump(), and fix it so the right thing happens
regardless of the static type of the pointer/reference the callee
has. FramebufferSurface::dump() could be removed right now, but I'd
need to bring it back in a later change.
- Use the right enum for validating display type ids.
- Don't try to send hotplug events for virtual displays.
- Mark virtual displays as connected so HWComposer::prepare() doesn't
think something is wrong when it gets a non-NULL layer list.
- Remove unused FramebufferSurface methods.
Bug: 8384764
Change-Id: Id28a2f9be86b45f4bb7915fdf7752157035f4294
FramebufferSurface no longer speaks directly to the FB HAL. Now
everything goes through HWComposer (which may or may not be
connected to a hardware composer).
Added display index arg to some query methods.
Change-Id: Id3e157d2d4e3555d33afbb703e518b6e92e2d6d5
This change moves some common fence handling code into the base class for
BufferQueue consumer classes. It also makes the ConsumerBase class initialize
a buffer slot's fence with the acquire fence every time a buffer is acquired.
Change-Id: I0bd88bc269e919653b659bfb3ebfb04dd61692a0
This change makes BufferQueue derive the min undequeued buffer count from a max
acquired buffer count that is set by the consumer. This value may be set at
any time that a producer is not connected to the BufferQueue rather than at
BufferQueue construction time.
Change-Id: Icf9f1d91ec612a079968ba0a4621deffe48f4e22
This change is a clean up of some of the handling of the maximum number of
buffers that are allowed at once. It mostly renames a few member variables and
methods, but it includes a couple small refactorings.
Change-Id: I9959310f563d09583548d4291e1050a7bbc7d87d
This change refactors the FramebufferSurface class to inherit from the new
ConsumerBase class.
Bug: 6620200
Change-Id: I46ec942ddb019658e3c5e79465548b171b2261f2
After a HWC set, each SurfaceFlinger Layer retrieves the release fence
HWC returned and gives it to the layer's SurfaceTexture. The
SurfaceTexture accumulates the fences into a merged fence until the
next updateTexImage, then passes the merged fence to the BufferQueue
in releaseBuffer.
In a follow-on change, BufferQueue will return the fence along with
the buffer slot in dequeueBuffer. For now, dequeueBuffer waits for the
fence to signal before returning.
The releaseFence default value for BufferQueue::releaseBuffer() is
temporary to avoid transient build breaks with a multi-project
checkin. It'll disappear in the next change.
Change-Id: Iaa9a0d5775235585d9cbf453d3a64623d08013d9
SF now has its own implementation of ANW for the
framebuffer and it uses BufferQueue. FramebufferNativeWindow
is now only used by stand-alone apps.
Change-Id: Iddeb24087df62bd92b0f78e391dda9b97ddc859c