Remove the unstable presentation_timing.xml file, and use presentation-time.xml from wayland-protocols instead to generate all the Presentation extension bindings. The following renames are done according to the XML changes: - generated header includes - enum constants and macros prefixed with WP_ - interface symbol names prefixed with wp_ - protocol API calls prefixed with wp_ Clients use wp_presentation_interface.name rather than hardcoding the global interface name: presentation-shm, weston-info, presentation-test. Signed-off-by: Pekka Paalanen <pekka.paalanen@collabora.co.uk> Reviewed-by: Bryce Harrington <bryce@osg.samsung.com> Reviewed-by: Jonas Ådahl <jadahl@gmail.com> [Pekka: updated wayland-protocols dependency to 1.2]dev
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<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> |
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<protocol name="presentation_timing"> |
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<!-- wrap:70 --> |
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<copyright> |
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Copyright © 2013-2014 Collabora, Ltd. |
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Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a |
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copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), |
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to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation |
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the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, |
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and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the |
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Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: |
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|
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The above copyright notice and this permission notice (including the next |
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paragraph) shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the |
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Software. |
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|
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THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR |
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IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, |
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FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL |
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THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER |
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LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING |
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FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER |
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DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. |
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</copyright> |
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|
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<interface name="presentation" version="1"> |
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<description summary="timed presentation related wl_surface requests"> |
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<!-- Introduction --> |
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The main feature of this interface is accurate presentation |
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timing feedback to ensure smooth video playback while maintaining |
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audio/video synchronization. Some features use the concept of a |
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presentation clock, which is defined in presentation.clock_id |
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event. |
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|
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Request 'feedback' can be regarded as an additional wl_surface |
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method. It is part of the double-buffered surface state update |
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mechanism, where other requests first set up the state and then |
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wl_surface.commit atomically applies the state into use. In |
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other words, wl_surface.commit submits a content update. |
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<!-- Completing presentation --> |
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When the final realized presentation time is available, e.g. |
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after a framebuffer flip completes, the requested |
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presentation_feedback.presented events are sent. The final |
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presentation time can differ from the compositor's predicted |
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display update time and the update's target time, especially |
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when the compositor misses its target vertical blanking period. |
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</description> |
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<enum name="error"> |
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<description summary="fatal presentation errors"> |
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These fatal protocol errors may be emitted in response to |
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illegal presentation requests. |
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</description> |
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<entry name="invalid_timestamp" value="0" |
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summary="invalid value in tv_nsec"/> |
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<entry name="invalid_flag" value="1" |
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summary="invalid flag"/> |
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</enum> |
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|
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<request name="destroy" type="destructor"> |
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<description summary="unbind from the presentation interface"> |
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Informs the server that the client will not be using this |
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protocol object anymore. This does not affect any existing |
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objects created by this interface. |
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</description> |
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</request> |
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|
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<request name="feedback"> |
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<description summary="request presentation feedback information"> |
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Request presentation feedback for the current content submission |
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on the given surface. This creates a new presentation_feedback |
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object, which will deliver the feedback information once. If |
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multiple presentation_feedback objects are created for the same |
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submission, they will all deliver the same information. |
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For details on what information is returned, see |
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presentation_feedback interface. |
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</description> |
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<arg name="surface" type="object" interface="wl_surface" |
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summary="target surface"/> |
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<arg name="callback" type="new_id" interface="presentation_feedback" |
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summary="new feedback object"/> |
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</request> |
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|
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<event name="clock_id"> |
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<description summary="clock ID for timestamps"> |
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This event tells the client in which clock domain the |
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compositor interprets the timestamps used by the presentation |
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extension. This clock is called the presentation clock. |
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The compositor sends this event when the client binds to the |
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presentation interface. The presentation clock does not change |
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during the lifetime of the client connection. |
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The clock identifier is platform dependent. Clients must be |
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able to query the current clock value directly, not by asking |
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the compositor. |
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On Linux/glibc, the identifier value is one of the clockid_t |
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values accepted by clock_gettime(). clock_gettime() is defined |
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by POSIX.1-2001. |
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Compositors should prefer a clock which does not jump and is |
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not slewed e.g. by NTP. The absolute value of the clock is |
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irrelevant. Precision of one millisecond or better is |
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recommended. |
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Timestamps in this clock domain are expressed as tv_sec_hi, |
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tv_sec_lo, tv_nsec triples, each component being an unsigned |
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32-bit value. Whole seconds are in tv_sec which is a 64-bit |
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value combined from tv_sec_hi and tv_sec_lo, and the |
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additional fractional part in tv_nsec as nanoseconds. Hence, |
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for valid timestamps tv_nsec must be in [0, 999999999]. |
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Note that clock_id applies only to the presentation clock, |
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and implies nothing about e.g. the timestamps used in the |
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Wayland core protocol input events. |
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</description> |
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|
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<arg name="clk_id" type="uint" summary="platform clock identifier"/> |
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</event> |
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</interface> |
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<interface name="presentation_feedback" version="1"> |
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<description summary="presentation time feedback event"> |
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A presentation_feedback object returns an indication that a |
