Every new memexport object now gets an ever increasing base index,
that prevents block ID collisions between different memexport
objects on the same pstream.
In particular, this prevents block ID collision between the srb memblock
(which has its own memexport object) and audio data blocks.
Reported-by: Peter Meerwald <pmeerw@pmeerw.net>
Signed-off-by: David Henningsson <david.henningsson@canonical.com>
New function allows to pass data pointer that is a member
of the outer structure that need to be freed too when data
is not needed anymore.
Signed-off-by: Lukasz Marek <lukasz.m.luki2@gmail.com>
The shared ringbuffer memblock must be writable by both sides.
This makes it possible to send such a memblock over a pstream without
the "both sides writable" information getting lost.
Signed-off-by: David Henningsson <david.henningsson@canonical.com>
This is a preparation for the shm ringbuffer, which needs to be able
to be writable by both sides, because there are atomic variables they
both need to modify.
Signed-off-by: David Henningsson <david.henningsson@canonical.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.
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.
When logging a suppression message do so on the same log level as the
suppressed messages.
Cherry picked by Colin Guthrie from ec5a785712
with a couple of additional changes due to extra limiting in master
that was not present in stable-queue.
pa_memblock is now an opaque structure. Access to its fields is now done
through various accessor functions in a thread-safe manner.
pa_memblock_acquire() and pa_memblock_release() are now used to access the
attached audio data. Why? To allow safe manipulation of the memory pointer
maintained by the memory block. Internally _acquire() and _release() maintain a
reference counter. Please do not confuse this reference counter whith the one
maintained by pa_memblock_ref()/_unref()!
As a side effect this patch removes all direct usages of AO_t and replaces it
with pa_atomic_xxx based code.
This stuff needs some serious testing love. Especially if threads are actively
used.
git-svn-id: file:///home/lennart/svn/public/pulseaudio/trunk@1404 fefdeb5f-60dc-0310-8127-8f9354f1896f