When we store the real_volume we get a hardware_volume as stored
in the mixer and a residual software_volume.
When we read the volume from the card, we need to compare this against
the hardware_volume we stored to check if something changed, not
against the real_volume that also contains the leftover software_volume.
spa_strstartswith() is more immediately understandable.
Coccinelle spatch file:
@@
expression E1, E2;
@@
- strstr(E1, E2) != E1
+ !spa_strstartswith(E1, E2)
@@
expression E1, E2;
@@
- strstr(E1, E2) == E1
+ spa_strstartswith(E1, E2)
Applied to the tree except for alsa/acp/compat.h because it looks like
that header is still mostly as-is from PA.
libfreeaptx is a fork of libopenaptx prior to the dubious licensing
situation was introduced to the library.
As it's fully API compatible, let's use that instead for those who
want to use aptX support.
The library source is available at https://github.com/iamthehorker/libfreeaptx
The ringbuffer can't be written to from multiple threads.
When both the main loop and data thread do _invoke, they both write to
the ringbuffer and cause it to be corrupted because the ringbuffer is
not multi-writer safe.
Doing invoke from the thread itself is usually done to flush things out
so we really only need to flush the ringbuffer and call the callback.
See #1451
To fix build warning about a variable being unused in LibCamera::stop():
[1/2] Compiling C++ object spa/plugins/libcamera/libspa-libcamera.so.p/libcamera_wrapper.cpp.o
../spa/plugins/libcamera/libcamera_wrapper.cpp: In member function ‘void LibCamera::stop()’:
../spa/plugins/libcamera/libcamera_wrapper.cpp:531:58: warning: unused variable ‘buffer’ [-Wunused-variable]
531 | for (const std::unique_ptr<FrameBuffer> &buffer : this->allocator_->buffers(stream)) {
| ^~~~~~
The SPA plugin is including a <libcamera/buffer.h> header file, but this
got renamed to <libcamera/framebuffer.h> to match the defined class name:
../spa/plugins/libcamera/libcamera_wrapper.cpp:52:10: fatal error: libcamera/buffer.h: No such file or directory
52 | #include <libcamera/buffer.h>
| ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Fixes#1435
If socket write results to EAGAIN/EWOULDBLOCK or rx data starts late,
spa_bt_sco_io_write may return 0, and we should give up and skip ahead
(and not loop in RT thread with very small timeout).
First calculate the size of the aligned payload and then check if
we can fit this aligned payload in the remaining space in the
ringbuffer.
Otherwise we might be able to fit the item + payload in the remaining
space but then place the alignment bytes at the begginning, which would
break alignment of the next invoke_item struct.
Also check if there is enough space to write the payload bytes.
We check if there is enough space for the invoke_item structure first.
Then we calculate how much bytes we need to use for the payload but we
fail to check if we can actually write that much data, risking
overwriting existing data from the ringbuffer and causing a crash later
when we try to jump to invalid memory.
Add some more comments.
The kernel-provided SCO write MTU is currently never the correct packet
size for writing, so don't try to use it. Some adapter firmware (eg.
BCM20702A0 0b05:17cb) appears in practice sensitive to the alignment of
the msbc frames, and writes with wrong packet size break things but only
on certain headsets. For other adapters, this doesn't appear to matter.
This is a bitfield, but it's unclear what it achieves since this is the
only member of a bitfield, so it may be more efficient to just make it a
bool.
Fixes a LGTM warning:
Bit field started of type int should have explicitly unsigned integral, explicitly signed integral, or enumeration type.
`sizes` members participate in multiplication and subsequent assignment
into port->bpf, which has size_t. So LGTM rightfully complains, there's
a chance the multiplication will overflow before the assignment happens.
Should have no influence on performance since 64 bit multiplication is
as fast, and since the struct is constified, a wise compiler should make
sure it doesn't take excess space either.
Fixes LGTM warning:
Multiplication result may overflow 'unsigned int' before it is converted to 'size_t'.
That was found by GCC fanalyze pass. Fixes warning:
../spa/plugins/audioconvert/resample-native.c: In function ‘resample_native_init’:
../spa/plugins/audioconvert/resample-native.c:385:9: warning: dereference of NULL ‘0B’ [CWE-476] [-Wanalyzer-null-dereference]
385 | spa_log_debug(r->log, "native %p: q:%d in:%d out:%d n_taps:%d n_phases:%d features:%08x:%08x",
Check if we are driving or following and only start the timers when we
are the driver of the graph.
Ready events from non-drivers are not really a problem because they are
ignored. They only cause unnecessary wakeups in the graph.
Mark some structures, arrays static/const at various places.
In some cases this prevents unnecessary initialization
when a function is entered.
All in all, the text segments across all shared
libraries are reduced by about 2 KiB. However,
the total size increases by about 2 KiB as well.
Instead of spa_aprintf(), convert `rfcomm_send_{cmd,query}`
to take a printf-style format string.
Furthermore, handle overflows and return errors from
`rfcomm_send_{cmd,reply}`. And make those functions
take an rfcomm as argument instead of any spa_source.
And match conversion specifiers to the actual types
in format strings.
Strip the alibpref from the device string in the mapping name. This
name is used to generate the node name eventually and we don't want
this random identifier in it.
Fixes#1362
If the caller asks for MemFd, pass a DmaBuf because it is mostly
the same for v4l2.
Not very correct but it's not yet trivial to fall back to memfd.
And this way we have something to give to the clients that will work
when the client asks for MemFd or MemPtr.
Several places in the code don't handle reconnecting DBus connections
yet. In those cases, a ref to the DBusConnection handle needs to be
kept, so that there's no use-after-free if it gets freed by spa_dbus
if the connection is broken.
Adjust spa_dbus so that others keeping additional refs is safe.
Until now the 'v4l2' feature was not actually checking that its
required header has been found, this commit adds a check for
<linux/videodev2.h> and correctly reports both header status and whether
the feature itself ends up enabled (depends on libudev).