Mercurial > sdl-ios-xcode
view README.Porting @ 4168:69bcba65c388 SDL-1.2
Fixed bug #526
Comment #1 From Simon Howard 2009-03-20 16:50:56
Hi,
I'm the author of Chocolate Doom, one of the other source ports that James
mentioned. This is a patch against the current SVN version of SDL 1.2 that
fixes the bug. It has been tested and hopefully should be obviously correct
from examining the changes. I'll give a brief explanation.
When the palette is set with SDL_SetPalette, the IDirectDrawPalette_SetEntries
DirectX function is invoked. However, when this happens, a WM_PALETTECHANGED
message is sent to the window.
A WM_PALETTECHANGED message can also be received if the palette is changed for
some other reason, like if the system palette is changed. Therefore, the
palette change handler (DX5_PaletteChanged) has code to deal with this case.
It distinguishes "expected" palette changes (set with SDL_SetPalette) from
"unexpected" palette changes using the colorchange_expected variable, which is
set before calling IDirectDrawPalette_SetEntries. However, the code to set
this variable is missing in the fullscreen code path. By setting this
variable, the palette change is handled properly and the freezes go away.
author | Sam Lantinga <slouken@libsdl.org> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 13 Apr 2009 00:53:12 +0000 |
parents | b2b476a4a73c |
children | 103760c3a5dc |
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* Porting To A New Platform The first thing you have to do when porting to a new platform, is look at include/SDL_platform.h and create an entry there for your operating system. The standard format is __PLATFORM__, where PLATFORM is the name of the OS. Ideally SDL_platform.h will be able to auto-detect the system it's building on based on C preprocessor symbols. There are two basic ways of building SDL at the moment: 1. The "UNIX" way: ./configure; make; make install If you have a GNUish system, then you might try this. Edit configure.in, take a look at the large section labelled: "Set up the configuration based on the target platform!" Add a section for your platform, and then re-run autogen.sh and build! 2. Using an IDE: If you're using an IDE or other non-configure build system, you'll probably want to create a custom SDL_config.h for your platform. Edit SDL_config.h, add a section for your platform, and create a custom SDL_config_{platform}.h, based on SDL_config.h.minimal and SDL_config.h.in Add the top level include directory to the header search path, and then add the following sources to the project: src/*.c src/audio/*.c src/cdrom/*.c src/cpuinfo/*.c src/events/*.c src/file/*.c src/joystick/*.c src/stdlib/*.c src/thread/*.c src/timer/*.c src/video/*.c src/audio/disk/*.c src/video/dummy/*.c src/joystick/dummy/*.c src/cdrom/dummy/*.c src/thread/generic/*.c src/timer/dummy/*.c src/loadso/dummy/*.c Once you have a working library without any drivers, you can go back to each of the major subsystems and start implementing drivers for your platform. If you have any questions, don't hesitate to ask on the SDL mailing list: http://www.libsdl.org/mailing-list.php Enjoy! Sam Lantinga (slouken@libsdl.org)