Add a new flag to avoid suppressing EINTR in SDL_IOReady(). Pass the
flag in WaitEventTimeout() to ensure that a SIGINT will wake up
SDL_WaitEvent() without another event coming in.
* Avoid unnecessary SDL_PumpEvents calls in SDL_WaitEventTimeout
* Add a sentinel event to avoid infinite poll loops
* Move SDL_POLLSENTINEL to new internal event category
* Tweak documentation to indicate SDL_PumpEvents isn't always called
* Avoid shadowing event variable
* Ignore poll sentinel if more (user) events have been added after
Co-authored-by: Sam Lantinga <slouken@libsdl.org>
Instead do an absolute elapsed time check since the start of the wait. If that is exceeded during any iteration the routine exits as the timeout has elapsed.
There were a few places throughout the SDL code where values were
clamped using SDL_min() and SDL_max(). Now that we have an SDL_clamp()
macro, use this instead.
This is the mouse focus except in the case where relative motion is enabled and the mouse is over a window floating on top of the application window (e.g. the taskbar)
This fixes restoring the cursor clip rectangle after the mouse has moved off of the window.
Also try to better synchronize cursor visibility with mouse position changes when changing relative mode. This doesn't work perfectly, but it seems to improve things on Windows.
When relative mode is enabled and not using warp mode, the cursor is
being clipped to the window. Therefore there is no reason to restore the
cursor position to the center.
Avoiding the warp to center simplifies mouse position event flow, as we
are no longer potentially receiving mouse events for the automated
movement of the cursor and can be (mostly) assured that an incoming
event from the windowing system is that of external means.
Not only is it more efficient to batch process pending events, it is
necessary for correctness with the Win32 backend. WIN_PumpEvents() runs
periodic updates of the cursor clip region and disambiguation of
left and right shift keys in addition to standard event processing.
Based on a patch by Jochen Schäfer <josch1710@live.de> :
On a T420 pressing the ACPI button for volume control, big scancodes
were emitted. This was causing an overflow, because missing guards.
We can be in a situation where we receive a win32 hook callback on the same
thread that is currently waiting. In that case, we do still need to trigger
a wakeup when an event is pushed because the hook itself won't necessarily
do that (depending on what we return from the hook).
When possible use native os functions to make a blocking call waiting for
an incoming event. Previous behavior was to continuously poll the event
queue with a small delay between each poll.
The blocking call uses a new optional video driver event,
WaitEventTimeout, if available. It is called only if an window
already shown is available. If present the window is designated
using the variable wakeup_window to receive a wakeup event if
needed.
The WaitEventTimeout function accept a timeout parameter. If
positive the call will wait for an event or return if the timeout
expired without any event. If the timeout is zero it will
implement a polling behavior. If the timeout is negative the
function will block indefinetely waiting for an event.
To let the main thread sees events sent form a different thread
a "wake-up" signal is sent to the main thread if the main thread
is in a blocking state. The wake-up event is sent to the designated
wakeup_window if present.
The wake-up event is sent only if the PushEvent call is coming
from a different thread. Before sending the wake-up event
the ID of the thread making the blocking call is saved using the
variable blocking_thread_id and it is compared to the current
thread's id to decide if the wake-up event should be sent.
Two new optional video device methods are introduced:
WaitEventTimeout
SendWakeupEvent
in addition the mutex
wakeup_lock
which is defined and initialized but only for the drivers supporting the
methods above.
If the methods are not present the system behaves as previously
performing a periodic polling of the events queue.
The blocking call is disabled if a joystick or sensor is detected
and falls back to previous behavior.
By default, we will minimize the window when we receive Alt+Tab with a
full-screen keyboard grabbed window to allow the user to escape the
full-screen application.
Some applications like remote desktop clients may want to handle Alt+Tab
themselves, so provide an opt-out via SDL_HINT_ALLOW_ALT_TAB_WHILE_GRABBED=0.
Michael Roe
The mappings for keyboard scancodes on Linux do not include keypad left and right parentheses (used on some Microsoft keyboard), keypad plus/minus, LANG1 and LANG2 (used on Korean keyboards), XK86MenuKB, and F20 (remapped to Audio Mic Mute in the usual X11 config).
The 10 ms delay effectively caps input polling at 100 Hz and rendering
at 100 FPS if applications use these functions in their event loop. The
delay may also lead to dropped frames even at 60 FPS due if they are
unlucky enough to hit the delay and rendering takes longer than 6 ms.
