Tim McDaniel
This patch replaces all use of NSAutoreleasePool with the Apple recommended @autoreleasepool. @autoreleasepool is supposedly more efficient, and since it is scope based it can't be accidentally not released.
Tim McDaniel
On OSX, with revision 8729, the coordinate space for window position and the coordinate space for global mouse position don't match. For a non-fullscreen window, the window position is global relative to the bottom of the menubar. The global mouse position is relative to the top of the screen. This affects Cocoa_WarpMouse and potentially other things as well. Further, the coordinate system for window position is now affected by what screen it is on. For example, if I have two equal size screens oriented side by side such that the tops of the screens are equal in global space, with the menubar on one screen, and a window straddles the two screens, the window's y position makes no sense. The window's y position depends on what screen "most" of the window is on. So if I move the window horizontally just a bit, the y position of my window is now different by the size of the menubar, even though the window was not moved vertically.
I'd like to reiterate that this was a fairly fundamental change (and a breaking change for us). If SDL OSX is to really support multi-display configurations, this is especially problematic.
If the real concern is preventing windows from going under the menubar, then perhaps a solution involving something like overriding [NSWindow constrainFrameRect] would be less problematic than redefining the global window coord space for the main display.
Andreas Falkenhahn
SDL_RenderReadPixels() doesn't seem to work when trying to read pixels from a texture that has been created using SDL_TEXTUREACCESS_TARGET and has been selected as the render target using SDL_SetRenderTarget().
I am attaching a small program that demonstrates the issue. I get the following result here:
READ PIXEL RETURN: 0 --- COLOR CHECK: ff000000
But it should be:
READ PIXEL RETURN: 0 --- COLOR CHECK: ffff0000
Tested with SDL 2.0.3 on Windows 7.
Nitz
In SDL_CreateTextureFromSurface:
SDL_PixelFormat *dst_fmt;
/* Set up a destination surface for the texture update */
dst_fmt = SDL_AllocFormat(format);
temp = SDL_ConvertSurface(surface, dst_fmt, 0);
Here is need of NULL check for dst_fmt because there are chances of NULL return from SDL_AllocFormat(format);
Tobias Himmer
this patch adds a check to the CMake build script to detect whether the VideoCore API is available.
If it is found, it enables SDL_VIDEO_DRIVER_RPI and will also add the needed include/library directory flags to CMAKE_C_FLAGS so the subsequent check for GLES succeeds in picking up the headers.
Seems to work fine on Raspbian.
Patch from Benoit Pierre:
video: fix clipping handling in SDL_UpperBlitScaled
- honor destination clipping rectangle
- update both destination and source rectangles when clipping source
rectangle to source surface and destination rectangle to destination
clip rectangle
- don't change scaling factors when clipping
N.B.:
- when no scaling is involved (source and destination width/height are
the same), SDL_UpperBlit is used (so SDL_BlitScaled behaves like
SDL_BlitSurface)
- the final destination rectangle after all clipping is performed is
saved back to dstrect (like for SDL_UpperBlit)
There was a misconception that Linux's saturation and deadband parameters -
on which the corresponding SDL parameters were based - use only half of the
possible range.
Thanks, Elias!
Partially fixes Bugzilla #2686.
The _xgetbv intrinsic was being used in ARM builds of SDL/WinRT, which was
leading to linker errors. This commit limits _xgetbv use to the platforms on
which it is available, x86 and x64.
This will (eventually) make SDL_GetQueuedAudioSize() more accurate, and thus
reduce latency. Right now this isn't implemented anywhere, so we assume data
fed to the audio callback is consumed by the hardware and immediately played
to completion.