We didn't do anything anyway in case of failures. When we
give NULL as the error, dbus_bus_remove_match() can act
asynchronously, so it becomes faster. Also, the bus daemon
can avoid sending any replies, which reduces the amount of
traffic.
From d8b81d5393df36085009bf9f69d41fa85e2ae58a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Nitin A Kamble <nitin.a.kamble@intel.com>
Date: Sat, 10 Dec 2011 09:09:06 +0100
Make assembly syntax compatible to the X32 toolchain and fix the
following kind of compilations errors with X32 gcc.
| pulsecore/svolume_mmx.c: Assembler messages:
| pulsecore/svolume_mmx.c:107: Error: `(%esi,%rdi,4)' is not a valid base/index expression
| pulsecore/svolume_mmx.c:135: Error: `(%esi,%rdi,4)' is not a valid base/index expression
| pulsecore/svolume_mmx.c:161: Error: `(%esi,%rdi,4)' is not a valid base/index expression
| pulsecore/svolume_mmx.c:162: Error: `8(%esi,%rdi,4)' is not a valid base/index expression
| pulsecore/svolume_mmx.c:180: Error: `(%esi,%rdi,4)' is not a valid base/index expression
| pulsecore/svolume_mmx.c:210: Error: `(%esi,%rdi,4)' is not a valid base/index expression
| pulsecore/svolume_mmx.c:244: Error: `(%esi,%rdi,4)' is not a valid base/index expression
| pulsecore/svolume_mmx.c:245: Error: `8(%esi,%rdi,4)' is not a valid base/index expression
| make[3]: *** [libpulsecore_1.1_la-svolume_mmx.lo] Error 1
Originally these assembly lines were written for x86_64 ABI, now they
are also compatible with X32 ABI [3][4].
The patch was submitted to the OpenEmbedded-Core list [1][2].
[1] http://lists.linuxtogo.org/pipermail/openembedded-core/2011-December/014189.html
[2] http://git.yoctoproject.org/cgit.cgi/poky-contrib/commit/?h=nitin/x32&id=2d8eec54f755c51f2eff600390f5a4b3cc2a7662
[3] https://wiki.yoctoproject.org/wiki/X32_abi
[4] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X32_ABI
This is actually implemented in module-protocol-stub as
'auth-group-enable'. An unfortunate typo because the other argument is
spelt as 'enabled', but it's better to be slightly inconsistent than to
change the public interface.
make speex library dependency optional, this affects the resampler
and the echo canceller module
this patch supersedes an earlier patch proposal and addresses the following
comments:
* fix order of pa_echo_canceller_method_t enum and ec_table (Frederic)
* the default resampler is speex if available as before, otherwise ffmpeg (Arun)
* does not touch the Adrian EC implementation (see separate patch) (Arun)
The algorithm had been implemented the same way as the trivial resampler. But
an important difference between the two is that the trivial resampler can write
an output as soon as the first corresponding input sample is seen, whereas the
peaks resampler must have read all input samples before writing an output
sample.
With this rework, the peaks resampler now outputs samples correctly when the
input data is spanning multiple memblocks.
Instead of using PA_SCACHE_ENTRY_SIZE_MAX, the size for FRAME_SIZE_MAX_ALLOW is
set directly to the same value. This removes the need for the core-scache.h
include, which caused an unwanted dependency of libpulsecommon on libpulsecore.
Fixes https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=41539
Without this fix, errors about previous definitions are generated in
numerous locations.
Example of error:
CC libpulsecore_1.98_la-auth-cookie.lo
In file included from ../../src/pulsecore/source.h:46:0,
from ../../src/pulsecore/sink.h:40,
from ../../src/pulsecore/core.h:50,
from ../../src/pulsecore/shared.h:25,
from ../../src/pulsecore/auth-cookie.c:33:
../../src/pulsecore/device-port.h:40:24: error: redefinition of typedef
'pa_core'
../../src/pulsecore/core.h:29:24: note: previous declaration of
'pa_core' was here
make[3]: *** [libpulsecore_1.98_la-auth-cookie.lo] Error 1
Overall it would be nicer if we could avoid this kind of fix, but it
would require further reorganisation that I'm not prepared to undertake
right now.
The recommended way of setting available status is to call
pa_device_port_set_available, which will send a subscription event
to the relevant card. It will also fire a hook.
Signed-off-by: David Henningsson <david.henningsson@canonical.com>
This forms the base for being able to expose all ports of all
profiles (even inactive ones) to clients.
Signed-off-by: David Henningsson <david.henningsson@canonical.com>
Since both cards and sinks can hold references to a port, it makes
sense to reference count them. Although no current implementation
actually has sinks with ports but without a card, it felt wrong
to make it harder to make such an implementation in the future.
Signed-off-by: David Henningsson <david.henningsson@canonical.com>
This moves out code from module-stream-restore and makes an internal API
out of it to get a "stream group" for a given sink input or source output.
This is factored out for reuse in module-filter-*.
The stream group basically provides some means of attaching a logical
identification to the stream (by role, application id, etc.).
This updates corked streams' resamplers when switching sample rates on a
sink/source, which means the restriction of allowing sample rate updates
only when no streams are attached to a sink/source is now relaxed to
preventing updates only when there is a running stream attached.