- use _Interlocked(Compare)ExchangePointer in case of _M_IX86 as well
- improve assertions:
1. add assertions to SDL_AtomicAdd/SDL_AtomicSet and SDL_AtomicCAS
2. use sizeof(a->value) instead of sizeof(int)
Sending rumble to the Amazon Luna controller on macOS gets there, but IOHIDDeviceSetReport() blocks for a long time and eventually fails.
This appears to be a bug in the macOS Bluetooth stack, ref rdar://99265496
- SDL_EventQ.active is a bool variable -> do not use SDL_AtomicGet/Set, it does not help in any way
- protect SDL_EventQ.active with SDL_EventQ.lock
- set SDL_EventQ.active to FALSE by default
This is a USB adapter for controllers shipped with Nintendo's NES-mini and
SNES-mini consoles.
Tested with both NES and SNES controllers, buttons map as expected on both.
Most of this code is disabled out for now.
- For mouse cursors we have a wl_surface for both system and custom
cursors which needs recreating.
- The other patch is about nullification after deletions
This works around udev event nodes arriving before hidraw nodes and the controller being opened twice - once using the Linux driver and once by the HIDAPI driver.
This also fixes a kernel panic on Steam Link hardware due to trying to open the hidraw device node too early.
A delay of 10 ms seems to be a good value, tested on Steam Link hardware.
If relative mouse mode is explicitly enabled, don't modify the capture flag on button events or the window might report having lost mouse focus if a button is pressed while moving the cursor.
This is a functional state for some window managers (tested using stock Ubuntu 22.04.1), and removing that state, e.g. using SDL_RestoreWindow(), results in a window centered and floating, and not visually covering the rest of the desktop.
This uses a newer browser API to get physical scancodes, but still
uses the (deprecated) event field that we were already using for
scancodes, but for keycodes instead now, which appears to be more
accurate.
Since keyboard layout isn't (generally) available to web apps, this
adds an internal interface to send key events with both scancode
and keycode to SDL's internals, instead of sending just scancodes and
expecting SDL to use its own keymap to generate keycodes.
Future work in this area would be to use the keyboard layout APIs
on browsers that support them, which would allow us to use SDL's
usual keymap code and not rely on a deprecated browser API, but
until we get there, this patch gives significantly more correct
results than we would have before.
Fixes#2098.
Exit the fullscreen sequence sooner if it is requested that a popup window be fullscreen.
The surface commit formerly in this path is irrelevant and can be removed as previous changes made it so that SetFullscreen() is no longer called from anywhere except Wayland_SetWindowFullscreen().
The controller can use either hat or buttons for the D-Pad, depending on what Linux driver is in use. The automatic mapping in LINUX_JoystickGetGamepadMapping() will do the right thing based on the exposed capability bits.
I'm sure this is the case for other controllers as well, so we might be removing more mappings over time.
Clear the window to black on the initial window draw, to avoid a really
obnoxious white flash. This doesn't always eliminate it, but it
definitely minimizes it.
This makes the colorspace match across different graphics APIs. By
default, OpenGL was getting a much more saturated colorspace (maybe
Display P3?) and it was looking very different from the rendering done
by Metal or MoltenVK.
- SDL_LoadObject: upon failure, strip the .dll extension and retry,
but only if module name has no path.
- SDL_LoadFunction: upon failure, retry with an underscore prepended,
e.g. for gcc-built dlls.
- strlcpy was passed a wrong buffer length parameter. has worked so
far by luck.
- use memcpy instead of strlcpy for simplicity.
- 'append' has been a typo: should be 'prepend'.
Otherwise the thread might block for a long time (more than 10 seconds!).
It's not clear to me why this happens, or why its safe to do this with a
resource that's still in use, but we have, until recently, always
disposed of the AudioQueue first, so changing back is probably okay.
Also changed the disposal to allow in-flight buffers to reach hardware;
otherwise you lose the last little bit of audio that's already been queued
but not played, which you can hear clearly in the loopwave test program.
Fixes#6377.
Disabling RAWINPUT on Windows 10 causes these issues:
* All Xbox controllers are named "XInput Controller".
* Trigger rumble no longer works.
* "XInput Controllers" are now also listed as separate haptic devices
It's only needed to support more than 4 Xbox controllers, and adds significant complexity to the joystick processing, and we regularly get bugs from people who aren't using an SDL window who need to turn on SDL_HINT_JOYSTICK_THREAD.
Replace instances of fprintf(stderr, ...) with SDL_SetError(), replace C++ comments with C style, use a uniform format for multi-line comments, and remove unused headers as poll and select aren't used in this file (the SDL function which calls them is used instead).
libdecor_dispatch() needs to be called, as libdecor plugins might do some required internal processing within, however care must be taken to avoid double-blocking in the case of a timeout, which can occur if libdecor_dispatch() and the SDL event processing both work on the main Wayland queue. Additionally, assumptions that libdecor will always dispatch the main queue or not process zero-length queues (can occur if a wait is interrupted by the application queueing an event) should not be made, as this behavior is outside the control of SDL and can change.
SDL handles polling for Wayland events and then calls libdecor to do its internal processing and dispatch. If libdecor operates on the main queue, it will dispatch the queued events and the additional wl_display_dispatch_pending() call will be a NOP. If a libdecor plugin uses its own, separate queue, then the wl_display_dispatch_pending() call will ensure that the main queue is always dispatched.
Fixes battery level dropping to empty with the Qanba Drone Arcade Stick.
It looks like we might also be able to skip the check for all third party controllers, but I think this is the right thing to do for Sony controllers as well.
In all cases they were using SDL_SCANCODE_TABLE_XFREE86_2 with some keycodes remapped or fewer than expected keycodes. This adds a sanity check that catches all of them and gives them the right scancode table.
If we can't find the X11 keysym, it's likely that either the keysym is NoSymbol, in which case we won't hit it anyway, or it's been mapped to a character, in which case the existing mapping is correct for the scancode and the character will be reflected in the keycode mapping.
* Consolidated scancode mapping tables into a single location for all backends
* Verified that the xfree86_scancode_table2 is largely identical to the Linux scancode table
* Updated the Linux scancode table with the latest kernel keycodes (still unmapped)
* Route X11 keysym -> scancode mapping through the linux scancode table (which a few hand-written exceptions), which will allow mappings to automatically get picked up as they are added in the Linux scancode table
* Disabled verbose reporting of missing keysym mappings, we have enough data for now
The original code mapped incorrectly from [min, max] to [-32768, 32512], the upper bound being SDL_JOYSTICK_AXIS_MAX - 255 instead of SDL_JOYSTICK_AXIS_MAX.
This will only log things going through dynapi, which means it won't
do anything if dynapi is disabled for a given build, but also things
that call the `*_REAL` version of an API won't log either (which is
to say, if an internal piece of SDL calls a public API, it won't log
it, but if an application calls that same entry point, it will).
Since this just inserts a different function pointer, unless you
explicitly request this at runtime, it won't add any overhead, and,
of course, the entire thing can be turned off with a single #define
so it doesn't even add extra unused code to the shared library if
the kill switch is flipped.