When SleepConditionVariableSRW() releases the SRW lock internally, it causes
our SDL_mutex_srw state to become inconsistent. The lock is unowned yet inside,
the owner is still the sleeping thread and more importantly the owner count is
still 1.
The next time someone acquires the lock, they will bump the owner count from 1
to 2. At that point, the lock is hosed. From the internal lock state, it looks
to us like that owner has acquired the lock recursively, even though they have
not. When they call SDL_UnlockMutex(), it will see the owner count > 0 and not
call ReleaseSRWLockExclusive().
Now when someone calls SDL_CondSignal(), SleepConditionVariableSRW() will start
the wakeup process by attempting to re-acquire the SRW lock. This will deadlock
because the lock was never released after the other thread had used it. The
thread waiting on the condition variable will never be able to wake up, even if
the SDL_CondWaitTimeout() function is used and the timeout expires.
There were two different implementations of IsBluetoothXboxOneController(), one
in SDL_hidapi_xbox360.c and one in SDL_hidapi_xboxone.c. The latter had been
updated to include USB_PRODUCT_XBOX_ONE_SERIES_X_BLUETOOTH while the former had
not.
This mismatch led to the Xbox Series X failing on macOS only. We have special
code for handling the 360Controller driver for macOS which requires us to use
the Xbox 360 driver for wired Xbox One controllers, and the SDL_hidapi_xbox360
version of IsBluetoothXboxOneController() was used to determine which devices
were wired.
In addition to adding the missing USB_PRODUCT_XBOX_ONE_SERIES_X_BLUETOOTH, this
change moves IsBluetoothXboxOneController() into a single shared function which
will ensure this bug won't happen again.
This is caused by the Metal renderer recreating the window because by default we create an OpenGL window on macOS.
It turns out that at least on macOS 10.15, a window that has been initialized for OpenGL can also be used with Metal. So we'll skip recreating the window in that case.
Hiroyuki Iwatsuki
If you pass the C string directly to NSLog(), it will be garbled with Japanese and probably other language strings, or no log will be output at all.
NSLog("Hello, World!"); // => "Hello, World!"
NSLog("こんにちは、世界!"); // => No output...
Therefore, you need to convert the string to an NSString before passing it to NSLog().
NSString *str = [NSString stringWithUTF8String:"こんにちは、世界!"];
NSLog(@"%@", str); // => "こんにちは、世界!"
Thank you.
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.
For keys that are already down when we install the keyboard hook, we need to
allow the WM_KEYUP/WM_SYSKEYUP message to be processed normally. This ensures
that other applications see the key up, which prevents the key from being stuck
down from the perspective of other apps when our grab is released.