src/joystick/linux/SDL_sysjoystick_c.h


Log

Author Commit Date CI Message
Sam Lantinga 499d31e9 2021-04-13T17:00:24 Cleanup Linux joystick code
Sam Lantinga 9130f7c3 2021-01-02T10:25:38 Updated copyright for 2021
Sam Lantinga db0a2025 2020-12-12T23:48:02 Fixed bug 5241 - SDL on Linux needs a way to turn deadzones off pj5085 It occurred to me that my simple patch that comments out a few lines of code does not correctly remove the dead zone since the calculation presumably assumes the dead zone has been cut out of the range. Then, while looking into how to make it output the correct range of values, I realized SDL wasn't returning the correct range of values to begin with. This line of code was already present: printf("Values = { %d, %d, %d, %d, %d }\n", absinfo.value, absinfo.minimum, absinfo.maximum, absinfo.fuzz, absinfo.flat); For my joystick this yeilds: Values = { 0, -127, 127, 0, 15 } Then this code calculates the coefficients: In SDL1: joystick->hwdata->abs_correct[i].coef[0] = (absinfo.maximum + absinfo.minimum) / 2 - absinfo.flat; joystick->hwdata->abs_correct[i].coef[1] = (absinfo.maximum + absinfo.minimum) / 2 + absinfo.flat; t = ((absinfo.maximum - absinfo.minimum) / 2 - 2 * absinfo.flat); if ( t != 0 ) { joystick->hwdata->abs_correct[i].coef[2] = (1 << 29) / t; } else { joystick->hwdata->abs_correct[i].coef[2] = 0; } In SDL2: joystick->hwdata->abs_correct[i].coef[0] = (absinfo.maximum + absinfo.minimum) - 2 * absinfo.flat; joystick->hwdata->abs_correct[i].coef[1] = (absinfo.maximum + absinfo.minimum) + 2 * absinfo.flat; t = ((absinfo.maximum - absinfo.minimum) - 4 * absinfo.flat); if (t != 0) { joystick->hwdata->abs_correct[i].coef[2] = (1 << 28) / t; } else { joystick->hwdata->abs_correct[i].coef[2] = 0; } Neither calculates the correct coefficients for the code in the AxisCorrect function. In SDL1: if ( value > correct->coef[0] ) { if ( value < correct->coef[1] ) { return 0; } value -= correct->coef[1]; } else { value -= correct->coef[0]; } value *= correct->coef[2]; value >>= 14; In SDL2: value *= 2; if (value > correct->coef[0]) { if (value < correct->coef[1]) { return 0; } value -= correct->coef[1]; } else { value -= correct->coef[0]; } In SDL1, the calculated coefficients are coef[0]=15, coef[1]=-15 and coef[2]=5534751. So with a full-scale input of 127, it calculates an output value of 37835, which is considerably out of range. In SDL2, the calculated coefficients are coef[0]=30, coef[1]=-30, and coef[2]=1383687. So with a full-scale input of 127, it calculates the same output value of 37835. I tested it with the 3 joysticks I have, and it produces out-of-range values for all of them. Anyway, since dead zones are garbage, I just deleted all of that junk and wrote some code that takes the absinfo.minimum and absinfo.maximum values and uses them to scale the axis range to -32767 through +32767. I also made it detect when a range doesn't have an integer center point, e.g. the center of -128 to + 127 is -0.5. In such cases, if either value to the side of the center is provided, it zeros it, but it otherwise doesn't implement any kind of dead zone. This seemed important with my gamepad which provides only the values of 0, 127, and 255, since without this hack it would never be centered. Also, the previous minimum output value was -32768, but as that creates an output range that has no true center, I changed the minimum value to -32767. I tested it with the 3 joystick devices I have and it seems to create correct values for all of them.
Sam Lantinga 7a05dbf4 2020-11-24T06:42:53 Fixed building on FreeBSD Alex S Looks like we have a collision with https://hg.libsdl.org/SDL/rev/cd774daff9f6. (Again, the headers in the base system are intended for drivers and should not be used for compiling non-base applications. At least that's the policy for now: https://bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=240964#c19.)
