Mercurial > sdl-ios-xcode
view src/thread/generic/SDL_syscond.c @ 4134:31c7c57af8a4 SDL-1.2
Updates for building on Windows CE using mingw32ce cross compiler:
http://sourceforge.net/mailarchive/forum.php?thread_name 0703291652.38437.jwalt%40garni.ch&forum_name=cegcc-devel
Hi!
I just managed to compile SDL for Windows CE using the "mingw32ce"
configuration of http://cegcc.sourceforge.net. Test programs work as expected
(except for those using signals -- no POSIX on mingw32ce), and I didn't yet
encounter any problem.
While it was a pain to get everything compiled and running, the changes to
SDL are actually quite small (see attached SDL-ce.diff).
Unfortunately, the win32 headers shipped with cegcc are not 100% correct, and
it feels quite messy to work around them in SDL code, so those headers will
also need to be patched. (Attachment: win32api-ce.diff)
Since I had to apply the libtool patch from the cegcc patch, I have also ad ded
my copy of aclocal.m4 for SDL. I had to modify the cegcc libtool patch to
use "lt_cv_deplibs_check_method=pass_all" for mingw32ce, otherwise libtool
would not recognize the import libraries as valid for dynamic linking.
All these changes should not affect non-WinCE builds, so they could be
included in mainline SDL.
If you need some docs, you can use this description for a cross-compilation
README:
1) get cegcc from http://cegcc.sourceforge.net
2) build and install the "mingw32ce" variant (see cegcc installation docs)
3) patch w32api-headers (if not yet included in cegcc)
4) setup environment (customize the first three lines as you like):
PREFIX=/opt/mingw32ce
TARGET=arm-wince-mingw32ce
BUILD=`uname -m`-pc-linux-gnu
export PATH="$PREFIX/bin:$PREFIX/$TARGET/bin:$PREFIX/local/bin:$PATH"
export CFLAGS="${CFLAGS:- -O2 -g} -I$PREFIX/local/include"
export CPPFLAGS="${CPPFLAGS:- -O2 -g} -I$PREFIX/local/include"
export CXXFLAGS="${CXXFLAGS:- -O2 -g} -I$PREFIX/local/include"
export LDFLAGS="${LDFLAGS:- -O2 -g} -L$PREFIX/local/lib"
export HOST_CC="gcc"
export CC="$PREFIX/bin/$TARGET-gcc"
export CXX="$PREFIX/bin/$TARGET-g++"
export LD="$PREFIX/bin/$TARGET-ld"
export AS="$PREFIX/bin/$TARGET-as"
export AR="$PREFIX/bin/$TARGET-ar"
export RANLIB="$PREFIX/bin/$TARGET-ranlib"
export CONFIG_SHELL="/bin/sh"
5) build and install
./configure --target=$TARGET --host=$TARGET --build=$BUILD
make
make install
6) use (4) and (5) for any SDL-using software you want to cross-compile
7) copy $PREFIX/local/bin/SDL-1-2-0.dll into your executable directory on the WinCE machine
author | Sam Lantinga <slouken@libsdl.org> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 03 Jan 2008 06:19:07 +0000 |
parents | d910939febfa |
children | 782fd950bd46 c121d94672cb a1b03ba2fcd0 |
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/* SDL - Simple DirectMedia Layer Copyright (C) 1997-2006 Sam Lantinga This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin St, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA Sam Lantinga slouken@libsdl.org */ #include "SDL_config.h" /* An implementation of condition variables using semaphores and mutexes */ /* This implementation borrows heavily from the BeOS condition variable implementation, written by Christopher Tate and Owen Smith. Thanks! */ #include "SDL_thread.h" struct SDL_cond { SDL_mutex *lock; int waiting; int signals; SDL_sem *wait_sem; SDL_sem *wait_done; }; /* Create a condition variable */ SDL_cond * SDL_CreateCond(void) { SDL_cond *cond; cond = (SDL_cond *) SDL_malloc(sizeof(SDL_cond)); if ( cond ) { cond->lock = SDL_CreateMutex(); cond->wait_sem = SDL_CreateSemaphore(0); cond->wait_done = SDL_CreateSemaphore(0); cond->waiting = cond->signals = 0; if ( ! cond->lock || ! cond->wait_sem || ! cond->wait_done ) { SDL_DestroyCond(cond); cond = NULL; } } else { SDL_OutOfMemory(); } return(cond); } /* Destroy a condition variable */ void SDL_DestroyCond(SDL_cond *cond) { if ( cond ) { if ( cond->wait_sem ) { SDL_DestroySemaphore(cond->wait_sem); } if ( cond->wait_done ) { SDL_DestroySemaphore(cond->wait_done); } if ( cond->lock ) { SDL_DestroyMutex(cond->lock); } SDL_free(cond); } } /* Restart one of the threads that are waiting on the condition variable */ int SDL_CondSignal(SDL_cond *cond) { if ( ! cond ) { SDL_SetError("Passed a NULL condition variable"); return -1; } /* If there are waiting threads not already signalled, then signal the condition and wait for the thread to respond. */ SDL_LockMutex(cond->lock); if ( cond->waiting > cond->signals ) { ++cond->signals; SDL_SemPost(cond->wait_sem); SDL_UnlockMutex(cond->lock); SDL_SemWait(cond->wait_done); } else { SDL_UnlockMutex(cond->lock); } return 0; } /* Restart all threads that are waiting on the condition variable */ int SDL_CondBroadcast(SDL_cond *cond) { if ( ! cond ) { SDL_SetError("Passed a NULL condition variable"); return -1; } /* If there are waiting threads not already signalled, then signal the condition and wait for the thread to respond. */ SDL_LockMutex(cond->lock); if ( cond->waiting > cond->signals ) { int i, num_waiting; num_waiting = (cond->waiting - cond->signals); cond->signals = cond->waiting; for ( i=0; i<num_waiting; ++i ) { SDL_SemPost(cond->wait_sem); } /* Now all released threads are blocked here, waiting for us. Collect them all (and win fabulous prizes!) :-) */ SDL_UnlockMutex(cond->lock); for ( i=0; i<num_waiting; ++i ) { SDL_SemWait(cond->wait_done); } } else { SDL_UnlockMutex(cond->lock); } return 0; } /* Wait on the condition variable for at most 'ms' milliseconds. The mutex must be locked before entering this function! The mutex is unlocked during the wait, and locked again after the wait. Typical use: Thread A: SDL_LockMutex(lock); while ( ! condition ) { SDL_CondWait(cond); } SDL_UnlockMutex(lock); Thread B: SDL_LockMutex(lock); ... condition = true; ... SDL_UnlockMutex(lock); */ int SDL_CondWaitTimeout(SDL_cond *cond, SDL_mutex *mutex, Uint32 ms) { int retval; if ( ! cond ) { SDL_SetError("Passed a NULL condition variable"); return -1; } /* Obtain the protection mutex, and increment the number of waiters. This allows the signal mechanism to only perform a signal if there are waiting threads. */ SDL_LockMutex(cond->lock); ++cond->waiting; SDL_UnlockMutex(cond->lock); /* Unlock the mutex, as is required by condition variable semantics */ SDL_UnlockMutex(mutex); /* Wait for a signal */ if ( ms == SDL_MUTEX_MAXWAIT ) { retval = SDL_SemWait(cond->wait_sem); } else { retval = SDL_SemWaitTimeout(cond->wait_sem, ms); } /* Let the signaler know we have completed the wait, otherwise the signaler can race ahead and get the condition semaphore if we are stopped between the mutex unlock and semaphore wait, giving a deadlock. See the following URL for details: http://www-classic.be.com/aboutbe/benewsletter/volume_III/Issue40.html */ SDL_LockMutex(cond->lock); if ( cond->signals > 0 ) { /* If we timed out, we need to eat a condition signal */ if ( retval > 0 ) { SDL_SemWait(cond->wait_sem); } /* We always notify the signal thread that we are done */ SDL_SemPost(cond->wait_done); /* Signal handshake complete */ --cond->signals; } --cond->waiting; SDL_UnlockMutex(cond->lock); /* Lock the mutex, as is required by condition variable semantics */ SDL_LockMutex(mutex); return retval; } /* Wait on the condition variable forever */ int SDL_CondWait(SDL_cond *cond, SDL_mutex *mutex) { return SDL_CondWaitTimeout(cond, mutex, SDL_MUTEX_MAXWAIT); }