Mercurial > sdl-ios-xcode
view README.Qtopia @ 809:dba98fb391e7
Date: Tue, 13 Jan 2004 19:25:37 +0300
From: Dmitry Yakimov
Subject: [SDL] [PATCH] SDL bug patch
Let me introduce 2 fixes to SDL.
1. Preventing great slowdown on fast machines while hardware
flipping (it's obviously bug).
2. Setting up 85 Hz of monitor if supported. The reason is that
Win98 by default sets lowest frequency 60 Hz.
And we can't set up maximum frequency because some users can have
wrong monitor drivers.
This is important for shareware and commercial programs.
author | Sam Lantinga <slouken@libsdl.org> |
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date | Wed, 11 Feb 2004 16:10:16 +0000 |
parents | 2c5d4c22a2ac |
children |
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============================================================================== Using the Simple DirectMedia Layer with Qtopia/OPIE ============================================================================== ============================================================================== I. Setting up the Qtopia development environment. This document will not explain how to setup the Qtopia development environment. That is outside the scope of the document. You can read more on this subject in this excellent howto: http://www.zauruszone.com/howtos/linux_compiler_setup_howto.html ============================================================================== II. Building the Simple DirectMedia Layer libraries using the arm cross-compiler This is somewhat tricky since the name of the compiler binaries differ from the standard. Also you should disable features not needed. The command below works for me. Note that it's all one line. You can also set the NM, LD etc environment variables separately. NM=arm-linux-nm LD=arm-linux-ld CC=arm-linux-gcc CXX=arm-linux-g++ RANLIB=arm-linux-ranlib AR=arm-linux-ar ./configure --enable-video-qtopia --disable-video-dummy --disable-video-fbcon --disable-video-dga --disable-arts --disable-esd --disable-alsa --disable-cdrom --disable-video-x11 --disable-nasm --prefix=/opt/Qtopia/sharp/ arm-unknown-linux-gnu One thing to note is that the above configure will include joystick support, even though you can't have joysticks on the Zaurus. The reason for this is to avoid link / compile / runtime errors with applications that have joystick support. ============================================================================== III. Building the Simple DirectMedia Layer test programs: After installing, making sure the correct sdl-config is in your path, run configure like this: NM=arm-linux-nm LD=arm-linux-ld CC=arm-linux-gcc CXX=arm-linux-g++ AR=arm-linux-ar ./configure arm-unknown-linux-gnu ============================================================================== IV. Application porting notes One thing I have noticed is that applications sometimes don't exit correctly. Their icon remains in the taskbar and they tend to relaunch themselves automatically. I believe this problem doesn't occur if you exit your application using the exit() method. However, if you end main() with 'return 0;' or so, this seems to happen. Also note that when running in landscape mode - i.e requesting a window that is HEIGHT pixels wide and WIDTH pixels high, where WIDTH and HEIGHT normally is 240 and 320 - the image is blitted so that the hardware buttons are on the left side of the display. This might not always be desirable but such is the code today. ============================================================================== V. Enjoy! :) If you have a project you'd like me to know about, or want to ask questions, go ahead and join the SDL developer's mailing list by sending e-mail to: sdl-request@libsdl.org and put "subscribe" into the subject of the message. Or alternatively you can use the web interface: http://www.libsdl.org/mailman/listinfo/sdl ============================================================================== VI. What is supported: Keyboard (Sharp Zaurus) Hardware buttons Stylus input (mouse) Video. Allows fullscreen both in portrait mode (up to WIDTHxHEIGHT size window) and in landscape mode (up to HEIGHTxWIDTH). All other SDL functionality works like a normal Linux system (threads, audio etc). -- David Hedbor <david@hedbor.org> http://david.hedbor.org/ http://eongames.com/