Ryan C. Gordon 5c957747 2020-11-23T22:14:22 joystick: Fix up Linux joystick code to (mostly) compile on FreeBSD.
Ryan C. Gordon 0e98040d 2020-06-28T16:23:05 joystick: Linux joysticks now recover better from dropped events. Fixes Bugzilla #4830.
Sam Lantinga 345b4d7e 2020-05-29T13:37:21 Fixed bug 5161 - Autodetect controller mappings based on the Linux Gamepad Specification Jan Bujak I wrote a new driver for my gamepad on Linux. I'd like SDL to support it out-of-box, as currently it just treats it as a generic joystick instead of a gamepad. From what I can see the only way to do that is to either 1) pick one of the already supported controllers' PID, VID and button layouts and have my driver send that (effectively lying that it's something else), or 2) submit a preconfigured, hardcoded mapping to SDL. Both of those, in my opinion, are silly when we already have the Linux Gamepad Specification which standarizes this: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/v4.15/input/gamepad.html Unfortunately SDL doesn't make use of it currently. So I've took it upon myself to add it; patch is in the attachments. Basically what the patch does is that if SDL finds no built-it controller mappings for a given joystick it then asks the joystick backend to autodetect it, and that uses the relevant evdev bits to figure out which button/axis is which. (See the specs for more details.) With this patch applied my own driver for my controller works out-of-box with SDL with no extra configuration and is correctly recognized as a gamepad; this is also going to be the case for any other driver which follows the Linux Gamepad Specification.
Sam Lantinga 6dc172d0 2020-01-23T12:53:39 Turn off rumble on drivers which don't respect the replay.length value
Sam Lantinga a8780c6a 2020-01-16T20:49:25 Updated copyright date for 2020
Cameron Gutman a4bfe2a4 2019-06-24T21:08:26 Allow hotplugging joysticks without udev
Sam Lantinga a1a2f9b9 2019-06-12T10:32:36 Fixed bug 4486 - Segfault when pressing a trigger on the Steam Controller (Linux) Matteo Beniamino Pressing a trigger button on a Steam Controller causes a segmentation fault both with stable version and latest mercurial head on Linux. I'm using the recent hid_steam kernel module with lizard_mode disabled (that is no keyboard/mouse emulation). I suspect this is what's happening: the driver exposes two hats. The two hats have indices 0 and 2. Inside linux/SDL_sysjoystick.c two hats are allocated in allocate_hatdata for joystick->hwdata->hats. In HandleHat function the hat parameter (that can be 2) is directly used as the index of the array that only has two elements, causing an out of bounds access. SDL is not expecting to have "holes" between hats indices. The index 2 is calculated in HandleInputEvents() as (ABS_HAT2X - ABS_HAT0X) / 2 where ABS_HAT2X is the value associated to the hat inside the hid_steam module.
Sam Lantinga 5e13087b 2019-01-04T22:01:14 Updated copyright for 2019
Micha? Janiszewski 91820998 2018-10-28T21:36:48 Add and update include guards Include guards in most changed files were missing, I added them keeping the same style as other SDL files. In some cases I moved the include guards around to be the first thing the header has to take advantage of any possible improvements compiler may have for inclusion guards.
Sam Lantinga d2042e1e 2018-08-09T16:00:17 Added HIDAPI joystick drivers for more consistent support for Xbox, PS4 and Nintendo Switch Pro controller support across platforms. Added SDL_GameControllerRumble() and SDL_JoystickRumble() for simple force feedback outside of the SDL haptics API
Sam Lantinga e3cc5b2c 2018-01-03T10:03:25 Updated copyright for 2018
Sam Lantinga d8286479 2017-09-22T08:30:52 Added stubs for simple Steam Controller support
Sam Lantinga 45b774e3 2017-01-01T18:33:28 Updated copyright for 2017
Sam Lantinga aa03b9d7 2016-11-22T22:14:28 The XBox One S controller sends keys outside the standard joystick button range
Sam Lantinga 42065e78 2016-01-02T10:10:34 Updated copyright to 2016
Philipp Wiesemann 0e45984f 2015-06-21T17:33:46 Fixed crash if initialization of EGL failed but was tried again later. The internal function SDL_EGL_LoadLibrary() did not delete and remove a mostly uninitialized data structure if loading the library first failed. A later try to use EGL then skipped initialization and assumed it was previously successful because the data structure now already existed. This led to at least one crash in the internal function SDL_EGL_ChooseConfig() because a NULL pointer was dereferenced to make a call to eglBindAPI().
