Some wayland compositors report the refresh rate as 0. Since we want to
force a minimum refresh rate of 10 frames worth, we were dividing by the
reported refresh rate, causing a divide-by-zero.
If the refresh rate is 0, instead force a frame every second if no frame
callbacks are received.
This fixes bug #4785
This will still happen occasionally as the mouse is whipped around, if there is a window overlapping the game window, but it should happen less often now. This could even happen with the original code that warped the mouse every frame, so this should be a good compromise where we don't warp the mouse continously and we still keep the mouse in the safe area of the game window.
Note that notifications can be any size, so the safe area may need to be adjusted or even dynamically defined via a hint.
We don't use it, it was a leftover from 1.2, I think, and it doesn't exist
on Solaris, so this should hopefully fix the build there.
This also means we don't need the configure/cmake checks for
SDL_VIDEO_DRIVER_X11_CONST_PARAM_XEXTADDDISPLAY, so that was removed also.
Fixes#1666.
One place known to differ in a significant way is a single line segment that
starts and ends on the same point; the GL renderers will light up a single
pixel here, whereas the software renderer will not. My current belief is this
is a bug in the software renderer, based on the wording of the docs:
"SDL_RenderDrawLine() draws the line to include both end points."
You can see an example program that triggers that difference in Bug #2006.
As it stands, the GL renderers might _also_ render diagonal lines differently,
as the the Bresenham step might vary between implementations (one does three
pixels and then two, the other does two and then three, etc). But this patch
causes those lines to start and end on the correct pixel, and that's the best
we can do, and all anyone really needs here.
Not closing any bugs with this patch (yet!), but here are several that it
appears to fix. If no other corner cases pop up, we'll call this done.
Reference Bug #2006.
Reference Bug #1626.
Reference Bug #4001.
...and probably others...
Vista and later provide the SleepConditionVariableCS() function for this.
Since SDL_syscond_srw.c doesn't require SRW locks anymore, rename it to
SDL_syscond_cv.c which better reflects the implementation of condition
variables rather than the implementation of mutexes.
Fixes#4051.
* Fixed: Whitespace being striped from the end of IME strings incorrectly
* Fixed: Google IME Candidate Window not placing correctly
* Why are PostBuild events stored in the vcxproj and not a user file?
* Revert SDL.vcxproj properly...
* Remove whitespace as per code review
* Fix Werror=declaration-after-statement error in code
In the future, we might want to support special swap intervals. To
prevent applications from expecting nonzero values of vsync to be the
same as "on", fail with SDL_Unsupported() if the value passed is neither
0 nor 1.
Currently, if an application wants to toggle VSync, they'd have to tear
down the renderer and recreate it. This patch fixes that by letting
applications call SDL_RenderSetVSync().
This is the same as the patch in #3673, except it applies to all
renderers (including PSP, even thought it seems that the VSync flag is
disabled for that renderer). Furthermore, the renderer flags also change
as well, which #3673 didn't do. It is also an API instead of using hint
callbacks (which could be potentially dangerous).
Closes#3673.
See SDL bug #4703. This implements two new hints:
- SDL_APP_NAME
- SDL_SCREENSAVER_INHIBIT_ACTIVITY_NAME
The former is the successor to SDL_HINT_AUDIO_DEVICE_APP_NAME, and acts
as a generic "application name" used both by audio drivers and DBUS
screensaver inhibition. If SDL_AUDIO_DEVICE_APP_NAME is set, it will
still take priority over SDL_APP_NAME.
The second allows the "activity name" used by
org.freedesktop.ScreenSavver's Inhibit method, which are often shown in
the UI as the reason the screensaver (and/or suspend/other
power-managment features) are disabled.
The recent change to make SDL_AUDIODRIVER support comma-separated lists
broke the previous behavior where an SDL_AUDIODRIVER that was empty
behaved the same as if it was not set at all. This old behavior was
necessary to paper over differences in platforms where SDL_setenv may
or may not actually delete the env var if an empty string is specified.
This patch just adds a simple check to ensure SDL_AUDIODRIVER is not
empty before using it, restoring the old interpretation of the empty
var.
Originally, SDL 1.2 used "pulse" as the name for its PulseAudio driver.
While it now supports "pulseaudio" as well for compatibility with SDL
2.0 [1], there are still scripts and distro packages which set
SDL_AUDIODRIVER=pulse [2]. While it's possible to remove this in most
circumstances or replace it with "pulseaudio" or a comma-separated list,
this may still conflict if the environment variable is set globally and
old binary builds of SDL 1.2 (e.g. packaged with older games) are being
used.
To fix this on SDL 2.0, add a hardcoded check for "pulse" as an audio
driver name, and replace it with "pulseaudio". This mimics what SDL 1.2
does (but in reverse). Note that setting driver_attempt{,_len} is safe
here as they're reset correctly based on driver_attempt_end on the next
loop.
[1] d951409784
[2] https://bugzilla.opensuse.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1189778
This change corrects the mappings for the Atari gamecontroller and
adds support for the Atari Xbox 360 compatible gamecontroller. The Atari
game controller can switch between Atari and Xbox 360 mappings.
This might have changed at some point in the Pulse API, or this might have
always been wrong, but we didn't notice because the dynamic loading code
hides it by casting things to void *. The static path, where it
assigns the function pointer directly, puts out a clear compiler warning,
though.