The motivation for this is to determine if a given event
originates from a user-controlled live input controller or
from playback from disk or a MIDI file.
This distinction is required for VST3 MIDI learn.
This fixes segfaults as well as corrupt listes when copy/pasting
due to invalid iterators.
::mark_dirty() must be called with WriterLock, and
::rt_safe_earliest_event_linear_unlocked() must not be called
while _events is being modified. The Sequence iterator
(only user of that function) does not ensure this. Only the
sequence read-lock is taken.
These are longer be used since Seuqnce has a "force_discrete"
boolen that needs to be taken into account in addition to
user-configurable ControlList _interpolation mode.
This significantly speeds up parsing MIDI files with complex
tempo-maps. e.g. "Black MIDI Trilogy_2.mid" has 24134 Tempo
changes. Prior to this commit parsing that file took over 5 minutes.
now it loads in under one seconds (libsmf only; libardour still
add overhead, and now needs about 30-40 seconds, previously
it took about 10 mins).
The problem was that every call to `smf_track_add_event_pulses()`
calls `seconds_from_pulses()` which calls `smf_get_tempo_by_seconds()`
which iterates over the tempo-map:
for every midi-event { for ever tempo until that midi-event {..} }
This does not scale to 3.5M events and 24k tempo-changes.
see also https://github.com/stump/libsmf/pull/7
* Fix validity checks of escaped data
* Handle non-EOT-terminated tracks.
* Fix buffer overflow on tempo change event
* Fix memory leaks in case loading fails
* Fix a logic errors in extract_escaped_event()
* Fix the assertion problem `is_sysex_byte(status)`
* Make libsmf more tolerant to malformed MIDI files.
(fixes import of files generated by NoteEdit)
Previously this was inherited via PBD.
On MacOS/X, this adds
"-undefined dynamic_lookup -flat_namespace"
and various "-framework .." options to linkflags
Without this flag, .dylibs fail to link usually because
of missing `-lintl` (Undefined symbols: "_libintl_dgettext")
On other systems this is a NO-OP:
CFLAGS_OSX, CXXFLAGS_OSX and LINKFLAGS_OSX
are only set on the darwin platform.
gcc can recognize various regexps in comments. Since C++17 provides
[[fallthrough]], using /* fallthrough */ consistently seems
appropriate until we switch to C++17.
see also https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Warning-Options.html
A "fall through" comment is most portable way to indicate
"no break, fallthru" cases.
* __attribute__ ((fallthrough)) // is not portable
* [[fallthrough]]; // is C++17