Since this->prepared will never be set to true unless the filter is
enabled, this results in the framebuffer setup being done every frame
for no reason, causing a lot of texture reallocations.
The cursorThread prevents the host from going to sleep when the
video feed is disabled as it's subscribed to the cursor queue. Stopping
the cursorThread will unsubscribe from the queue and allow the host
application to disable capture.
This commit adds check for the extensions that we need and then calls
the functions indirectly through gl_dynprocs.
This should improve compatibility with older versions of OpenGL, as we
now fallback to the ARB extensions if possible, and in the case of
glGenerateMipmap, we can handle the function not existing at all.
The Linux OpenGL ABI does not guarantee that glXSwapIntervalEXT will be
exported statically from any library, and indeed on some systems this
function does not link at load time, e.g. with amdgpu-pro. All other
GLX functions that we use are from GLX 1.0, which is guaranteed to be
exported statically.
This commit solves this issue by using glXGetProcAddressARB to load the
function. Note that only the ARB version of glXGetProcAddress is
guaranteed to exist by the Linux OpenGL ABI, which is why we must use
it.
This prevents attempts to grab the pointer after the guest side warp
finishes if the pointer has left the window in the meantime. On Wayland,
this would result in the pointer moving to the middle of the window when
the confine is created.
Previously, all progress made during sleep is reset, so if the thread keeps
getting interrupted before the sleep finishes, the sleep will never complete.
This saves a lot of GPU power for partial updates. Running testufo with
lanczos downscaling and FSR upscaling consumed over 90 W, but with this
commit, consumed only 75 W.
The translucent white modal background sort of cancels out the dark
background we apply to the overlay, which is undesirable. It should
instead further darken the background.
For consistency, we now use igGetColorU32Col(ImGuiCol_ModalWindowDimBg)
to draw the overlay background, to avoid hardcoding the same colour in
multiple places.
Currently, this is visible through how fast the cursor blinks, with it
blinking faster at higher refresh rates. This commit makes the timing
consistent.
This new function dumps all options marked as preset instead of dumping
individual sections. This should allow filter options to not be all grouped
into the [eglFilter] section.
imgui really hates it when we update the modifier key state after igNewFrame.
The result is:
void ImGui::ErrorCheckEndFrameSanityChecks(): Assertion
`(key_mod_flags == 0 || g.IO.KeyMods == key_mod_flags) &&
"Mismatching io.KeyCtrl/io.KeyShift/io.KeyAlt/io.KeySuper vs io.KeyMods"'
failed.
Therefore, we buffer the modifier state information and update it in the IO
object right before we call igNewFrame.
This avoids warping the host cursor when the guest-side warp has not finished,
which will result in the host cursor exiting at the wrong position if it exits
at that moment.
Using 4x4 means that some pixels will be outside of the lanczos window. The
ideal lanczos function should in fact be zero in those areas, so we shouldn't
waste time processing those pixels.
I can't notice any difference in the results.
According to the documentation for eglQueryString:
> EGL_BAD_DISPLAY is generated if display is not an EGL display connection,
> unless display is EGL_NO_DISPLAY and name is EGL_EXTENSIONS.
Therefore, we should check EGL by doing:
eglQueryString(EGL_NO_DISPLAY, EGL_EXTENSIONS)
Indeed, the old way of eglQueryString(EGL_NO_DISPLAY, EGL_VERSION) works on
libglvnd but not using mesa's libEGL.so directly.
Also added a warning to make it more obvious that EGL is not available.
With the new keymap feature, we are now able to properly support letting
the user enter exact values into the sliders. This commit adds a tooltip
to help the user discover this feature.
Note that this currently only works on Wayland. The X11 backend will need
to call app_handleKeyboardModifiers.
Due to the way assert is defined in standard C, compilers in release mode
will not treat it as unreachable. This explains a lot about those pesky
uninitialized variable bugs, actually.