As suggested by akshay, there is no reason to do this only for control
transfers. All input transfers can have short packets and we want to
detect those and trigger the "end of transfer" code when a short packet
happens.
Fixes#11087.
- This makes the video output looks more visual appealing. Without bilinear
filtering you would see aliasing artifacts all over the place. Now it looks
more harmonic.
- This get rids of the complain "'UINT64_C' was not declared in this scope" and
allows us to remove the (now superflous) declaration of UINT64_C.
- No functional change intended.
- This should fix the bug where video files that played well before the recent
changes to the FFMPEG Plugin didn't play anymore. Now we apply the essential
video container properties (that were passed by with Setup()) to the
AVCodecContext. Some video formats simply store those properties in the
container only (e.g. AVI, WMV) and not in the video frames itself
(e.g. MPEG2).
Tested with several files from samples.ffmpeg.org and from the FATE suite of
FFMPEG.
* Restore missing definitions of std::nothrow and mynothrow that are
required for the debug build.
* Additionally, cleanup function overrides provided by kernel_cpp,
such that any exceptions in kernel, bootloader or runtime_loader will
trigger a panic.
Same fix as hrev42151 for usb_serial:
When determining the bit to be set for RTS/DTR there was a missing comparison
to op which would've caused a wrong line state to be set.
* The given void pointers are pointers to the actual list items, which
are pointers themselves, so there was an indirection missing
* Fix inverted sort order
This could have caused spurious crashes related to initialization of
the locale kit, most notably this was responsible for triggering a
crashing bug in the plaintext add-on that caused the x86 image
not being able to boot.
I will continue with trying to find the actual crash, too.
The 160x120 preview size is a bad choice, because it makes XRoger crash
in an infinite recursion when trying to draw bezier arcs with custom
code (instead of using the BeAPI for that).
Use 120x90, just like BeOS, to maximise compatibility and avoid such
problems.
Fixes#10601.
* Use a BGroupLayout with insets to make space for the monitor drawing
* Don't put the "no preview available" inside the view passed to
screensavers, this could confuse them
* Have the actual preview area (not including borders) be 160x120
This reverts 0fb019bbf2. Making the window
a BDirectWindow isn't a good idea, especially if you want things other
than a direct rendering view in it. Moreover, this is completely
unneeded as GL works just as well in non-direct mode.
DirectDraw is called only in direct drawing mode (BDirectWindow). Our GL
kit also works fine (but slower) in indirect mode (standard BWindow, GL
stuff rendered offscreen then blitted). However, for this to work we
need the screensavers to actually do something. Use the
BScreenSaver::Draw method, which is called in either case.
This makes it possible to use indirect mode for the preview of GL
screensavers. The performance isn't really a problem on the very small
preview (160x200 pixels).
Fixes GLife and Gravity. Flurry still crashes Mesa.
- When walking through and querying volumes for a missing source file,
store the error and report it back in the completion message rather
than exiting the query worker. Otherwise, if something went wrong
with the queries, it'd potentially occur that we'd never prompt the
user to locate the file, as the UI would never be notified that
the background work was complete.