If there is exactly one producer, then it can assume that the remaining
space in the buffer will only increase until it writes something.
This assumption may allow the producer to write to the buffer (up to a
known safe size) without any synchronization mechanism, thus allowing
to read and write different parts of the buffer in parallel.
The producer can then commit the write with a lock held, and update its
knowledge of the safe empty remaining space.
PR #3757 <https://github.com/Genymobile/scrcpy/pull/3757>
On click event, only the whole buttons state was passed to the device.
In addition, on ACTION_DOWN and ACTION_UP, pass the button associated to
the action.
Refs #3635 <https://github.com/Genymobile/scrcpy/issues/3635>
Co-authored-by: Romain Vimont <rom@rom1v.com>
Signed-off-by: Romain Vimont <rom@rom1v.com>
This util function was error-prone:
- it accepted a buffer as parameter (not necessarily a NUL-terminated
string) and its length (including the NUL char, if any);
- it wrote '\0' over the last character of the buffer, so the last
character was lost if the buffer was not a NUL-terminated string, and
even worse, it caused undefined behavior if the length was empty;
- it returned the length of the resulting NUL-terminated string,
which was inconsistent with the input buffer length.
In addition, it was not necessarily optimal:
- it wrote '\0' twice;
- it required to know the buffer length, that is the input string
length + 1, in advance.
Remove this function, and let the client use strcspn() manually.
The parser assumed that its input was a NUL-terminated string, but it
was not the case: it is just the raw output of "adb devices ip route".
In practice, it was harmless, since the output always ended with '\n'
(which was replaced by '\0' on truncation), but it was incorrect
nonetheless.
Always write a '\0' at the end of the buffer, and explicitly parse as a
NUL-terminated string. For that purpose, avoid the error-prone
sc_str_truncate() util function.
A scroll event might be produced when a mouse button is pressed (for
example when scrolling while selecting a text). For consistency, pass
the actual buttons state (instead of 0).
In practice, it seems that this use case does not work properly with
Android event injection, but it will work with HID mouse.
There was only two key injection modes:
- the default one
- the mode with --prefer-text enabled
To prepare the addition of another mode (--raw-key-events), use an enum
instead of a bool.
PR #2831 <https://github.com/Genymobile/scrcpy/pull/2831>
Depending on the platform and adb versions, the lines output by adb
could end with "\r\r\n". This util function helps to remove all trailing
'\r'.
PR #2827 <https://github.com/Genymobile/scrcpy/pull/2827>
The argument for option --lock-video-orientation has been made optional
by 5af9d0ee0f.
With getopt_long(), contrary to mandatory arguments, optional arguments
must be given with a '=':
--lock-video-orientation 2 # wrong, parse error
--lock-video-orientation=2 # correct
This flag forced the decoder to wait for the previous frame to be
consumed by the display.
It was initially implemented as a compilation flag for testing, not
intended to be exposed at runtime. But to remove ifdefs and to allow
users to test this flag easily, it had finally been exposed by commit
ebccb9f6cc.
In practice, it turned out to be useless: it had no practical impact,
and it did not solve or mitigate any performance issues causing frame
skipping.
But that added some complexity to the codebase: it required an
additional condition variable, and made video buffer calls possibly
blocking, which in turn required code to interrupt it on exit.
To prepare support for multiple sinks plugged to the decoder (display
and v4l2 for example), the blocking call used for pacing the decoder
output becomes unacceptable, so just remove this useless "feature".