* Add support for C++ plugins.
* Seperate between a "module" and a "plugin": a module is a shared
library that exposes a function called "proxy_module_entry_point". This
function gets a parameter to `proxyPluginsManager*`, which can be used to
register plugins.
* Refine the API of the modules infrastructure:
* use proxyData* instead of rdpContext* when firing a hook or calling a filter.
* use clearer names.
* Instead of having to specify a path for each module to be loaded in
the configuration, the proxy now loads modules from specificed
directory, using the CMAKE variable PROXY_PLUGINDIR.
* Add an option to specify required plugins: plugins that the proxy
wouldn't start without having them fully loaded.
This patch adds the basic infrastructure to have openCL acceleration.
For now only YUV2RGB is implemented but other operations could be
implemented.
The primitives have been massively reworked so that we have an autodetect
mode that will pick the best implementation automatically by performing a
benchmark.
Sponsored-by: Rangee Gmbh(http://www.rangee.com)
If no library can be loaded at runtime ignore H264 capabilities.
This allows a build with only OpenH264 support and dynamic loading
enabled to function when no openh264 library was detected.
Different platforms/systems may install CMake modules into different places. For
instance, FreeBSD will install modules into ${PREFIX}/share/cmake/Modules while
Linux distributions might install into ${PREFIX}/lib/cmake.
This leaves us with a useful abstraction- consumers only need to care about
the name of their subdirectory, and only one place needs to be patched to change
where this subdirectory lands.
libepoll-shim is our implementation of this API on top of kevent. It supplies
the same headers and a library, but we don't install it in any of the default
include search paths when it comes in through ports on an as-needed basis.
This set of changes is restricted to FREEBSD-compatible OS, which includes
DragonflyBSD and FreeBSD.
DragonflyBSD was a fork of FreeBSD once upon a time. As far as FreeRDP is
concerned, DragonflyBSD is FreeBSD-compatible and DragonflyBSD in-fact uses
the FreeBSD ports tree (+ patches)