The finial objective is to store the preferred source name in the
source-output struct, and use module-stream-restore to save and
restore it.
This patch just replaces the save_source with preferred_source, and
tries to keep the original logic.
Signed-off-by: Hui Wang <hui.wang@canonical.com>
The finial objective is to store the preferred sink name in the
sink-input struct, and use module-stream-restore to save and restore
it.
This patch just replaces the save_sink with preferred_sink, and tries
to keep the original logic.
Signed-off-by: Hui Wang <hui.wang@canonical.com>
pa_sink_input_get_state() and pa_source_output_get_state() just return
the state variable. We can as well access the state variable directly.
There are no behaviour changes, except that some filter sources accessed
the main thread's state variable from their push() callbacks. I fixed
them so that they use the thread_info.state variable instead.
This removes the symdef header generation m4 magic in favour of a
simpler macro method, allowing us to skip one unnecessary build step
while moving to meson, and removing an 11 year old todo!
module-device-manager doesn't change the routing of those streams that
have been explicitly routed by the user, which is good. Similarly, it
should leave those streams alone whose routing was decided by the
application that created the stream. This patch implements that.
BugLink: https://github.com/wwmm/pulseeffects/issues/99
When a stream is created, and the stream creator specifies which device
should be used, that can affect automatic routing policies.
Specifically, module-device-manager shouldn't apply its priority list
routing when a stream has been routed by the application that created
the stream.
A stream that was initially routed by the application may be moved for
some valid reason (e.g. user requesting a move, or the original device
disappearing). When the stream is moved away from its initial device,
the "device requested by application" flag isn't relevant any more, so
it's set to false and never reset to true again.
The change in module-device-manager's routing logic will be done in the
following patch.
Rather than entirely ignore streams for which we have automatically
loaded a filter, this makes module-device-manager only avoid rerouting
such streams within their existing filter hierarchy.
If, for example, m-d-m decided to move a stream which is currently
routed to speakers/mic which we requested echo cancellation for, to a
USB headset, the previous logic would disallow such a move even though
it was legitimate.
Fixes: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=93443
Signed-off-by: Arun Raghavan <git@arunraghavan.net>
This adds an ignore mechanism to module-device-manager and uses that
from within module-filter-apply, rather than having m-d-m have knowledge
of anything related to m-f-a.
Signed-off-by: Arun Raghavan <git@arunraghavan.net>
device-manager reroutes all streams whenever a new device appears.
When filter-apply has loaded a filter for some stream, the filter
device may not be what device-manager considers the best device for
the stream, which means that when an unrelated device appears,
device-manager may break the filtering that filter-apply had set up.
This patch changes filter-apply so that it saves the filter device
name to the stream proplist when it sets up a filter. device-manager
can then check the proplist when it does rerouting, and skip the
rerouting for streams that have a filter applied to them.
The proplist isn't cleaned up when the stream moves away from the
filter device, so before doing any decisions based on the
filter_device property, it should be checked that the stream is
currently routed to the filter device. It seemed simpler to do it this
way compared to setting up stream move monitoring in filter-apply and
removing the property when the stream moves away from the filter
device.
Previously a missing key would cause this kind of log output:
D: [pulseaudio] module-device-manager.c: Database contains invalid data for key: sink:auto_null (probably pre-v1.0 data)
D: [pulseaudio] module-device-manager.c: Attempting to load legacy (pre-v1.0) data for key: sink:auto_null
D: [pulseaudio] module-device-manager.c: Size does not match.
D: [pulseaudio] module-device-manager.c: Unable to load legacy (pre-v1.0) data for key: sink:auto_null. Ignoring.
That is now replaced with
D: [pulseaudio] module-device-manager.c: Database contains no data for key: sink:auto_null
pa_tagstruct_new() is called either with no data, i.e. (NULL, 0)
to create a dynamic tagstruct or with a pointer to fixed data
introduce a new function pa_tagstruct_new_fixed() for the latter case
Signed-off-by: Peter Meerwald <pmeerw@pmeerw.net>
FSF addresses used in PA sources are no longer valid and rpmlint
generates numerous warnings during packaging because of this.
This patch changes all FSF addresses to FSF web page according to
the GPL how-to: https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-howto.en.html
Done automatically by sed-ing through sources.
This fixes an assertion crash:
[pulseaudio] source.c: Assertion 'PA_SOURCE_IS_LINKED(s->state)' failed at pulsecore/source.c:734, function pa_source_update_status(). Aborting.
