Mercurial > sdl-ios-xcode
view README.wscons @ 3877:81f66f258d77 SDL-1.2
Fixed bug #281
------- Comment #2 From Christian Walther 2006-07-23 07:37 [reply] -------
Wow, that was an interesting bug to chase. It was a timing issue: it seems that
for some reason, a certain time must pass between ShowMenuBar() being called in
QZ_UnsetVideoMode() and the application quitting. Before rev. 1885, this delay
was provided by the slow hand-coded fade. With the asynchronous Core Graphics
fading introduced in rev. 1885, that delay was no longer present (most of the
time) and the bug became apparent. Adding an SDL_Delay(100) somewhere between
ShowMenuBar() and the end of QZ_VideoQuit() lowered the frequency of the bug
appearing from "almost every time" to "very rarely" here.
However, there is another solution: doing the ShowMenuBar() before releasing
the captured display instead of afterwards. Apparently, no delay is necessary
in that case, and it looks nicer to me anyway because it is the reverse order
of the way things are set up in the beginning: capture display - set video mode
- hide menu bar - ... - show menu bar - reset video mode - release captured
display. So, this is what the attached patch does.
In addition, I've taken the liberty of
- removing some unused code that I forgot to remove in rev. 1885,
- fixing two warnings about undeclared functions in SDL_QuartzVideo.m by
including OpenGL.h (whose name is a bit misleading - it only declares CGL
stuff, so there's no interference with SDL_opengl.h).
author | Sam Lantinga <slouken@libsdl.org> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 24 Sep 2006 01:27:40 +0000 |
parents | 19d8949b4584 |
children |
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============================================================================== Using the Simple DirectMedia Layer with OpenBSD/wscons ============================================================================== The wscons SDL driver can be used to run SDL programs on OpenBSD without running X. So far, the driver only runs on the Sharp Zaurus, but the driver is written to be easily extended for other machines. The main missing pieces are blitting routines for anything but 16 bit displays, and keycode maps for other keyboards. Also, there is no support for hardware palettes. There is currently no mouse support. To compile SDL with support for wscons, use the "--enable-video-wscons" option when running configure. I used the following command line: ./configure --disable-oss --disable-ltdl --enable-pthread-sem \ --disable-esd --disable-arts --disable-video-aalib \ --enable-openbsdaudio --enable-video-wscons \ --prefix=/usr/local --sysconfdir=/etc Setting the console device to use ================================= When starting an SDL program on a wscons console, the driver uses the current virtual terminal (usually /dev/ttyC0). To force the driver to use a specific terminal device, set the environment variable SDL_WSCONSDEV: bash$ SDL_WSCONSDEV=/dev/ttyC1 ./some-sdl-program This is especially useful when starting an SDL program from a remote login prompt (which is great for development). If you do this, and want to use keyboard input, you should avoid having some other program reading from the used virtual console (i.e., do not have a getty running). Rotating the display ==================== The display can be rotated by the wscons SDL driver. This is useful for the Sharp Zaurus, since the display hardware is wired so that it is correctly rotated only when the display is folded into "PDA mode." When using the Zaurus in "normal," or "keyboard" mode, the hardware screen is rotated 90 degrees anti-clockwise. To let the wscons SDL driver rotate the screen, set the environment variable SDL_VIDEO_WSCONS_ROTATION to "CW", "CCW", or "UD", for clockwise, counter clockwise, and upside-down rotation respectively. "CW" makes the screen appear correct on a Sharp Zaurus SL-C3100. When using rotation in the driver, a "shadow" frame buffer is used to hold the intermediary display, before blitting it to the actual hardware frame buffer. This slows down performance a bit. For completeness, the rotation "NONE" can be specified to use a shadow frame buffer without actually rotating. Unsetting SDL_VIDEO_WSCONS_ROTATION, or setting it to '' turns off the shadow frame buffer for maximum performance. Running MAME ============ Since my main motivation for writing the driver was playing MAME on the Zaurus, I'll give a few hints: XMame compiles just fine under OpenBSD. I'm not sure this is strictly necessary, but set MY_CPU = arm in makefile.unix, and CFLAGS.arm = -DLSB_FIRST -DALIGN_INTS -DALIGN_SHORTS in src/unix/unix.max to be sure. The latest XMame (0.101 at this writing) is a very large program. Either tinker with the make files to compile a version without support for all drivers, or, get an older version of XMame. My recommendation would be 0.37b16. When running MAME, DO NOT SET SDL_VIDEO_WSCONS_ROTATION! Performace is MUCH better without this, and it is COMPLETELY UNNECESSARY, since MAME can rotate the picture itself while drawing, and does so MUCH FASTER. Use the Xmame command line option "-ror" to rotate the picture to the right. Acknowledgments =============== I studied the wsfb driver for XFree86/Xorg quite a bit before writing this, so there ought to be some similarities. -- Staffan Ulfberg <staffan@ulfberg.se>