The xdg_shell spec seems to state[1] that xdg_toplevel_configure events can
always provide a 0×0 width/height to signal that the compositor doesn't
care. SDL previously assumed the provided width/height was always valid
for fullscreen windows, and so applied it as-is.
This broke SDL applications on KDE/KWin 5.23, which now sends 0×0
configure events (and, in 5.23.3, 1×1 events for some reason), breaking
all SDL applications in fullscreen[2].
[1]: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland-protocols/-/issues/6
[2]: https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=444962#c6
Otherwise, if one builds libSDL2_test using a new mingw but builds
the test programs using an older mingw, a link failure happens:
/opt/local/x86_64-w64-mingw32/lib/libSDL2_test.a(SDL_test_common.o): In function `printf':
/opt/local/x86_64-w64-mingw32/include/stdio.h:372: undefined reference to `__imp___acrt_iob_func'
collect2: ld returned 1 exit status
gbm_device_get_fd() in at least some libmali versions duplicates handle.
Other implementations do not do duplication. To prevent handle leak save
drm_fd in SDL_DisplayData.
When our keyboard grab hook is installed, GetKeyState() will return 0 for the
GUI keys even when they are pressed. This leads to spurious key up events when
holding down the GUI keys and the inability to use any key combos involving
those modifier keys.
This fixes a compile warning — and possible invalid memory read —
introduced in 9c03d255 ("Add back X11 legacy WM_NAME encodings"), which
was part of PR #5029, fixing Bug #4924.
The issue is with one of the added warnings in X11_GetWindowTitle().
Basically, the "title" variable passed to SDL_LogError() hasn't been
initialised yet: we could pass propdata in directly, but it's better to
move the SDL_LogError() call until after title is set, IMHO.
This fixes the following warning from gcc (SUSE Linux) 11.2.1:
In file included from /home/david/Development/SDL/src/video/x11/../../SDL_internal.h:45,
from /home/david/Development/SDL/src/video/x11/SDL_x11window.c:21:
/home/david/Development/SDL/src/video/x11/SDL_x11window.c: In function 'X11_GetWindowTitle':
/home/david/Development/SDL/src/video/x11/../../dynapi/SDL_dynapi_overrides.h:33:22: warning: '%s' directive argument is null [-Wformat-overflow=]
33 | #define SDL_LogDebug SDL_LogDebug_REAL
/home/david/Development/SDL/src/video/x11/SDL_x11window.c:720:13: note: in expansion of macro 'SDL_LogDebug'
720 | SDL_LogDebug(SDL_LOG_CATEGORY_VIDEO, "Failed to convert WM_NAME title expecting UTF8! Title: %s", title);
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~
Closes#4924.
Based on patches of the past, such as this work by James Cloos in July
2010:
d7d98751b7,
as well as code comments in the Perl module X11::Protocol::WM
(https://metacpan.org/pod/X11::Protocol::WM) and even the code to Xlib
itself, which taught me that we should never have been using
`XStoreName`, all it does is call `XChangeProperty`, hardcoded to
`XA_STRING`!
What can I say, when the task is old school, the sources are too 😂
On Win32 this list is empty and we always get controller added events. On UWP, this list is populated and we don't get controlle added events for currently connected controllers.
This is to workaround systems where we hang in playback because the buffer
does not report the space for whatever reason. The system will instead block
in PlayDevice, which always immediately follows WaitDevice in modern times
so this works out, and it seems to keep the device moving forward.
For a future revision, we are either going to clean this up more properly,
or attempt to move to PulseAudio's pa_stream_set_write_callback() API, but
this will do for SDL 2.0.18.
Reference #4387 for discussion and further information.
Touching HID devices with keyboard usages will trigger a keyboard capture
permission prompt on macOS 11+. See #4887
Like the IOKit joystick backend, we accept HID devices that have joystick,
gamepad, or multi-axis controller usages. We also allow the Valve VID for
the Steam Controller, just like the Windows HIDAPI implementation does.
We can also ditch the lock in RAWINPUT_JoystickQuit() now that the joystick
subsystem quits drivers in reverse order. There's no chance of a racing call
to RAWINPUT_WindowProc() anymore.
SDL_WINDOWS_JoystickDriver depends on callbacks in SDL_RAWINPUT_JoystickDriver
and SDL_HIDAPI_JoystickDriver being available. It also manages the common
WindowProc used for joystick detection in both WINDOWS and RAWINPUT drivers.
If we don't tear them down backwards, there's a window of time where we could
invoke RAWINPUT_WindowProc() after RAWINPUT_JoystickQuit() was called.
