This change fixes the stability problems experienced when using
a bluetooth headset supporting both A2DP and SCO. Problems occur
when starting the video chat at which time the A2DP output is being
stopped to start SCO. At that time, active AudioTracks are invalidated
by AudioFlinger so that a new AudioTrack binder interface can be
recreated by the client process on the new mixer thread with correct parameters.
The problem was that the process to restore the binder interface was not
protected against concurrent requests which caused 2 binder interfaces
to be created sometimes. This could lead to permanent client deadlock
if one of the client threads was waiting for a condition of the first
created binder interface while the second one was created (as the AudioFlinger
would only signal conditions on the last one created).
This concurrent request situation is more likely to happen when a client
uses the JAVA AudioTrack as the JNI implementation uses simultaneously the
native AudioTrack callback and write push mechanisms. By doing so, the code
that checks if the binder interface should be restored (in obtainBuffer()) is
much more likely to be called concurrently from two different threads.
The fix consists in protecting the critical binder interface restore phase
with a flag in the AudioTrack control block. The first thread acting upon the binder
interface restore request will raise the flag and the second thread will just wait for
a condition to be signaled when the restore process is complete.
Also protected all accesses to the AudioTrack control block by a mutex to prevent
access while the track is being destroyed and restored. If a mutex cannot be held
(e.g because we call a callback function), acquire a strong reference on the IAudioTrack
to prevent its destruction while the cblk is being accessed.
Modified AudioTrack JNI to use GetByteArrayElements() instead of
GetPrimitiveArrayCritical() when writing audio buffers. Entering a critical section would
cause the JNI to abort if a mediaserver crash occurs during a write due to the AudioSystem
callback being called during the critical section when media server process restarts.
Anyway with current JNI implementation, either versions do not copy data most of the times
and the criticial version does not guaranty no data copy.
The same modifications have been made to AudioRecord.
Change-Id: Idc5aa711a04c3eee180cdd03f44fe17f3c4dcb52
now that we removed the notion of a "inUse" buffer in surfaceflinger
a lot of code can be simplified / removed.
noteworthy, the whole concept of "unlockClient" wrt. "compositionComplete"
is also gone.
Change-Id: I210413d4c8c0998dae05c8620ebfc895d3e6233d
There is a new ANativeWindow::cancelBuffer() API that can be used to
cancel any dequeued buffer, BEFORE it's been enqueued. The buffer is
returned to the list of availlable buffers. dequeue and cancel are not
mutually thread safe, they must be called from the same thread or
external synchronization must be used.
Change-Id: I86cc7985bace8b6a93ad2c75d2bef5c3c2cb4d61
This issue showed that when an AudioTrack underruns during a too long period
of time and is therefore disabled by audioflinger mixer, it takes an additional
delay of up to 3 seconds to recover.
This fix adds a simple mechanism to recover immediately when the client application
is ready to write data again in the AudioTrack buffer
Also throttle warnings on record overflows
Change-Id: I8b2c71578dd134b9e60a15ee4d91b70f3799cb3d
this situation happened when the last buffer needed to be resized
(or allocated, the first time). the assumption was that the buffer
was in use by SF itself as the current buffer (obviously, this
assumption made no sense when the buffer had never been allocated, btw).
the system would wait until some other buffer became the "front" buffer.
we fix this problem by entirely removing the requirement that the
buffer being resized cannot be the front buffer. instead, we just
allocate a new buffer and replace the front buffer by the new one.
the downside is that this uses more memory (an extra buffer) for a
brief amount of time while the old buffer is being reallocated and
before it has actually been replaced.
Change-Id: I022e4621209474ceb1c671b23deb4188eaaa7285
The old dispatch mechanism has been left in place and continues to
be used by default for now. To enable native input dispatch,
edit the ENABLE_NATIVE_DISPATCH constant in WindowManagerPolicy.
Includes part of the new input event NDK API. Some details TBD.
To wire up input dispatch, as the ViewRoot adds a window to the
window session it receives an InputChannel object as an output
argument. The InputChannel encapsulates the file descriptors for a
shared memory region and two pipe end-points. The ViewRoot then
provides the InputChannel to the InputQueue. Behind the
scenes, InputQueue simply attaches handlers to the native PollLoop object
that underlies the MessageQueue. This way MessageQueue doesn't need
to know anything about input dispatch per-se, it just exposes (in native
code) a PollLoop that other components can use to monitor file descriptor
state changes.
There can be zero or more targets for any given input event. Each
input target is specified by its input channel and some parameters
including flags, an X/Y coordinate offset, and the dispatch timeout.
