summaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/doc/src
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorEskil Abrahamsen Blomfeldt <eskil.abrahamsen-blomfeldt@nokia.com>2009-11-23 15:42:37 (GMT)
committerEskil Abrahamsen Blomfeldt <eskil.abrahamsen-blomfeldt@nokia.com>2009-11-23 15:42:37 (GMT)
commit22eac0feb492e4719c51c85926f2c7185963a01a (patch)
tree6b7829dd152a85339f73b7904cb6c191fab8cfd3 /doc/src
parent6ef5b4485b9fe5a9d25d2d9b5e67f110fb728a8b (diff)
parentddd885ae9a46f8abcc4e5eb45bb4c53d7f86f4c2 (diff)
downloadQt-22eac0feb492e4719c51c85926f2c7185963a01a.zip
Qt-22eac0feb492e4719c51c85926f2c7185963a01a.tar.gz
Qt-22eac0feb492e4719c51c85926f2c7185963a01a.tar.bz2
Merge branch '4.6' of scm.dev.nokia.troll.no:qt/oslo-staging-2 into 4.6
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/src')
-rw-r--r--doc/src/deployment/deployment.qdoc8
-rw-r--r--doc/src/getting-started/examples.qdoc1
-rw-r--r--doc/src/getting-started/known-issues.qdoc20
-rw-r--r--doc/src/howtos/HWacceleration.qdoc100
-rw-r--r--doc/src/platforms/emb-HwAcc-LinuxEmbedded.qdoc62
-rw-r--r--doc/src/platforms/emb-HwAcc-WinCE.qdoc1
-rw-r--r--doc/src/platforms/emb-hardwareacceleration.qdocinc269
-rw-r--r--doc/src/platforms/platform-notes.qdoc7
8 files changed, 315 insertions, 153 deletions
diff --git a/doc/src/deployment/deployment.qdoc b/doc/src/deployment/deployment.qdoc
index ea841f9..6a1760e 100644
--- a/doc/src/deployment/deployment.qdoc
+++ b/doc/src/deployment/deployment.qdoc
@@ -1491,7 +1491,13 @@
\o Accessibility for Qt3Support is deployed if the application uses the Qt3Support module.
\endlist
- macdeployqt supports the following options:
+ \note If you want a 3rd party library to be included in your
+ application bundle, then you must add an excplicit lib entry for
+ that library to your application's .pro file. Otherwise, the
+ \c macdeployqt tool will not copy the 3rd party .dylib into the
+ bundle.
+
+ \c macdeployqt supports the following options:
\list
\o -no-plugins: Skip plugin deployment
\o -dmg : Create a .dmg disk image
diff --git a/doc/src/getting-started/examples.qdoc b/doc/src/getting-started/examples.qdoc
index b5dc03d..e951804 100644
--- a/doc/src/getting-started/examples.qdoc
+++ b/doc/src/getting-started/examples.qdoc
@@ -794,6 +794,7 @@
\o \l{opengl/framebufferobject2}{Framebuffer Object 2}
\o \l{opengl/grabber}{Grabber}
\o \l{opengl/hellogl}{Hello GL}\raisedaster
+ \o \l{opengl/hellogl_es}{Hello GL - ported to Windows CE}\raisedaster
\o \l{opengl/overpainting}{Overpainting}\raisedaster
\o \l{opengl/pbuffers}{Pixel Buffers}
\o \l{opengl/pbuffers2}{Pixel Buffers 2}
diff --git a/doc/src/getting-started/known-issues.qdoc b/doc/src/getting-started/known-issues.qdoc
index 3c92257..b8c2192 100644
--- a/doc/src/getting-started/known-issues.qdoc
+++ b/doc/src/getting-started/known-issues.qdoc
@@ -61,27 +61,33 @@
\section2 Installing the Source Package on Unix systems
+ \list
+
\o If you download a Zip source package, you will need to convert
Windows-style line endings (CR/LF) to Unix-style line-endings (LF) when
you uncompress the package. To do this, give the "-a" option when you
run the "unzip' command.
-
- If you fail to supply the "-a" option when unzipping the package, you
+
+ \o If you fail to supply the "-a" option when unzipping the package, you
will see the following error message when you attempt to execute the
configure command:
"bash: ./configure: /bin/sh^M: bad interpreter: No such file or directory"
+
\endlist
\section2 Installing on Mac OS X 10.6 "Snow Leopard"
+
\list
+
\o Performing a new install of the Qt 4.6 beta on Snow Leopard
triggers a bug in the installer that causes the install to fail.
