Add also an assertion for the sample spec validity. The
existing code already does crash in case of an invalid
sample spec, but the error would not be as obvious: the
crash would happen due to a divide-by-zero operation in
pa_frame_aligned().
Misbehaving clients can try to set a filter sink to output to
itself, leading to crashes later on. This patch protects us from that.
Thanks to Roman Beslik for testing and finding an error in the first
version of this patch.
Tested-by: Roman Beslik <rabeslik@gmail.com>
BugLink: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44397
Signed-off-by: David Henningsson <david.henningsson@canonical.com>
This causes problems with 24kHz audio (results in echoing)
when upscaling to 44.1kHz or 48kHz.
It can be reapplied when the optimisation works for all cases.
This reverts commit 8539fe9765.
When the runtime path gets long (which can happen on some NFS
mounts where $HOME is not just /home/$USER), it can grow
longer the 108 char limit imposed by sockaddr_un.sun_path.
This just calls realpath which should ultimately point into
/tmp in most cases and result in a much smaller path.
Only do this when we are adding on a name component to the
runtime path so creating the actual symlink will still get
the original, long name, but this shouldn't be a problem
as it never goes into the sockaddr_un.sun_path.
Bug: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=44680
As David points out, the previous commit made a couple of asserts
redundant (the XOR covers all cases that were previous tested for).
Remove these redundant commits now.
Commit 54cddc6ddf removed an assert that
looked redundant but was not. This commit reinstates it in a slightly
modified form. It is not stated as (a ^ b) instead of (!a || !b) in
order to make the condition more obvious.
For some reason, a badly behaving client was trying to set a NULL
port, which caused PulseAudio to crash. Add safeguards on two levels
just to be protected. (Also remove a redundant check.)
BugLink: https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/951273
Signed-off-by: David Henningsson <david.henningsson@canonical.com>
While developing the new UI we had to ask ourselves the question of whether
"speakers" should be considered available when headphones are plugged in.
In most cases, they are not available and therefore we should list them
as such.
OTOH, we don't want unplugging the headphones to be considered an act of
wanting to use the speakers (the user might prefer HDMI), and there might
be line-outs that keeps the speakers from unmuting anyway. So, at this point,
I think the most reasonable would be to make the speakers have
PA_PORT_AVAILABLE_NO when headphones are plugged in and
PA_PORT_AVAILABLE_UNKNOWN when they are not. But we might want to revisit
this decision once we have the priority lists up and running.
The same reasoning applies for "Internal Mic", which should become unavailable
when any other mic is plugged in.
Signed-off-by: David Henningsson <david.henningsson@canonical.com>
For volume control UIs to be able to show ports in inactive profiles,
expose all ports together with the card info. This includes updating
the protocol and the client API to show the connection between ports
and for which profiles the ports are relevant.
Update protocol to 26.
Signed-off-by: David Henningsson <david.henningsson@canonical.com>
Our flist implementation suffers from the ABA problem
(see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ABA_problem), causing PulseAudio
to crash very rarely, usually inside memblock operations.
By turning stored pointers into stored table indices, we have some
extra bits that we can use to store tag bits, which is a known
workaround for the ABA problem.
Buglink: https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/924416
Signed-off-by: David Henningsson <david.henningsson@canonical.com>
This allows clients to get a "fake" sample space for compressed formats
that we can support. This should make size/time conversion for things
like calculating buffer attributes simpler.
These utility functions could be handy to clients.
pa_format_info_to_sample_spec_fake() isn't made public, but the return
value is changed to keep in sync with pa_format_info_to_sample_spec().
assuming RAND_MAX is around 1<<31, rand() >> 1 generates large numbers as
random volume data; these likely causes saturated sample values after
applying the volume function -- not a good test
For muted channels, we forgot to increment a pointer, so if one
channel was muted but not the other, sound became distorted in a
Darth Vader like way. To test the difference, start two input
streams and pan one of them hard left (or right).
And hey, if you didn't think it sounded like Darth Vader, it's
your imagination that's broken, not mine! ;-)
BugLink: https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/928757
Signed-off-by: David Henningsson <david.henningsson@canonical.com>
If a *_UNLINK_POST hook causes a sink-input/source-output's sink/source
to go away, the subsequent attempt to update the sink/source status will
cause an assert. We deal with this by checking the sink/source status
before trying to update it.
* If we don't have "Digital Speakers", we should say "Speakers"
instead of "Analog Speakers", and similar for other ports.
* Change "IEC958" to "S/PDIF" (more well known name)
* Add new ports and mappings for HDMI
* Change "Internal" to "Built-in" for the card name
Signed-off-by: David Henningsson <david.henningsson@canonical.com>
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.