Since accessing Bluetooth prompts the user for permission on both Android and iOS, and we only need it for Steam Controller support, we'll leave it off by default. You can enable it by setting the hint SDL_HINT_JOYSTICK_HIDAPI_STEAM to "1" before calling SDL_Init()
Fixes https://github.com/libsdl-org/SDL/issues/4952
macOS 10.6 has some touch NSEvents which do not have a subtype
(Begin/EndGesture, Magnify, Rotate, Swipe) and cause an uncaught
exception which triggers SIGABRT and the program exits.
As it is, none of the macOS 10.6 touch events are detected as a
trackpad (including Gesture due to using different subtypes).
Case fallthrough warnings can be suppressed using the __fallthrough__
compiler attribute. Unfortunately, not all compilers have this
attribute, or even have __has_attribute to check if they have the
__fallthrough__ attribute. [[fallthrough]] is also available in C++17
and the next C2x, but not everyone uses C++17 or C2x.
So define the SDL_FALLTHROUGH macro to deal with those problems - if we
are using C++17 or C2x, it expands to [[fallthrough]]; else if the
compiler has __has_attribute and has the __fallthrough__ attribute, then
it expands to __attribute__((__fallthrough__)); else it expands to an
empty statement, with a /* fallthrough */ comment (it's a do {} while
(0) statement, because users of this macro need to use a semicolon,
because [[fallthrough]] and __attribute__((__fallthrough__)) require a
semicolon).
Clang before Clang 10 and GCC before GCC 7 have problems with using
__attribute__ as a sole statement and warn about a "declaration not
declaring anything", so fall back to using the /* fallthrough */ comment
if we are using those older compiler versions.
Applications using SDL are also free to use this macro (because it is
defined in begin_code.h).
All existing /* fallthrough */ comments have been replaced with this
macro. Some of them were unnecessary because they were the last case in
a switch; using SDL_FALLTHROUGH in those cases would result in a compile
error on compilers that support __fallthrough__, for having a
__attribute__((__fallthrough__)) statement that didn't immediately
precede a case label.
Case fallthrough warnings can be suppressed using the __fallthrough__
compiler attribute. Unfortunately, not all compilers have this
attribute, or even have __has_attribute to check if they have the
__fallthrough__ attribute. [[fallthrough]] is also available in C++17
and the next C2x, but not everyone uses C++17 or C2x.
So define the SDL_FALLTHROUGH macro to deal with those problems - if we
are using C++17 or C2x, it expands to [[fallthrough]]; else if the
compiler has __has_attribute and has the __fallthrough__ attribute, then
it expands to __attribute__((__fallthrough__)); else it expands to an
empty statement, with a /* fallthrough */ comment (it's a do {} while
(0) statement, because users of this macro need to use a semicolon,
because [[fallthrough]] and __attribute__((__fallthrough__)) require a
semicolon).
Applications using SDL are also free to use this macro (because it is
defined in begin_code.h).
All existing /* fallthrough */ comments have been replaced with this
macro. Some of them were unnecessary because they were the last case in
a switch; using SDL_FALLTHROUGH in those cases would result in a compile
error on compilers that support __fallthrough__, for having a
__attribute__((__fallthrough__)) statement that didn't immediately
precede a case label.
This causes lots of spam in test automation and it's not clear it's useful to developers. If we need this level of validation, we should add a log category for it.
Since the haptic subsystem is usually initialized after the joystick subsystem,
the initial calls to HapticMaybeAddDevice() from inside SDL_JoystickInit() will
arrive too early to be handled by the haptic subsystem. We need to add those
haptic devices for those already present joysticks ourselves.
* SDLTest_CommonDrawWindowInfo: log SDL_RenderGetScale, SDL_RenderGetLogicalSize
* testwm2: fix video modes menu hit detection in High DPI cases
- also when logical size is specified, e.g.
`--logical 640x480 --resizable --allow-highdpi`
* add function to determine logical coordinates of renderer point when given window point
* change since to the targeted milestone
* fix typo
* rename for consistency
* Change logical coordinate type to float, since we can render with floating point precision.
* add function to convert logical to window coordinates
* testwm2: use new SDL_RenderWindowToLogical
* SDL_render.c: alternate SDL_RenderWindowToLogical/SDL_RenderLogicalToWindow
Co-authored-by: John Blat <johnblat64@protonmail.com>
Co-authored-by: John Blat <47202511+johnblat64@users.noreply.github.com>
The joystick subsystem has complex precedence logic to deal multiple competing
backends like XInput, RawInput, and WGI. Let it fire the MaybeAdd callbacks
for joystick devices, since it knows which backend will end up managing them.
This resolves a situation where the RawInput joystick backend would take
control of an XInput device but the XInput haptic backend would still create
a haptic device. Since the XInput joystick backend didn't own the underlying
joystick device, we'd end up with an orphaned haptic device that didn't work
with SDL_HapticOpenFromJoystick() on the associated joystick device.