Sam Lantinga 2c4a6ea0 2015-05-26T06:27:46 Updated the copyright year to 2015
Ryan C. Gordon b72938c8 2015-04-20T12:22:44 Windows: Always set the system timer resolution to 1ms by default. An existing hint lets apps that don't need the timer resolution changed avoid this, to save battery, etc, but this fixes several problems in timing, audio callbacks not firing fast enough, etc. Fixes Bugzilla #2944.
Alex Szpakowski fe6c797c 2015-04-10T23:30:31 Fixed an iOS view orientation issue when SDL_GL_CreateContext or SDL_CreateRenderer is called.
Edward Rudd b88ca1b4 2015-02-10T16:28:56 the last parameter of XChangeProperty is the number of elements.. and when the element format is 32.. the element is "long" so we have 5 long elements here. Yes this seems confusing as on mac+linux Long is either 32 or 64bits depending on the architecture, but this is how the X11 protocol is defined. Thus 5 is the correct value for the nelts here. Not 5 or 10 depending on the architecture. More info on the confusion https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=16802
Philipp Wiesemann b48e54aa 2015-01-26T22:00:29 Fixed bug 2802 - [patch] Fix android build compiling in wrong filesystem implementation Jonas Kulla The configure script didn't differentiate between Linux and Android, unconditionally compiling in the unix implementation of SDL_sysfilesystem.c. I'm probably one of the very few people building SDL for android using classic configure + standalone toolchain, so this has gone undetected all along.
David Ludwig 70438be2 2014-12-03T10:55:23 WinRT: fixed bug whereby SDL would override an app's default orientation WinRT apps can set a default, preferred orientation via a .appxmanifest file. SDL was overriding this on app startup, and making the app use all possible orientations (landscape and portrait). Thanks to Eric Wing for the heads up on this!
Philipp Wiesemann 9c398852 2014-11-22T22:20:40 Corrected header file documentation comment.
Pierre-Loup A. Griffais 24c86b55 2014-09-11T19:24:42 [X11] Reconcile logical keyboard state with physical state on FocusIn since the window system doesn't do it for us like other platforms. This prevents sticky keys and missed keys when going in and out of focus, for example Alt would appear to stick if switching away from an SDL app with Alt-Tab and had to be pressed again. CR: Sam
David Ludwig 3dcb451f 2014-04-09T21:29:19 Added a README file regarding WinRT support To note, this file is currently formatted with CRLF line endings, rather than LF, to allow the file to be viewed with Notepad.
Sam Lantinga 58edac3e 2014-02-02T00:53:27 Fixed bug 2374 - Update copyright for 2014... Is it that time already??
Gabriel Jacobo f848adff 2013-11-29T10:06:08 Improve Android pause/resume behavior.
Gabriel Jacobo dad42067 2013-08-12T11:13:50 Fixes #2022, do not resume on Android when surfaceChanged If the app is in landscape mode and the user presses the power button, a pause is followed immediately by a surfaceChanged event because the lock screen is shown in portrait mode. This triggers a "false" resume. So, we just pause and resume following the onWindowFocusChanged events. Also, wait for SDL_APP_WILLENTERBACKGROUND and SDL_APP_DIDENTERBACKGROUND before blocking the event pump.
Sam Lantinga 1ad936eb 2013-08-11T19:56:43 Fixed bug 2027 - Full-screen appears to be broken - hang in SDL_DestroyWindow() Rainer Deyke I'm running Linux Mint 15 with the Cinnamon window manager. SDL_DestroyWindow consistently locks up for me when the window if fullscreen.