- Nov 15, 2020
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George Kiagiadakis authored
There is no good reason to keep them private
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- Jun 16, 2020
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George Kiagiadakis authored
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- Jun 15, 2020
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George Kiagiadakis authored
- pw_core_info has data that represent the remote core - pw_core properties are the properties of its pw_client, initially inherited from the pw_context, which can be updated either when calling pw_context_connect() or later at runtime (the pw_core calls pw_client_update_properties() on its pw_client) wp_core_update_properties() is made in such a way so that we can do: ``` clone = wp_core_clone(core); wp_core_update_properties(clone, ...); wp_core_connect(clone); ``` and get clone to have different properties than the original core, while they still share the same pw_context underneath
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George Kiagiadakis authored
also delay the "connected" signal until info is there
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- Jun 10, 2020
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Julian Bouzas authored
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Julian Bouzas authored
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- May 19, 2020
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Julian Bouzas authored
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- May 13, 2020
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George Kiagiadakis authored
libpipewire already prints this, so we get it duplicated on the log
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George Kiagiadakis authored
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- May 11, 2020
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George Kiagiadakis authored
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- May 08, 2020
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George Kiagiadakis authored
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George Kiagiadakis authored
This aligns better with the general design of consuming property objects on constructors, both in PipeWire and WirePlumber APIs
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- May 07, 2020
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George Kiagiadakis authored
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- Apr 24, 2020
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George Kiagiadakis authored
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- Apr 21, 2020
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Julian Bouzas authored
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- Apr 14, 2020
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George Kiagiadakis authored
+ enable the new log writer on the executables + enable structured logging in the tests
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- Mar 31, 2020
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George Kiagiadakis authored
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- Feb 27, 2020
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Julian Bouzas authored
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Julian Bouzas authored
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- Feb 19, 2020
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George Kiagiadakis authored
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- Feb 17, 2020
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George Kiagiadakis authored
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- Feb 14, 2020
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George Kiagiadakis authored
There are 3 kinds of WpProxy objects: * the ones that are created as a result of binding a global from the registry * the ones that are created as a result of calling into a remote factory (wp_node_new_from_factory, etc...) * the ones that are a local implementation of an object (WpImplNode, etc...) and are exported Previously the object manager was only able to track the first kind. With these changes we can now also have globals associated with WpProxies that were created earlier (and caused the creation of the global). This saves some resources and reduces round-trips (in case client code wants to change properties of an object that is locally implemented, it shouldn't need to do a round-trip through the server)
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- Feb 12, 2020
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George Kiagiadakis authored
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George Kiagiadakis authored
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George Kiagiadakis authored
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- Feb 11, 2020
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George Kiagiadakis authored
* core no longer exposes create_remote/local_object * node, device & link have constructor methods to enable the create_remote_object functionality * added WpImplNode to wrap pw_impl_node and allow creating "local" node instances * added WpSpaDevice to wrap spa_device and allow creating "local" device instances * exporting objects in all cases now happens by requesting FEATURE_BOUND from the proxy, eliminating the need for WpExported * replaced WpMonitor by new, simpler code directly in module-monitor * the proxy type lookup table in WpProxy is gone, we now use a field on the class structure of every WpProxy subclass and iterate through all the class structures instead; this is more flexible and extensible
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- Jan 22, 2020
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George Kiagiadakis authored
They are equivalent, there is no real benefit in having both
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- Jan 13, 2020
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Julian Bouzas authored
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Julian Bouzas authored
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Julian Bouzas authored
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- Jan 10, 2020
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Julian Bouzas authored
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Julian Bouzas authored
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- Jan 09, 2020
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Julian Bouzas authored
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- Dec 12, 2019
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George Kiagiadakis authored
to make it more usable and compatible with g_idle_add
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- Dec 06, 2019
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Julian Bouzas authored
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Julian Bouzas authored
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- Dec 04, 2019
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Julian Bouzas authored
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- Nov 27, 2019
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Julian Bouzas authored
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- Nov 13, 2019
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George Kiagiadakis authored
* rework how global objects are stored in the core * rework how users get notified about global objects and proxies of remote global objects The purpose of this change is to have a class that can manage objects that are registered in the core or signalled through the registry. This object can declare interest on certain types of global objects and only keep & signal those objects that it is interested in. Additionally, it can prepare proxy features and asynchronously deliver an 'objects-changed' signal, which is basically telling us that the list of objects has changed. This is useful to simplify port proxies management in WpAudioStream. Now the stream object can declare that it is interested in ports that have "node.id" == X and the object manager will only maintain a list of those. Additionally, it will emit the 'objects-changed' signal when the list of ports is complete, so there is no reason to do complex operations and core syncs in the WpAudioStream class in order to figure out when the list of ports is ready. As a side effect, this also reduces resource management. Now we don't construct a WpProxy for every global that pipewire reports; we only construct proxies when there is interest in them! Another interesting side effect is that we can now register an object manager at any point in time and get immediately notified about remote globals that already exist. i.e. when you register an object manager that is interested in nodes, it will be immediately notified about all the existing nodes in the graph. This is useful to avoid race conditions between connecting the signal and objects beting created in pipewire
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- Nov 07, 2019
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George Kiagiadakis authored
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