create_card_profile() used to get called separately for HSP and HFP,
so if a headset supports both profiles, a profile named
"headset_head_unit" would get created twice. The second instance would
get immediately freed, so that wasn't a particularly serious problem.
However, I think it makes more sense to create the profile only once.
This patch makes things so that before a profile is created, we check
what name that profile would have, and if a profile with that name
already exists, we don't create the profile.
A couple of Yocto releases (jethro and krogoth) have non-upstream
patches that suffer from this double creation. The patches add
associations between profiles and ports, and those associations use
the profile name as the key. When the second profile gets freed, the
associations between the profile and its ports get removed, and since
the profile name is used as the key, this erroneously affects the
first profile too. Crashing ensues.
BugLink: https://bugzilla.yoctoproject.org/show_bug.cgi?id=10018
A hashmap is more convenient than a linked list for storing the UUIDs,
so change the BlueZ 4 code accordingly.
Rename the BlueZ 4 UUID constants to match the BlueZ 5 naming.
The only changes to the BlueZ 5 code are the addition of one comment
and making another comment a bit clearer.
I want module-alsa-card to set the availability of unavailable
profiles before the initial card profile gets selected, so that the
selection logic can use correct availability information.
module-alsa-card initializes the jack state after calling
pa_card_new(), however, and the profile selection happens in
pa_card_new(). This patch solves that by moving parts of pa_card_new()
to pa_card_choose_initial_profile() and pa_card_put().
pa_card_choose_initial_profile() applies the profile selection policy,
so module-alsa-card can first call pa_card_new(), then initialize the
jack state, and then call pa_card_choose_initial_profile(). After that
module-alsa-card can still override the profile selection policy, in
case module-alsa-card was loaded with the "profile" argument. Finally,
pa_card_put() finalizes the card creation.
An alternative solution would have been to move the jack
initialization to happen before pa_card_new() and use pa_card_new_data
instead of pa_card in the jack initialization code, but I disliked
that idea (I want to get rid of the "new data" pattern eventually).
The order in which the initial profile policy is applied is reversed
in this patch. Previously the first one to set it won, now the last
one to set it wins. I think this is better, because if you have N
parties that want to set the profile, we avoid checking N times
whether someone else has already set the profile.
pa_module_unload() takes two pointers: pa_module and pa_core.
The pa_core pointer is also available via the pa_module object,
so the pa_core argument is redundant
[David Henningsson: Rebased to git HEAD]
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.
Now a2dp and hsp sinks and sources will have different names which means that
applications and other modules can use sink/source to distinguish selected
profile.
Module module-device-restore uses sink/source name and port name as identifier,
so if different profiles have different names module-device-restore can store
volume settings for each profile.
So with this patch it is possible to configure different volume settings for
a2dp and hsp profiles.
This patch does not change port names so gnome applications will be happy.
Note that similar patch is needed also for bluez5, but I'm not using bluez5
so I cannot write or test it.
Signed-off-by: Pali Rohár <pali.rohar@gmail.com>
Currently the latency information is being updated based on the encoded
SBC data instead of the decoded PCM data. Fixing this required moving
the timing update to be after the packet has been decoded.
The Nokia E7 running Symbian Belle Refresh seems to generate invalid SBC
packets every few minutes. This causes pulseaudio to disconnect the
stream and log "SBC decoding error (-3)".
If a single packet is bad, pulseaudio should keep playing the stream.
I think this makes the code a bit nicer to read and write. This also
reduces the chances of off-by-one errors when checking the bounds of
channel count values.
by using pa_modargs_get_sample_rate() we avoid inconsistant validity
checking of the sample rate in various places
Signed-off-by: Peter Meerwald <pmeerw@pmeerw.net>
When setting attribute foo, or in this case the card profile, in my
opinion the thing passed to the set_foo() function should be of the
type of foo, not a string identifier that can be used to search for
the actual foo in set_foo().
This is mostly a question of taste, but there's at least some small
benefit from passing the actual object: often the profile object is
already available when calling pa_card_set_profile(), so passing the
card name would cause unnecessary searching when pa_card_set_profile()
needs to look up the profile from the hashmap.
We need diferent symbol prefixing for the current BlueZ 4 support and
the new BlueZ 5 support which is about to enter the codebase, to avoid
symbol clashing and crashing the daemon in the case both modules are
loaded at the same time.
This commit replaces all pa_bluetooth_ and pa_bt_ (for consistency)
prefixes with pa_bluez4_, for both lower-case and upper-case, what was
done with the following sed commands:
$ sed -i s/pa_bluetooth_/pa_bluez4_/g src/modules/bluetooth/*bluez4*
$ sed -i s/PA_BLUETOOTH_/PA_BLUEZ4_/g src/modules/bluetooth/*bluez4*
$ sed -i s/pa_bt_/pa_bluez4_/g src/modules/bluetooth/*bluez4*
$ sed -i s/PA_BT_/PA_BLUEZ4_/g src/modules/bluetooth/*bluez4*