Regular .h files *should* be self-contained and independent of previous
includes and guarded to only include once. Make it clear which files
that *doesn't* apply for at all.
the rest from `tools/convert_boost.sh`.
* replace boost::function, boost::bind with std::function and std::bind.
This required some manual fixes, notably std::placeholders,
some static_casts<>, and boost::function::clear -> = {}.
This is necessary with clip recording because for some short time after recording,
a trigger may be playable despite not yet having a region.
libs edition.
84e38b4c65 made the same change for FP16.
It has apparently not been necessary for FP8 so far, because backends
have happened to report "Port 1" before the control port. But that is
not necessarily the case. It failed for me when playing around.
Change FP8 handling to also not make assumptions about the device order
returned by the backend.
When handling the `/set_surface` command, the code would set
plug_page_size to the new value first, and call `sel_plug_pagesize()`
later. The latter then sees the page size is already the same, so it
leaves it unchanged and also does not send the page size to the
OSCSelectObserver object. In practice, this means that only the default
plugin page size from the preferences or set with
`/set_surface/plugin_page_size` take effect and values set with
`/set_surface` are ignored.
Exactly the same thing happens for the send page size.
This code has been like this since it was first introduced in comit
9c0f6ea948 (OSC: Allow set_surface to set send and plugin page sizes.,
2017-06-13)
This commit fixes this by omitting the first assignment.
Before this commit, OSCSelectObserver would read the feedback value when
it was created, but then never update it anymore. In practice, the
OSCSelectObserver is created on startup, and when the surface connects
and configures feeback, this value is not applied.
For example, when sending `/set_surface` with a feedback value of
4 (Send SSID as path extension), `/strip/*` would get their ssid put
into the path, but `/select/plugin/*` messages would not have their
parameter id in the path. When setting the corresponding checkbox in the
default feedback preferences, it is applied as expected.
This commit passes the new feedback value to the OSCSelectObserver
instance whenever it changes, which ensures the value is applied as
expected.
We now have two basic methods for CoreSelection
* when selecting a stripable, use ::select_stripable_and_maybe_group() with
appropriate arguments to cover the group selection aspects.
* when selecting an automation control that is part of a stripable, call
::select_stripable_with_control()
The old, more simply named methods (set/add/toggle etc.) have all been
made private, and their internal implementations changed somewhat.
This commit includes changes to control surfaces that use CoreSelection directly.
This fixes an issue on Windows, where UI::run can dispatch
a signal that ends up via cross-thread channel at the surfaces'
BaseUI::request_handler. causing a segfault.
This removes the _io_lock in favor of a RCU.
The reason for this change is to ensure data structure
consistency, notably iterators. Previously adding/removing
ports invalidated iterators, which caused [rare] crashes,
since IO::ports() simply returned a PortSet reference.
(This breaks API)
IRC user MikeLupe reports a Linux/ALSA system that has ports named
Launchpad Mini MK3 LPMiniMK3 DA
Launchpad Mini MK3 LPMiniMK3 MI
(note the truncations). Unclear if this is a failure of some specific
version of ALSA or something unusual about his device, but this
should fix the situation without breaking for anyone else