Updating an existing Qt installation works fine.
- There are two workarounds, either disable spotlight for the target
+ \o There are two workarounds, either disable spotlight for the target
drive during the install, or do a custom install where you deselect
documentation and examples. Run the installer again as a full
install to get the documentation and examples installed.
+
\endlist
\section1 Issues with Third Party Software
@@ -107,6 +113,7 @@
\section2 Windows
\list
+
\o When using version 6.14.11.6921 of the NVIDIA drivers for the GeForce
6600 GT under Windows XP, Qt applications which use drag and drop will
display reduced size drag and drop icons when run alongside
@@ -122,14 +129,21 @@
\o A bug in the Firebird database can cause an application to crash when
\c{fbembed.dll} is unloaded. The bug is fixed in version 2.5.
+ \o On Windows 7, resizing windows is slower than on Vista/Xp. This is because
+ the gesture initialization process (required for native gesture support)
+ currently calls winId() on widgets, which causes whole widget hierarchies
+ to use native window handles. This slows down resizing.
+
\endlist
\section2 Mac OS X
\list
+
\o If a sheet is opened for a given window, clicking the title bar of that
window will cause it to flash. This behavior has been reported to Apple
(bug number 5827676).
+
\endlist
\section2 Symbian
diff --git a/doc/src/howtos/HWacceleration.qdoc b/doc/src/howtos/HWacceleration.qdoc
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..80db740
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/src/howtos/HWacceleration.qdoc
@@ -0,0 +1,100 @@
+/****************************************************************************
+**
+** Copyright (C) 2009 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies).
+** All rights reserved.
+** Contact: Nokia Corporation (qt-info@nokia.com)
+**
+** This file is part of the documentation of the Qt Toolkit.
+**
+** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:LGPL$
+** No Commercial Usage
+** This file contains pre-release code and may not be distributed.
+** You may use this file in accordance with the terms and conditions
+** contained in the Technology Preview License Agreement accompanying
+** this package.
+**
+** GNU Lesser General Public License Usage
+** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU Lesser
+** General Public License version 2.1 as published by the Free Software
+** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.LGPL included in the
+** packaging of this file. Please review the following information to
+** ensure the GNU Lesser General Public License version 2.1 requirements
+** will be met: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/lgpl-2.1.html.
+**
+** In addition, as a special exception, Nokia gives you certain additional
+** rights. These rights are described in the Nokia Qt LGPL Exception
+** version 1.1, included in the file LGPL_EXCEPTION.txt in this package.
+**
+** If you have questions regarding the use of this file, please contact
+** Nokia at qt-info@nokia.com.
+**
+**
+**
+**
+**
+**
+**
+**
+** $QT_END_LICENSE$
+**
+****************************************************************************/
+
+/*!
+ \page HWAcc_rendering.html
+ \title Using hardware acceleration on embedded platforms.
+
+ \ingroup best-practices
+
+ \section1 Abstract
+ This document describes how to use hardware acceleration for fast
+ rendering on embedded platforms supported by Qt. In short, it explains
+ how the graphics pipeline works. Since there might be differences to
+ how the APIs are being used on different embedded platforms, a table
+ links to documentation dedicated to platform specific documentation
+ for each supported hardware acceleration API.
+
+ \input platforms/emb-hardwareacceleration.qdocinc
+
+ \section1 Supported platforms
+ Since there might be differences to how the APIs are being used on
+ the different embedded platforms, this table provides you with links to
+ pages dedicated to platform specific documentation for each
+ supported hardware acceleration API. Click the API link for the
+ platform to go the correct documentation.
+
+ \table
+ \header
+ \o Operating System
+ \o {3,1} Hardware Acceleration Platform
+ \row
+ \o \bold {Windows CE}
+ \o \l {Qt for Windows CE and OpenGL ES}{OpenGL ES}
+ \o \l {Qt for Windows CE and OpenVG}{OpenVG}
+ \o
+ \row
+ \o \bold {Embedded Linux}
+ \o \l {Qt for Embedded Linux and OpenGL}{OpenGL ES}
+ \o \l {Qt for Embedded Linux and OpenVG}{OpenVG}
+ \o \l {Qt for Embedded Linux and DirectFB}{DirectFB}
+ \row
+ \o \bold {Symbian Platform}
+ \o {3,1} \e {There are currently no support for hardware
+ acceleration.}
+ \endtable
+\omit
+ \section1 Examples using hardware acceleration on embedded platforms.
