Added script to identify the Windows version used to compile the source.
Currently the windows version for Windows NT is hard coded into the
source. By running this CMake script the _WIN32_WINNT preprocessor
variable gets set to the corresponding windows version.
I used osgSetGLExtensionsFuncPtr to remove the symbols. I don't know how to test this path, but it did remove the symbols from libosgViewer.so. I have also not been able yet to see if that was sufficient for our customer.
I did this by looking at other cases, and I tried to follow some of the same practices in PixelBufferX11, like using _useSGIX in a similar way to the previous _useGLX1_3."
git-svn-id: http://svn.openscenegraph.org/osg/OpenSceneGraph/trunk@15041 16af8721-9629-0410-8352-f15c8da7e697
The solution for to refactor the way that events are checked so I add a bool return type to checkEvents() method across osgViewer::GraphcisWindow, osgGA::Devive and osgViewer::Viewer/CompositeViewer classes
* resthttp/osc: encapsulate RequestHandler-classes in their own namespaces to prevent class-name-lookup-errors in the debugger/code (had some weird crashes)
* QTKit: fixed a compile-bug for gcc and blocks
* osgPresentation: click_to_* will fire on RELEASE, only if the drawable received a PUSH beforehand
* p3d/osgPresentation: implemented "forward_mouse_event_to_device"-tag, which will forward mouse-events to all registered devices of a viewer, if an intersection occurs. The mouse-coordinates get reprojected
* present3d: all devices get registered with the viewer
* osgViewer: only devices which are capable of receiving events are queried for new events.
* GraphicWindowIOS: added a flag to GraphicWindowIOS::WindowData to set up a retained backing buffer (defaults to false) This will enable read-back of the render-buffer with glReadPixels even after the renderbuffer got presented
* curl: added an optimized check for file-existance, now only the headers are requested and checked, instead of reading the whole file and handle it with a ReaderWriter
* p3d: fixed a bug, where the existence of a local file may prevent the remote loading of a file with the same name.
"
* avfoundation: added support for IOS (CoreVideo-support is still in development, works only for SDK >= 6.0, set IPHONE_SDKVER in cMake accordingly)
* zeroconf: added ZeroConf-device-plugin (Mac/Win only, linux implementation missing) to advertise and discover services via ZeroConf/Bonjour, on windows you'll need the Bonjour SDK from Apple
* osgosc: modified the example to demonstrate the usage of the ZeroConf-plugin (start the example with the command-line-argument --zeroconf)
* SlideShowConstructor: enable/disable CoreVideo via a environment variable (P3D_ENABLE_CORE_VIDEO)
* RestHttp: mouse-motion-events get interpolated
* RestHttp: unhandled http-requests get sent as an user-event to the event-queue, all arguments get attached as user-values to the event
* modified some CMakeModules to work correctly when compiling for IOS
* fixed a compile-error for IOS in GraphicsWindowIOS
* some minor bugfixes"
This issue can be reproduced:
1. Create osgViewer window,
2. Push right&left mouse buttons on the osgViewer window,
3. Move mouse out of window, and release right&left mouse buttons.
osgViewer window handle only first mouse release, as result window thinks that we did not released second mouse button.
I attached fix for this issue."
10.6), which will forward all multi-touch events from a trackpad to the
corresponding osgGA-event-structures.
The support is switched off per default, but you can enable multi-touch
support via a new flag for GraphicsWindowCocoa::WindowData or directly
via the GraphicsWindowCocoa-class.
After switching multi-touch-support on, all mouse-events from the
trackpad get ignored, otherwise you'll have multiple events for the same
pointer which is very confusing (as the trackpad reports absolute
movement, and as a mouse relative movement).
I think this is not a problem, as multi-touch-input is a completely
different beast as a mouse, so you'll have to code your own
event-handlers anyway.
While coding this stuff, I asked myself if we should refactor
GUIEventAdapter/EventQueue and assign a specific event-type for
touch-input instead of using PUSH/DRAG/RELEASE. This will make it
clearer how to use the code, but will break the mouse-emulation for the
first touch-point and with that all existing manipulators. What do you
think? I am happy to code the proposed changes.
Additionally I created a small (and ugly) example osgmultitouch which
makes use of the osgGA::MultiTouchTrackballManipulator, shows all
touch-points on a HUD and demonstrates how to get the touchpoints from
an osgGA::GUIEventAdapter.
There's even a small example video here: http://vimeo.com/31611842"
UIView, respecting the sizes via GraphicsContext::Traits.
This helps users, who want to integrate osg into an existing ios-app
with multiple UIViews. Additinally a view-controller gets only created
if needed, set IGNORE_ORIENTATION via the WindowData-struct.
"
implement the recently introduced setSyncToVBlank-method.
Additionally I added a ToggleSyncToVBlank-eventhandler to osgViewer. I
used it to test the code, perhaps you'll find it useful and include it
in the distribution."
I also fixed the vsync implementation introduced with rev.11357 that was crashing with the Windows Error #170. So I removed your temporary /* */ around the vsync condition..."
enum DeviceOrientation{
PORTRAIT_ORIENTATION = 1<<0,
PORTRAIT_UPSIDEDOWN_ORIENTATION = 1<<1,
LANDSCAPE_LEFT_ORIENTATION = 1<<2,
LANDSCAPE_RIGHT_ORIENTATION = 1<<3,
ALL_ORIENTATIONS = PORTRAIT_ORIENTATION | PORTRAIT_UPSIDEDOWN_ORIENTATION | LANDSCAPE_LEFT_ORIENTATION | LANDSCAPE_RIGHT_ORIENTATION
};
typedef unsigned int DeviceOrientationFlags;
The main motivation for this is to easily allow the user to specifiy that the device is in a horizontal orientation rather then having to rotate the view matrix. All flags have been tested individually as well as in combinations. The default is ALL_ORIENTATIONS to keep the exiting functionality for anyone who hasn't specified WindowData for their context traits.
