Send COPY and CUT on MOD+c and MOD+x (only supported for Android >= 7).
The shortcuts Ctrl+c and Ctrl+x should generally also work (even before
Android 7), but the active Android app may use them for other actions
instead.
Do not explicitly set the clipboard text if it already contains the
expected content.
Even if copy-paste loops are avoided by the previous commit, this avoids
to trigger a clipboard change on the computer-side.
Refs #1580 <https://github.com/Genymobile/scrcpy/issues/1580>
Pressing Ctrl+v on the device will typically paste the clipboard
content.
Before sending the key event, synchronize the computer clipboard to the
device clipboard to allow seamless copy-paste.
Now that the scrcpy shortcut modifier is Alt by default (and can be
configured), forward Ctrl to the device.
This allows to trigger Android shortcuts.
Fixes#555 <https://github.com/Genymobile/scrcpy/issues/555>
Pressing Alt+c generates a text event containing "c", so "c" was sent to
the device when --prefer-text was enabled.
Ignore text events when the mod state matches a shortcut modifier.
Remove the Cmd modifier on macOS, which was possible only for some
shortcuts but not all.
This paves the way to make the shortcut modifier customizable.
Touch events were HiDPI-scaled twice:
- once because the position (provided as floats between 0 and 1) were
converted in pixels using the drawable size (not the window size)
- once due to screen_convert_to_frame_coords()
One possible fix could be to compute the position in pixels from the
window size instead, but this would unnecessarily round the event
position to the nearest window coordinates (instead of drawable
coordinates).
Instead, expose two separate functions to convert to frame coordinates
from either window or drawable coordinates.
Fixes#1536 <https://github.com/Genymobile/scrcpy/issues/1536>
Refs #15 <https://github.com/Genymobile/scrcpy/issues/15>
Refs e40532a376
The header scrcpy.h is intended to be the "public" API. It should not
depend on other internal headers.
Therefore, declare all required structs in this header and adapt
internal code.
The function must return a SDL_LogPriority, but returned an enum
sc_log_level.
(It was harmless because this specific return should never happen, as
asserted.)
This reverts commit 8c8649cfcd.
I cannot reproduce the issue with Ctrl+Shift+o on any device, so in
practice it works, it's too bad to remove the feature for a random bug
on some Android versions on some devices.
Add a command-line option to force "adb forward", without attempting
"adb reverse" first.
This is especially useful for using SSH tunnels without enabling remote
port forwarding.
The verbosity was set either to info (in release mode) or debug (in
debug mode).
Add a command-line argument to change it, so that users can enable debug
logs using the release:
scrcpy -Vdebug
The field lock_video_orientation may only take values between -1 and 3
(included). But the compiler may trigger a warning on the sprintf()
call, because its type could represent values which could overflow the
string (like "-128"):
> warning: ‘%i’ directive writing between 1 and 4 bytes into a region of
> size 3 [-Wformat-overflow=]
Increase the buffer size to remove the warning.
Trilinear filtering can currently only be enabled for OpenGL renderers.
Do not print a warning if the renderer is not OpenGL, as it can confuses
users, while nothing is wrong.
On macOS with renderer "metal", HiDPI scaling may be incorrect on
initialization when several displays are connected.
Resetting the window size fixes the problem.
Refs #15 <https://github.com/Genymobile/scrcpy/issues/15>
Position and scale the content "manually" instead of relying on the
renderer "logical size".
This avoids possible rounding differences between the computed window
size and the content size, causing one row or column of black pixels on
the bottom or on the right.
This also avoids HiDPI scale issues, by computing the scaling manually.
This will also enable to draw items at their expected size on the screen
(unscaled).
Fixes#15 <https://github.com/Genymobile/scrcpy/issues/15>
In maximized state (but not fullscreen), it was possible to resize to
fit the device screen (with Ctrl+x or double-clicking on black borders).
This caused problems on macOS with the "expand to fullscreen" feature,
which behaves like a fullscreen mode but is seen as maximized by SDL.
In that state, resizing to fit causes unexpected results.
To keep the behavior consistent on all platforms, just disable "resize
to fit" when the window is maximized.
On Windows, in maximized+fullscreen state, disabling fullscreen mode
unexpectedly triggers the "restored" then "maximized" events, leaving
the window in a weird state (maximized according to the events, but not
maximized visually).
Moreover, apply_pending_resize() asserts that fullscreen is disabled.
To avoid the issue, if fullscreen is set, just ignore the "restored"
event.
If the content size changes (due to rotation for example) while the
window is maximized or fullscreen, the resize must be applied once
fullscreen and maximized are disabled.
The previous strategy consisted in storing the windowed size, computing
the target size on rotation, and applying it on window restoration. But
tracking the windowed size (while ignoring the non-windowed size) was
tricky, due to unspecified order of SDL events (e.g. size changes can be
notified before "maximized" events), race conditions when reading window
flags, different behaviors on different platforms...
To simplify the whole resize management, store the old content size (the
frame size, possibly rotated) when it changes while the window is
maximized or fullscreen, so that the new optimal size can be computed on
window restoration.