An input target can request either synchronous dispatch (for foreground apps)
or asynchronous dispatch (fire-and-forget for wallpapers and "outside"
targets). Currently, finding the appropriate input targets for an event
requires a call back into the WindowManagerServer from native code.
In the future this will be refactored to avoid most of these callbacks
except as required to handle pending focus transitions.
End-to-end event dispatch mostly works!
To do: event injection, rate limiting, ANRs, testing, optimization, etc.
Change-Id: I8c36b2b9e0a2d27392040ecda0f51b636456de25
Surfaces can now be parcelized and sent to remote
processes. When a surface crosses a process
boundary, it looses its connection with the
current process and gets attached to the new one.
Change-Id: I39c7b055bcd3ea1162ef2718d3d4b866bf7c81c0
First drop of audio framework modifications for audio effects support.
- AudioTrack/AudioRecord:
Added support for auxiliary effects in AudioTrack
Added support for audio sessions
Fixed left right channel inversion in setVolume()
- IAudioFlinger:
Added interface methods for effect enumeraiton and instantiation
Added support for audio sessions.
- IAudioTrack:
Added method to attach auxiliary effect.
- AudioFlinger
Created new classes to control effect engines in effect library and manage effect connections to tracks or
output mix:
EffectModule: wrapper object controlling the effect engine implementation in the effect library. There
is one EffectModule per instance of an effect in a given audio session
EffectChain: group of effects associated to one audio session. There is one EffectChain per audio session.
EffectChain for session 0 is for output mix effects, other chains are attached to audio tracks
with same session ID. Each chain contains a variable number of EffectModules
EffectHandle: implements the IEffect interface. There is one EffectHandle object for each application
controlling (or using) an effect module. THe EffectModule maintians a list of EffectHandles.
Added support for effect modules and effect chains creation in PlaybackThread.
modified mixer thread loop to allow track volume control by effect modules and call effect processing.
-AudioMixer
Each track now specifies its output buffer used by mixer for accumulation
Modified mixer process functions to process tracks by groups of tracks with same buffer
Modified track process functions to support accumulation to auxiliary channel
Change-Id: I26d5f7c9e070a89bdd383e1a659f8b7ca150379c
the new native_window_set_buffers_geometry allows
to specify a size and format for all buffers to be
dequeued. the buffer will be scalled to the window's
size.
Change-Id: I2c378b85c88d29cdd827a5f319d5c704d79ba381
this method can be used to change the number of buffers
associated to a native window. the default is two.
Change-Id: I608b959e6b29d77f95edb23c31dc9b099a758f2f
this change introduces R/W locks in the right places.
on the server-side, it guarantees that setBufferCount()
is synchronized with "retire" and "resize".
on the client-side, it guarantees that setBufferCount()
is synchronized with "dequeue", "lockbuffer" and "queue"
The problem is due to a too big difference between the buffer size used at the hardware interface and at the A2DP interface.
When no resampling occurs we don't notice problems but the timing is very tight. As soon as resampling is activated, the AudioTrack underruns.
This is because the AudioTrack buffers are not resized when moving the AudioTrack from hardware to A2DP output.
The AudioTrack buffers are calculated based on a hardware output buffer size of 3072 bytes. Which is much less than the A2DP output buffer size (10240).
The solution consists in creating new tracks with new buffers in AudioFlinger when the A2DP output is opened
instead of just transfering active tracks from hardware output mixer thread to the new A2DP output mixer thread.
To avoid synchronization issues between mixer threads and client processes, this is done by invalidating tracks
by setting a flag in their control block and having AudioTrack release the handle on this track (IAudioTrack)
and create a new IAudioTrack when this flag is detected next time obtainBuffer() or start() is executed.
AudioFlinger modifications:
- invalidate the tracks when setStreamOutput() is called
- make sure that notifications of output opening/closing and change of stream type to output mapping are sent synchronously to client process.
This is necessary so that AudioSystem has the new stream to output mapping when the AudioTrack detects the invalidate flag in the client process.
Previously their were sent when the corresponding thread loop was executed.
AudioTrack modifications:
- move frame count calculation and verification from set() to createTrack() so that is is updated every time a new IAudioTrack is created.
- detect track invalidate flag in obtainBuffer() and start() and create a new IAudioTrack.
AudioTrackShared modifications
- group all flags (out, flowControlFlag, forceReady...) into a single bit filed to save space.
Change-Id: I9ac26b6192230627d35084e1449640caaf7d56ee
Some variables and structure members should be renamed to reflect the fact that they contain the
number of channels in a track (channel count) or the actual channels used by a track (channel mask).
