* Add a Rational class
* Can get/set Key<T> where T is a primitive (or Rational)
* Can get/set Key<T> where T is a primitive array
* Can get/set Key<T> where T is an enum (synthetic constructor only)
Not implemented yet:
* When T is anything else, i.e. Rect, Size, etc
Bug: 9529161
Change-Id: I64438024a1e8327a38dd2672652626f0ffbb70e3
No longer compile libandroidfw as a static library on the device
since it already exists as a shared library. Keeping the static
library would force us to provide a static library version of
libinput for the device as well which doesn't make sense.
Change-Id: I3517881b87b47dcc209d80dbd0ac6b5cf29a766f
* Working streaming preview requests only
* Almost everything else returns empty objects that don't do anything
Bug: 9213377
Change-Id: Ie6f02a7c0952b0f5ebc41905425b15cae221f7d3
* Working streaming preview requests only
* Almost everything else returns empty objects that don't do anything
Bug: 9213377
Change-Id: I183dd47ddd737ec2c3c374e5c3461542a97f09b0
This change adds simple APIs that enable an Android application
to generate a PDF document by drawing content on a canvas.
Change-Id: Ibac93d7c37b01a376ce7c48238657d8c7698d588
When the Android runtime starts, the system preloads a series of assets
in the Zygote process. These assets are shared across all processes.
Unfortunately, each one of these assets is later uploaded in its own
OpenGL texture, once per process. This wastes memory and generates
unnecessary OpenGL state changes.
This CL introduces an asset server that provides an atlas to all processes.
Note: bitmaps used by skia shaders are *not* sampled from the atlas.
It's an uncommon use case and would require extra texture transforms
in the GL shaders.
WHAT IS THE ASSETS ATLAS
The "assets atlas" is a single, shareable graphic buffer that contains
all the system's preloaded bitmap drawables (this includes 9-patches.)
The atlas is made of two distinct objects: the graphic buffer that
contains the actual pixels and the map which indicates where each
preloaded bitmap can be found in the atlas (essentially a pair of
x and y coordinates.)
HOW IS THE ASSETS ATLAS GENERATED
Because we need to support a wide variety of devices and because it
is easy to change the list of preloaded drawables, the atlas is
generated at runtime, during the startup phase of the system process.
There are several steps that lead to the atlas generation:
1. If the device is booting for the first time, or if the device was
updated, we need to find the best atlas configuration. To do so,
the atlas service tries a number of width, height and algorithm
variations that allows us to pack as many assets as possible while
using as little memory as possible. Once a best configuration is found,
it gets written to disk in /data/system/framework_atlas
2. Given a best configuration (algorithm variant, dimensions and
number of bitmaps that can be packed in the atlas), the atlas service
packs all the preloaded bitmaps into a single graphic buffer object.
3. The packing is done using Skia in a temporary native bitmap. The
Skia bitmap is then copied into the graphic buffer using OpenGL ES
to benefit from texture swizzling.
HOW PROCESSES USE THE ATLAS
Whenever a process' hardware renderer initializes its EGL context,
it queries the atlas service for the graphic buffer and the map.
It is important to remember that both the context and the map will
be valid for the lifetime of the hardware renderer (if the system
process goes down, all apps get killed as well.)
Every time the hardware renderer needs to render a bitmap, it first
checks whether the bitmap can be found in the assets atlas. When
the bitmap is part of the atlas, texture coordinates are remapped
appropriately before rendering.
Change-Id: I8eaecf53e7f6a33d90da3d0047c5ceec89ea3af0
The input method manager service now supplies an input channel for
communication while creating an IME session on behalf of the
application.
This change significanly reduces the overhead of IME event dispatch
by using a standard input channel to send input events rather than
using binder. This results in fewer thread context switches
and fewer object allocations.
What's more, the IME may perform additional batching of the motion
events that it receives which may help it catch up if it is
getting behind while processing them.
Bug: 7984576
Bug: 8473020
Change-Id: Ibe26311edd0060cdcae80194f1753482e635786f
SurfaceControl is the window manager side; it can
control the attributes of a surface but cannot push buffers
to it. Surface on the other hand is the application (producer)
side and is used to push buffers to the surface.
Change-Id: Ib6754c968924e87e8dd02a2073c7a447f729f4dd
# Via Android (Google) Code Review (1) and Jeff Sharkey (1)
* commit 'aec6bcfb767a4b9dfd391bff338a8ff284b29549':
Parse network stats using native code.
Switch to parsing detailed network stats with native code, which
is 71% faster than ProcFileReader.
Change-Id: I2525aaee74d227ce187ba3a74dd08a2b06514deb
This reverts commit 6c0307dd0aefe9a08794b155fc03ee60ebd14f25, reversing
changes made to a2cd828b749c444d55c2c41c7dbb85088ff94b9f.
Conflicts:
packages/SystemUI/res/values-sv/strings.xml
Change-Id: Ia178efe8b14751583d47b2826bfe3d3d5463dd2e
Cleaned up the implementation of Surface and SurfaceSession
to use more consistent naming and structure.
Added JNI for all of the new surface flinger display API calls.
Enforced the requirement that all Surfaces created by
the window manager be named.
Updated the display manager service to use the new methods.
Change-Id: I2a658f1bfd0437e1c6f9d22df8d4ffcce7284ca2
Remove some JNI and duplicated functionality and use libcore's Posix
class for the statfs function instead.
Change-Id: Ic1e161dc10c18c2c6ee81d895a0efd8910086dbf
The purpose of this change is to remove direct reliance on
SurfaceFlinger for describing the size and characteristics of
displays.
This patch also starts to make a distinction between logical displays
and physical display devices. Currently, the window manager owns
the concept of a logical display whereas the new display
manager owns the concept of a physical display device.
Change-Id: I7e0761f83f033be6c06fd1041280c21500bcabc0