Implements the decoding of video streams using common H264 decoders. We also implement
a trivial feedback algorithm.
Sponsored by: Rangee GmbH (http://www.rangee.de)
freerdp_disconnect must only be called, if the connection
was established. Otherwise all resources are cleaned up twice
leading to double free and other issues.
Some window managers do not support _NET_WM_FULLSCREEN_MONITORS.
In that case multimonitor fullscreen does not properly work, so
add a path resizing the window over all screens instead.
Based on @erbth pull request, adding proper X11 atom checks.
If the display channel is available we use it to allow the user to resize the
xfreerdp window. When the window is resized we announce a new monitor layout and
the server reacts by doing a reactivation sequence to the new size.
The minimum window size is limited to 300x300 as 2012 servers crash horribly
if we send them a smaller layout.
* client/x11: Fix colors on big endian
The bitmaps are recieved in little endian byte order (LSBFirst in terms
of X11). This is a problem on systems, where bitmaps are expected in big
endian byte order (MSBFirst). X11 client tries to handle this situation
by different color formats (e.g. RGBX vs. BGRX), but this doesn't work.
BGRX is not MSBFirst variant of RGBX, it should be XRGB. But this would
work only for 32/24 depths, where color channels matches bytes. Let's
say to the XServer that all the bitmaps are in LSBFirst encoding instead
of changing the color formats on big endian systems.
https://github.com/FreeRDP/FreeRDP/issues/2520
* client/x11: Fix cursor color on big endian
The cursor color is wrong on big endian systems. It is not probably
possible to force bitmap_order for XcursorImage as it is possible for
XImage. Fortunately, cursors are always 32 bit so we can use ABGR
instead of BGRA to deal with.
https://github.com/FreeRDP/FreeRDP/issues/2520
* client/x11: Fix comment indentation
The comment has wrong indentation for some reason, let's fix it.
* client/x11: Fix BGR vs. RGB detection
The BGR vs. RGB detection code is leftover from history and I am conviced
that it is wrong with the current color handling, where invert flag is TRUE
by default. However, I suppose that the detection still makes sense and
XServer may use the inverted formats in some cases. Maybe we can force XServer
to use our masks somehow, but let's just fix the value to FALSE now.
* client/x11: Remove unused color shifts
The color shifts are lefover from history and are not used in current
code. Let's remove them.
XSelection protocol does not define any global clipboard as there is on
Windows. Instead each window has its own property for clipboard content
(like CLIPBOARD or PRIMARY) and there is a global notion of clipboard
ownership. Only one window can claim ownership of some clipboard type
at the moment.
FreeRDP uses CLIPBOARD for clipboard transfers (it's the one used by
applications when Ctrl+V is pressed). For regular desktop sessions the
session window itself is used for clipboard interactions via
xfc->drawable field. However, for remote app session there is no session
window. We cannot use the current remote app window as it may change or
be destroyed without closing the session. We also cannot use the root
window as it is already used for CF_RAW transfer protocol.
Therefore we create a simple dummy window to put into xfc->drawable for
this exact job: to act as a clipboard vessel on behalf of the entire
remote app session.
xf_create_window() usually creates the window as we immediately start in
RAIL mode when possible. xf_rail_enable_remoteapp_mode() is invoked only
when autologin failed or remote desktop had to show the session window
to the user for some reason.
- fixed invalid, missing or additional arguments
- removed all type casts from arguments
- added missing (void*) typecasts for %p arguments
- use inttypes defines where appropriate
Global static variables do not work, if more than one instance
of an RDP client is running in the same process space.
Removed the varaibles where possible and replaced them with
thread local storage where necessary.