Especially member "channels" of track control block (struct audio_track_cblk_t) is actually the
number of channels (channels count).
Change-Id: I220c8dede9fc00c8a5693389e790073b6ed307b8
the reason for the above change is that waitForCondition() had become
large over time, mainly to handle error cases, using inlines to
evaluate the condition doesn't buys us much anymore while it increases
code size.
Change-Id: I2595d850832628954b900ab8bb1796c863447bc7
in the undoDequeue() case, 'tail' was recalculated from 'available' and 'head'
however there was a race between this and retireAndLock(), which could cause
'tail' to be recalculated wrongly.
the interesting thing though is that retireAndLock() shouldn't have any impact
on the value of 'tail', which is client-side only attribute.
we fix the race by saving the value of 'tail' before dequeue() and restore it
in the case of undoDequeue(), since we know it doesn't depend on retireAndLock().
Change-Id: I4bcc4d16b6bc4dd93717ee739c603040b18295a0
also increase the dirtyregion size from 1 to 6 rectangles.
Overall we now need 27KiB process instead of 4KiB
Change-Id: Iebda5565015158f49d9ca8dbcf55e6ad04855be3
A typo caused GL_AMBIENT_AND_DIFFUSE to only set the the ambient color.
Fix another typo which caused the viewer position to be wrong for
specular highlights.
Switch back to eye-space lighting, since there are still some issues
with some demos (San Angeles in particular).
we lost the concept of vertical stride when moving video playback to EGLImage.
Here we bring it back in a somewhat hacky-way that will work only for the
softgl/mdp backend.
This also fixes [2152536] ANR in browser
When SF is enqueuing buffers faster than SF dequeues them.
The update flag in SF is not counted and under some situations SF will only
dequeue the first buffer. The state at this point is not technically
corrupted, it's valid, but just delayed by one buffer.
In the case of the Browser ANR, because the last enqueued buffer was delayed
the resizing of the current buffer couldn't happen.
The system would always fall back onto its feet if anything -else- in
tried to draw, because the "late" buffer would be picked up then.
A window is created and the browser is about to render into it the
very first time, at that point it does an IPC to SF to request a new
buffer. Meanwhile, the window manager removes that window from the
list and the shared memory block it uses is marked as invalid.
However, at that point, another window is created and is given the
same index (that just go freed), but a different identity and resets
the "invalid" bit in the shared block. When we go back to the buffer
allocation code, we're stuck because the surface we're allocating for
is gone and we don't detect it's invalid because the invalid bit has
been reset.
It is not sufficient to check for the invalid bit, I should
also check that identities match.
When EGLImage extension is not available, SurfaceFlinger will fallback to using
glTexImage2D and glTexSubImage2D instead, which requires 50% more memory and an
extra copy. However this code path has never been exercised and had some bugs
which this patch fix.
Mainly the scale factor wasn't computed right when falling back on glDrawElements.
We also fallback to this mode of operation if a buffer doesn't have the adequate
usage bits for EGLImage usage.
This changes only code that is currently not executed. Some refactoring was needed to
keep the change clean. This doesn't change anything functionaly.
The ANR is caused by SurfaceFlinger waiting for buffers of a removed surface to become availlable.
When it is removed from the current list, a Surface is marked as NO_INIT, which causes SF to return
immediately in the above case. For some reason, the surface here wasn't marked as NO_INIT.
This change makes the code more robust by always (irregadless or errors) setting the NO_INIT status
in all code paths where a surface is removed from the list.
Additionaly added more information in the logs, should this happen again.
Rewrote SurfaceFlinger's buffer management from the ground-up.
The design now support an arbitrary number of buffers per surface, however the current implementation is limited to four. Currently only 2 buffers are used in practice.
The main new feature is to be able to dequeue all buffers at once (very important when there are only two).
A client can dequeue all buffers until there are none available, it can lock all buffers except the last one that is used for composition. The client will block then, until a new buffer is enqueued.
The current implementation requires that buffers are locked in the same order they are dequeued and enqueued in the same order they are locked. Only one buffer can be locked at a time.
eg. Allowed sequence: DQ, DQ, LOCK, Q, LOCK, Q
eg. Forbidden sequence: DQ, DQ, LOCK, LOCK, Q, Q
Initial commit for review.
Integrated comments after patch set 1 review.
Fixed lockup in AudioFlinger::ThreadBase::exit()
Fixed lockup when playing tone with AudioPlocyService startTone()