"
and another problem is:
example osgkeyboard is not work (keys not highlight) if user have 2 keyboard layout native and english and current user layout is native
I try to explain my changes
we need something that is identify key without modifier keys and layout -> this is UnmodifedKey
I think osg must have its own UnmodifiedKeys table. Code must be run same on different platforms. This can de guaranteed by UnmodifiedKeys table.
Mikhail Izmestev helped me. He implemented VirtualKey changes in GraphicsWindowX11"
attached you'll find the second part of the IOS-submission. It contains
* GraphicsWindowIOS, which supports external and "retina" displays,
multisample-buffers (for IOS > 4.0) and multi-touch-events
* an ios-specific implementation of the imageio-plugin
* an iphone-viewer example
* cMake support for creating a xcode-project
* an updated ReadMe-file describing the necessary steps to get a
working xcode-project-file from CMake
Please credit Thomas Hogarth and Stephan Huber for these changes.
This brings the ios-support in line with the git-fork on github. It
needs some more testing and some more love, the cmake-process is still a
little complicated.
You'll need a special version of the freetype lib compiled for IOS,
there's one bundled in the OpenFrameworks-distribution, which can be used."
Notes, from Robert Osfield, modified CMakeLists.txt files so that the IOS specific paths are within IF(APPLE) blocks.
osg::GraphicsContext, in order to give good integration with the
application's GUI toolkit. This works really well.
However, I need to share OpenGL texture resources with the standard
osgViewer GraphicsContext implementations, in particular the
PixelBuffers. This is essential for my application to conserve graphics
memory on low-end hardware. Currently the standard osg implementations
will not share resources with another derived osg::GraphicsContext,
other than the pre-defined osgViewer classes e.g. PixelBufferX11 is
hardcoded to only share resources with GraphicsWindowX11 and
PixelBufferX11 objects, and no other osg::GraphicsContext object.
To address this in the cleanest way I could think of, I have moved the
OpenGL handle variables for each platform into a small utility class,
e.g. GraphicsHandleX11 for unix. Then GraphicsWindowX11, PixelBufferX11
and any other derived osg::GraphicsContext class can inherit from
GraphicsHandleX11 to share OpenGL resources.
I have updated the X11, Win32 and Carbon implementations to use this.
The changes are minor. I haven't touched the Cocoa implmentation as
I'm not familiar with it at all and couldn't test it - it will work
unchanged.
Without this I had some horrible hacks in my application, this greatly
simplifies things for me. It also simplifies the osgViewer
implementations slightly. Perhaps it may help with other users'
desires to share resources with external graphics contexts, as was
discussed on the user list recently."
Notes from Robert Osfield, adapted Colin's submission to work with the new EGL related changes.
GraphicsWindowCocoa-implementation, which enhances multithreaded
stability, it ensures that modifications to the size of an openglcontext
is done only from one thread.
"
implementation of GraoicsWindowCocoa:
Enhancements/Bugfixes:
+ now it's possible to integrate osgViewer better into existing
cocoa-applications:
* create one or more NSOpenGLView(s) and add these to your window(s)
* create one or more NSWindows
* disable the integrated event-polling of osgViewer, and let the work be
done by Cocoa / NSApplicationRun. You'll have to run the osgViewer's
runloop in a separate thread
+ missing menu-event-handling implemented
+ added NSAutoReleasePools where necessary, this fixes some memory-leaks
+ fixed some crashes and thread-issues"
Original email from Frederic at start of thread:
"he patch attached, made from r10068, fix two things, in other of importance :
- the selected cursor is never shown ( second change in file ). Only the left arrow is always displayed.
- remove the arbitrary ( in my sense ) limitation that the user cannot choose a cursor with the same shape that one used when resizing the window. This limitation doesn't exist for X11, and we have a diverging behaviour there ( first change in file ). Flightgear use the LeftRightCursor in look around mode."
Follow up email from Frederic (with changes that finally made it into this check in:
"I've just tested Mark's suggestion and it works perfectly, even when the
cursor goes to the border then come back inside the window.
But his patch doesn't seem to be based on the last revision of the
files, or at least not on the trunk, and there are more changes than
expected in them, including some loss from the previous patches.
The patch attached is based on r10068 of
src/osgViewer/GraphicsWindowWin32.cpp and r10067 of
include/osgViewer/api/Win32/GraphicsWindowWin32"
http://www.mail-archive.com/osg-users@lists.openscenegraph.org/msg23734.html
The change is source compatible with current osg code and will not affect current users, it simply adds an additional parameter to the GraphicsWindowWin32::WindowData struct constructor and defaults to the current behavior.
Attached are the files "include/osgViewer/api/Win32/GraphicsWindowWin32" and "src/osgViewer/GraphicsWindowWin32.cpp" with my changes, based on svn revision 10045. In addition, I have provided an svn patch file with the same changes for your convenience.
I have discussed the matter with my supervisor, and agreed that my company makes no copyright claim over this extremely trivial change (or to put it another way, we assign copyright to the open scene graph community.)"
set to off. But could be activated/decativated via CMake as well as system
environment variable. I also modified src\osgViewer\CMakeLists.txt to turn
off this workaround by default as suggested."