The X11 target sets mouse->last_x and last_y in EnterNotify and then calls
SDL_SendMouseMotion(), which throws away the new position because it matches
the mouse->last_x and last_y we just set, meaning that if the pointer is
in the window when it created, SDL_GetMouseState() will report a position of
0,0 until a MotionNotify event (the pointer moves) arrives and corrects the
mouse state.
Mostly fixes Bugzilla #1612.
superfury
I notice that, somehow, when locking the mouse into place(using SDL_SetRelativeMouseMode), somehow at least the movement information gets through to both mouse movement and touch movement events?
My app handles both, so when moving a touched finger accross the app(using RDP from an Android device) I see the mouse moving inside the app when it shouldn't(meaning that the touch movement is ignored properly by the app(press-location dependant) but the mouse movement is still performed due to the mouse movement events)?
This time, we make anything we think is a MacBook trackpad report its touches
as SDL_MOUSE_TOUCHID, even though they're not _actually_ synthesized events,
and let all mouse input--even if the OS synthesized it from a multitouch
trackpad on our behalf--look like physical input. This is backwards from
reality, but produces the results most apps will expect.
Note that if you have a real touch device that doesn't appear to be the
trackpad, it'll produce real touch events with unique device ids, so it's
not a total loss here, but also note that the way we decide if it was the
trackpad is an imperfect heuristic; it happens to work out right now, but
it's not impossible that a real touchscreen could come to the Mac at some
point and (incorrectly?) call it a "mouse" input, etc.
But for now, good enough.
Fixes Bugzilla #4690.
Max Waine
SDL_mouse.c, if compiled for Windows, requires GetDoubleClickTime to compile (available from winuser.h). Without Vulkan present this fails to compile as the include chain for winuser.h is the following.
SDL_mouse.c -> SDL_sysvideo.h -> SDL_vulkan_internal.h -> SDL_windows.h -> windows.h -> winuser.h.
Problem is that SDL_vulkan_internal.h doesn't include SDL_windows.h if Vulkan isn't present, so under MinGW/GCC it will give a -Wimplicit-function-declaration warning for GetDoubleClickTime, and under MSVC fails to compile completely.
The solution to this would be to simplify the include chain: including SDL_windows.h under the same condition as GetDoubleClickTime (#ifdef __WIN32__) in SDL_mouse.c (or another file that isn't quite so indirectly included).
This lets you build a custom embedded device that roughly offers the "this
process is going to the background NOW" semantics of SDL on a mobile device.
Touch device types include SDL_TOUCH_DEVICE_DIRECT (a touch screen with window-relative coordinates for touches), SDL_TOUCH_DEVICE_INDIRECT_ABSOLUTE (a trackpad-style device with absolute device coordinates), and SDL_TOUCH_DEVICE_INDIRECT_RELATIVE (a trackpad-style device with screen cursor-relative coordinates).
Phone screens are an example of a direct device type. Mac trackpads are the indirect-absolute touch device type. The Apple TV remote is an indirect-relative touch device type.
Include guards in most changed files were missing, I added them keeping
the same style as other SDL files. In some cases I moved the include
guards around to be the first thing the header has to take advantage of
any possible improvements compiler may have for inclusion guards.
First: disable d'n'd events by default; most apps don't need these at all, and
if an app doesn't explicitly handle these, each drop on the window will cause
a memory leak if the events are enabled. This follows the guidelines we have
for SDL_TEXTINPUT events already.
Second: when events are enabled or disabled, signal the video layer, as it
might be able to inform the OS, causing UI changes or optimizations (for
example, dropping a file icon on a Cocoa app that isn't accepting drops will
cause macOS to show a rejection animation instead of the drop operation just
vanishing into the ether, X11 might show a different cursor when dragging
onto an accepting window, etc).
Third: fill in the drop event details in the test library and enable the
events in testwm.c for making sure this all works as expected.
SDL now builds with gcc 7.2 with the following command line options:
-Wall -pedantic-errors -Wno-deprecated-declarations -Wno-overlength-strings --std=c99
Ozkan Sezer
Since changeset 11607:60cd425a2f14, I am getting the following
error upon quit. Running testsprite2, clicking the mouse, and
quiting it is enough to trigger it. This is on my old Fedora9
x86-Linux:
X Error of failed request: BadCursor (invalid Cursor parameter)
Major opcode of failed request: 2 (X_ChangeWindowAttributes)
Resource id in failed request: 0xb057340
Serial number of failed request: 905
Current serial number in output stream: 906
Reverting https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/60cd425a2f14 removes
the error.