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wl_surface content update has become visible to the user. |
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One object corresponds to one content update submission |
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(wl_surface.commit). There are two possible outcomes: the |
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content update is presented to the user, and a presentation |
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timestamp delivered; or, the user did not see the content |
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update because it was superseded or its surface destroyed, |
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and the content update is discarded. |
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Once a presentation_feedback object has delivered an 'presented' |
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or 'discarded' event it is automatically destroyed. |
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</description> |
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<event name="sync_output"> |
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<description summary="presentation synchronized to this output"> |
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As presentation can be synchronized to only one output at a |
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time, this event tells which output it was. This event is only |
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sent prior to the presented event. |
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As clients may bind to the same global wl_output multiple |
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times, this event is sent for each bound instance that matches |
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the synchronized output. If a client has not bound to the |
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right wl_output global at all, this event is not sent. |
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</description> |
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<arg name="output" type="object" interface="wl_output" |
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summary="presentation output"/> |
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</event> |
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|
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<enum name="kind"> |
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<description summary="bitmask of flags in presented event"> |
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These flags provide information about how the presentation of |
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the related content update was done. The intent is to help |
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clients assess the reliability of the feedback and the visual |
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quality with respect to possible tearing and timings. The |
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flags are: |
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VSYNC: |
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The presentation was synchronized to the "vertical retrace" by |
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the display hardware such that tearing does not happen. |
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Relying on user space scheduling is not acceptable for this |
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flag. If presentation is done by a copy to the active |
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frontbuffer, then it must guarantee that tearing cannot |
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happen. |
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HW_CLOCK: |
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The display hardware provided measurements that the hardware |
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driver converted into a presentation timestamp. Sampling a |
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clock in user space is not acceptable for this flag. |
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HW_COMPLETION: |
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The display hardware signalled that it started using the new |
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image content. The opposite of this is e.g. a timer being used |
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to guess when the display hardware has switched to the new |
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image content. |
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ZERO_COPY: |
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The presentation of this update was done zero-copy. This means |
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the buffer from the client was given to display hardware as |
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is, without copying it. Compositing with OpenGL counts as |
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copying, even if textured directly from the client buffer. |
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Possible zero-copy cases include direct scanout of a |
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fullscreen surface and a surface on a hardware overlay. |
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</description> |
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<entry name="vsync" value="0x1" summary="presentation was vsync'd"/> |
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<entry name="hw_clock" value="0x2" |
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summary="hardware provided the presentation timestamp"/> |
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<entry name="hw_completion" value="0x4" |
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summary="hardware signalled the start of the presentation"/> |
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<entry name="zero_copy" value="0x8" |
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summary="presentation was done zero-copy"/> |
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</enum> |
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<event name="presented"> |
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<description summary="the content update was displayed"> |
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The associated content update was displayed to the user at the |
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indicated time (tv_sec_hi/lo, tv_nsec). For the interpretation of |
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the timestamp, see presentation.clock_id event. |
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The timestamp corresponds to the time when the content update |
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turned into light the first time on the surface's main output. |
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Compositors may approximate this from the framebuffer flip |
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completion events from the system, and the latency of the |
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physical display path if known. |
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This event is preceded by all related sync_output events |
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telling which output's refresh cycle the feedback corresponds |
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to, i.e. the main output for the surface. Compositors are |
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recommended to choose the output containing the largest part |
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of the wl_surface, or keeping the output they previously |
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chose. Having a stable presentation output association helps |
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clients predict future output refreshes (vblank). |
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Argument 'refresh' gives the compositor's prediction of how |
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many nanoseconds after tv_sec, tv_nsec the very next output |
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refresh may occur. This is to further aid clients in |
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predicting future refreshes, i.e., estimating the timestamps |
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targeting the next few vblanks. If such prediction cannot |
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usefully be done, the argument is zero. |
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The 64-bit value combined from seq_hi and seq_lo is the value |
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of the output's vertical retrace counter when the content |
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update was first scanned out to the display. This value must |
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be compatible with the definition of MSC in |
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GLX_OML_sync_control specification. Note, that if the display |
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path has a non-zero latency, the time instant specified by |
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this counter may differ from the timestamp's. |
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If the output does not have a constant refresh rate, explicit |
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video mode switches excluded, then the refresh argument must |
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be zero. |
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If the output does not have a concept of vertical retrace or a |
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refresh cycle, or the output device is self-refreshing without |
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a way to query the refresh count, then the arguments seq_hi |
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and seq_lo must be zero. |
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</description> |
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<arg name="tv_sec_hi" type="uint" |
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summary="high 32 bits of the seconds part of the presentation timestamp"/> |
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<arg name="tv_sec_lo" type="uint" |
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summary="low 32 bits of the seconds part of the presentation timestamp"/> |
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<arg name="tv_nsec" type="uint" |
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summary="nanoseconds part of the presentation timestamp"/> |
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<arg name="refresh" type="uint" summary="nanoseconds till next refresh"/> |
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<arg name="seq_hi" type="uint" |
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summary="high 32 bits of refresh counter"/> |
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<arg name="seq_lo" type="uint" |
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summary="low 32 bits of refresh counter"/> |
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<arg name="flags" type="uint" summary="combination of 'kind' values"/> |
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</event> |
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<event name="discarded"> |
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<description summary="the content update was not displayed"> |
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The content update was never displayed to the user. |
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</description> |
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</event> |
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</interface> |
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</protocol> |
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