The crash happened when a Bluetooth headset profile was changed from
a2dp to hsp. During the profile change three devices are created:
a sink, a monitor source for the sink, and a regular source. First
pa_sink/source_new() are called for each device, and that puts the
devices to u->core->sinks/sources. Then, pa_sink_put() is called for
the sink, and that in turn calls pa_source_put() for the source. At
that point module-device-manager decides to reroute all source
outputs. The non-monitor source that the Bluetooth card created hasn't
been linked yet at this stage, because it will only be linked after
the sink and the monitor source have been linked. So,
module-device-manager should take into account during the rerouting
that not all sinks and sources are necessarily linked. This patch does
that.
Reported-By: Iskren Hadzhinedev <i.hadzhinedev@gmail.com>
Since the hashmap stores a pointer to the key provided at pa_hashmap_put()
time, it make sense to allow the hashmap to be given ownership of the key and
have it free it at pa_hashmap_remove/free time.
To do this cleanly, we now provide the key and value free functions at hashmap
creation time with a pa_hashmap_new_full. With this, we do away with the free
function that was provided at remove/free time for freeing the value.
This patch removes all occurrences of double and triple
newlines.
Command used for this:
find . -type d \( -name ffmpeg \) -prune -o \
-regex '\(.*\.[hc]\|.*\.cc\)' \
-a -not -name 'adrian-aec.*' -a -not \
-name reserve.c -a -not -name 'rtkit.*' \
-exec sed -i -e '/^$/{N;s/^\n$//}' {} \;
Two passes were needed to remove triple newlines.
The excluded files are mirrored files from external sources.
e->description is a pointer, not a fixed char array. Hence it
makes no sense to use strncmp.
This fixes a compiler warning when compiling under Ubuntu.
Signed-off-by: David Henningsson <david.henningsson@canonical.com>
The previous patch removed module-gconf's dependency on the userdata
pointer of the free callback, and that was the only place where the
userdata pointer of pa_free2_cb_t was used, so now there's no need for
pa_free2_cb_t in pa_hashmap_free(). Using pa_free_cb_t instead allows
removing a significant amount of repetitive code.
Coverity thinks that device_name can be NULL when it's
dereferenced by strcmp. Adding an assertion doesn't hurt
here (in my opinion), and that should get rid of the
warning.
This adds code to specifically support legacy entries.
I kept this code in a separate commit so that it can be (relatively)
easily removed at some point in the future.
This has the advantage of allowing versioned updates in the future,
thus allowing us to be more user friendly going forward (as opposed
to just ignoring entries from old versions).
The primary motivation for this, however, is to allow variable length
storage in each entry which will be needed for upcoming work.
At present this commit will ignore any legacy entries but support
for reading and subsequently converting legacy entries will be added
shortly.
This is the beginning of work to support compressed formats natively in
PulseAudio. This adds a pa_stream_new_extended() that takes a format
structure, sends it to the server (=> protocol extension) and has the
server negotiate with the appropropriate sink to figure out what format
it should use.
This is work in progress, and works only with PCM streams. Actual
compressed format support in some sink needs to be implemented, and
extensive testing is required.
More details on how this is supposed to work is available at:
http://pulseaudio.org/wiki/PassthroughSupport
If m-s-r sets the device we let it do so. Otherwise we handle the routing. We run before
module-intended-roles as the priority list will likely be configured appropriately
to do the same job, albeit with manual setup.
If the user has not (via our protocol extension) renamed a device, but it happens to now have
a different name (e.g. module-combine automatically updating the description for us or udev-db
getting better etc.) then make sure we update our cache with this updated version.
If the user has set a name, enforce it's use, even if the description is updated by some other
means (e.g. the user manually editing the proplist or another module doing it for them).
* Do not read or set the save_sink/save_source flags. This seems to be for module-stream-restore only...
* Even if a sink is already set by an earlier module, still move it to the sink we dictate.
* Fix a s/sink/source/ copy paste issue when dumping the database.
* Only show priority list when routing is enabled (as the list is not updated if not)
* Fix a memory access issue when finding the highest priority sinks/sources
* key name->device name efficiency fix.
* Silence noisy debug on reorder - it seems to work :)
* Reroute after reordering.
* Initialise preferred lists to PA_INVALID_INDEX
We put in the devices from the wire into a hashmap and then add all like type device in the database
and then order them based on priority (with the ones specified on the wire always being in that order at
the top of the list.