This patch adds a new file handle watch interface to libspice, featuring
three callbacks:
(1) watch_add() -- create a new file watch.
(2) watch_update_mask() -- change event mask. spice frequently
enables/disables write notification.
(3) watch_remove() -- remove a file watch.
libspice users must implement these functions to allow libspice
monitoring file handles.
The old interface (set_file_handlers) doesn't explicitly express the
lifecycle of a watch. Also it maps 1:1 to a qemu-internal function.
In case the way qemu implements file watches changes (someone sayed
QemuIONotifier?) this will break horribly. Beside that it is very
bad style.
Follwing patches will switch over users one by one to the new interface
and finally zap the old one.
Interfaces must be registered after spice_server_init().
The "next" callback is used to discover interfaces
registered before spice_server_init(). Which is a empty
list and thus pretty pointless. Remove it.
- drop spice_channel_name_t enum, use spice-protocol defines instead.
- switch spice_server_set_channel_security() channel parameter from
enum to string.
- drop spice_server_set_default_channel_security(), use
spice_server_set_channel_security with channel == NULL instead.
Adds sanity check to iovec setup. In theory this should never ever
trigger. In practice guest driver bugs can make it trigger. This
patch avoids qemu burning cpu in a endless loop, instead we'll print a
message and abort. Not sure whenever there is a more graceful way to
handle the situation ...
Surface creation now specifies the exact format, not only the bit depth
of each surface which is used for rendering.
Additionally we now actually store the surfaces in that format, instead
of converting everything to 32bpp when drawing or e.g. handling palettes.
We now support 16bit format pixmaps as well as the old ones. Including
both 555 and 565 modes.
We drop the palette argument for pixmap construction as it was only
used for black/white anyway.
Canvas creation is simplified so that there is no separate set_mode
state. Canvases are already created in the right mode and never change.
The new command return dirty area to be used
by users that want spice to render localy or
into some framebuffer (sdl / vnc)
Signed-off-by: Izik Eidus <ieidus@redhat.com>
The idea is that we can try to defer some stuff to be later
send in the pipe if the pipe is not fulled yet, moreover
we will then walk on the pipe using:
red_clear_surface_drawables_from_pipe() and will try to
remove the uneeded objects of this surface
Still some room to improvment but later...
Signed-off-by: Izik Eidus <ieidus@redhat.com>
Just skip the items of destroyed surface that are found in the pipe
before we skip them, we check if they are needed by other users...
Signed-off-by: Izik Eidus <ieidus@redhat.com>
Now we can send commands from the server to the client
to destroy surfaces (right now just the primary surface)
Needed for offscreens support)
Another patch`s on the way.
Signed-off-by: Izik Eidus <ieidus@redhat.com>
Also change include dir to "spice-server" for consistency.
libspice.so conflicted with the tclspice package, and its also
a clarification for when we create a spice client library.
In 'filter' video streaming mode, use a more permissive threshold for distinguishing
'realistic' streams from 'textaul'/'artificial' streams. The previous threshold classified
streams that were scaled on the guest as artificial and thus they were not recoginized as videos.
I added a lower limit to the size of images that are being streamed.
The limit is only active in "filter" video streaming mode.
This will prevent blurry animated icons.