The peak meter needs to withstand various test-signals
without visual jitter (in particular 1kHz sine) regardless
of settings (period-size, sample-rate, custom fall-off).
This needs to be done in sync (and not by a random non-rt
‘smoothing’ thread).
On the downside this voids the ‘visual smoothing’ particularly
with large buffersizes - but then again exactly this “always
fall-off no matter what [the next real data will be]” is the
problem.
One the upside, there’s one less high-frequency (100Hz) thread
(Yay!) PS. it probably never worked on windows, anyway.
Only peak-meters are affected by his change.
K-meters, IEC I/II and VU were never visually smoothed.
Those objects do not have a versioned API by themselves.
This fixes issues with duplicate deployment (OSX, Linux bundles: cp) and
ardour listing control-surfaces multiple times (file index plugin dir).
This was necessary due to a bug/design issue between Glibmm and Glib (see https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=561885)
but the problem needs to be managed by the *creator* of the IOSource and that has now moved inside CrossThreadChannel.
Reverse the parameters of Mackie::Control::stop_touch() to make them
consistent with AutomationControl::stop_touch(), and fix up the call to
AutomationControl::stop_touch() to have the parameters in the correct
order.
Unfortunately, I don't possess any devices that speak the Mackie protocol, so
though the patch seems logical and correct to me, I have no way of testing it.
If anyone has a device with touch faders that speaks Mackie, I'd be glad of any
confirmation that it at least doesn't break anything.
Move control-surface editor-window management to the control surface.
The Preferences-Dialog is not aware of session specific or surface
specific actions and cannot properly manage the window.
It'd be nice if we could use 'ARDOUR::config_dir_name' for this purpose (or perhaps 'PROGRAM_VERSION'). However, neither is implemented widely enough at present to make this practical. Keep an eye on them though, as possible future strategies.
This avoids having to define define LIBFOO_DLL=1 all over the place. If we ever go with static libs we will
need to define LIBFOO_STATIC=1 but hopefully in some central location like the top level wscript.
Oh, and I also dropped support for gcc older than version 4.x because ardour will already not build
on such an old version.