We now enumerate all IVSHMEM devices, sort them based on PCI bus, slot,
and function numbers, then index from the resulting order. This should
be consistent across boots.
To help the user identify the correct IVSHMEM device, we also print the
list of IVSHMEM devices on startup.
When our window is destroyed, our timers are also destroyed. This causes our
attempt at destruction to fail. Instead, set MessageHWND to NULL in the
WM_DESTROY handler and don't try destroying the timers if the window is gone.
This allows us to set a callback to read a value out before it's about
to be overwritten which can be useful for things like calculating a
running average.
This so called "enhanced" event logic is completely flawed and can never
work correctly, better to strip it out and put our faith in windows to
handle the events for us.
And yes, I am fully aware I wrote the utter trash in the first place :)
Due to a failure to understand atomics when this code was originally
written it has a critical flaw with the fast path where an event could
be signalled when it should not be. This change set corrects this issue
by using atomic operations.
People often miss the warnings about invalid arguments in their command
line, this last minute patch attempts to address this by making
warnings, errors, fixme's and fatal errors stand out if stdout is a TTY.
We receive values as int64_t, but when we compute the sum, we store it as
int. This doesn't make sense as we eventually cast it to double when
computing the average. We should instead store the sum as int64_t.
Extensive profiling reveals that the glibc memcpy performs up to 2x
faster then the existing SIMD implementation that was in use here. This
patch also will copy large 1MB chunks if the pitch of the source and
destination match further increasing throughput.
Under windows text editors like to default to saving in UTF8 with a byte
order mask prefix preventing proper parsing of any option that is on the
first line of the file. Since the configuration file is only intended to
be plain ascii this change ignores all non-ascii characters solving this
issue.
This change adds an average function to time how long it takes the GPU
to copy and map the texture, and then uses this average to sleep for 80%
of this average lowering CPU usage and potentially decreasing lock
contention.
We previously used strstr, which can be prone to false positives when
the name of one extension is a substring of another extension.
This commit creates the helper function util_hasGLExt, which asserts
that the substring found in extension list is bounded by either spaces
or the beginning/end of the string.
Corners of table have '+' added, and adds new command line flag --rst-help,
which adds some extra formatting to the make it an rST compliant table for the
in-line docs.
When linking against libbfd.so, just passing libbfd.so to the compiler is
sufficient. When linking against the static version libbfd.a, however,
we must additionally link against libiberty.a and libz.a.
This commit adds a CMake helper to find the correct libraries that need
to be passed to link against libbfd correctly.
Calling abort() instead of exit() will generate a core dump, allowing gdb
to be used when the client crashes. This is desirable for the following
reasons:
1. gdb can be used to inspect the call stack with far more detail than the
our quick stack trace code, and also allows the access to the heap.
2. Our SIGSEGV handler is unable to use debug symbols for shared libraries,
making it impossible to debug bugs involving drivers and similar.
This allows buffers to be shared between different asynchronous operations.
Once all users no longer need the buffer, it will be freed.
The motivation for this is being able to stream Wayland clipboard data
asynchronously to multiple clients. The buffer should only be freed after
the clipboard has changed and all ongoing transfer completes.
It used to be the case that you need to create dmabuf for kvmfr devices
to be able to mmap them. But after #457, this is no longer needed.
Directly mmaping the kvmfr device has the advantage of avoiding the
creation of a dmabuf, which has cost (e.g. the list of pages, the
scatterlist, etc.).
This commit uses the DbgHelp library which is shipped with Windows to
generate stack traces with function names and line number information.
It takes advantage of the pdb file generated by cv2pdb that is now
installed with looking-glass-host.exe.
These two functions were added in 9ff1859dc1
for Windows, but were never used on Linux.
Adding stubs will allow the host to compile on Linux.
These should be fixed later.
This makes it a compile-time error to call a function that semantically
takes no parameters with a nonzero number of arguments.
Previously, such code would still compile, but risk blowing up the stack
if a compiler chose to use something other than caller-cleanup calling
conventions.
Note: This only works with the KVMFR kernel module in a VM->VM
configuration. If this causes issues it can be disabled with the new
option `app:allowDMA`
This is a major change to how the LG client performs it's updates. In
the past LG would operate a fixed FPS regardless of incoming update
speed and/or frequency. This change allows LG to dynamically increase
it's FPS in order to better sync with the guest as it's rate changes.
This changes the method of the memory copy from the host application to
the guest. Instead of performing a full copy from the capture device
into shared memory, and then flagging the new frame, we instead set a
write pointer, flag the client that there is a new frame and then copy
in chunks of 1024 bytes until the entire frame is copied. The client
upon seeing the new frame flag begins to poll at high frequency the
write pointer and upon each update copies as much as it can into the
texture.
This should improve latency but also slightly increase CPU usage on the
client due to the high frequency polling.