+
+ \table
+ \header
+ \o Embedded Platform
+ \o Example
+ \row
+ \o Windows CE
+ \row
+ \o Embedded Linux
+ \endtable
+\endomit
+
+
+
+*/
diff --git a/doc/src/platforms/emb-HwAcc-LinuxEmbedded.qdoc b/doc/src/platforms/emb-HwAcc-LinuxEmbedded.qdoc
index 9c18d87..a9bd167 100644
--- a/doc/src/platforms/emb-HwAcc-LinuxEmbedded.qdoc
+++ b/doc/src/platforms/emb-HwAcc-LinuxEmbedded.qdoc
@@ -49,23 +49,57 @@
\ingroup qt-embedded-linux
- \input platforms/emb-hardwareacceleration.qdocinc
+ \input platforms/emb-hardwareacceleration.qdocinc
-\section1 Supported Hardware Accelerated Graphics APIs
+ \section1 Windowing on Embedded Linux with Hardware Accelerated Graphics
-This list shows which Hardware Accelerated Graphics APIs currently
-supported by Qt.
+ Qt for Embedded Linux includes its own windowing system, QWS. QWS was
+ designed in 1999, well before graphics acceleration was available for
+ embedded devices. It does a great job providing a lightweight window
+ manager including all the expected functionality such as arbitrary
+ windows that can be moved, resized, minimized, etc. Getting QWS to work
+ with GPUs is very challenging, particularly with OpenGL and OpenVG
+ because there is no standard way in Linux to share textures across
+ processes. Some silicon vendors provide private APIs to allow texture
+ sharing, others do not. These limitations are documented under the
+ sections describing each type of accelerated hardware APIs. The simplest
+ most generic support for accelerated graphics is a full screen single
+ process single window.
- \table
- \header
- \o Supported Hardware Accelerated Graphics APIs
- \row
- \o \l {Qt for Embedded Linux and OpenGL}{OpenGL ES}
- \row
- \o \l {Qt for Embedded Linux and OpenVG}{OpenVG}
- \row
- \o \l {Qt for Embedded Linux and DirectFB}{DirectFB}
- \endtable
+ \section2 General options
+ \list
+ \o QWS, not accelerated, allows arbitrary windowing with multiple
+ processes drawing on the screen.
+ \o X11 with an accelerated X11 driver provided by the silicon
+ vendor. Like QWS, this allows arbitrary windows with multiple
+ processes drawing on the screen. Our experience is that there is
+ some overhead from X11 which will adversely affect framerates.
+ Additionally, our experience is that the drivers from silicon
+ vendors are still maturing.
+ \o Full screen single process single window. This will always work.
+ Some additional capabilities are available and are documented in
+ the acceleration specific API sections.
+ \endlist
+
+ \section1 Supported Hardware Accelerated Graphics APIs
+
+ This table shows which Hardware Accelerated Graphics APIs currently
+ supported by Qt.
+
+ \table
+ \header
+ \o Supported APIs
+ \o API Version
+ \row
+ \o \l {Qt for Embedded Linux and OpenGL}{OpenGL ES}
+ \o 1.x and 2.x
+ \row
+ \o \l {Qt for Embedded Linux and OpenVG}{OpenVG }
+ \o 1.1
+ \row
+ \o \l {Qt for Embedded Linux and DirectFB}{DirectFB}
+ \o 2.0
+ \endtable
*/
diff --git a/doc/src/platforms/emb-HwAcc-WinCE.qdoc b/doc/src/platforms/emb-HwAcc-WinCE.qdoc
index 66b6948..b7789f1 100644
--- a/doc/src/platforms/emb-HwAcc-WinCE.qdoc
+++ b/doc/src/platforms/emb-HwAcc-WinCE.qdoc
@@ -47,7 +47,6 @@
\title Qt for Windows CE Hardware Accelerated Graphics
\ingroup qtce
-
\input platforms/emb-hardwareacceleration.qdocinc
\section1 Supported Hardware Accelerated Graphics APIs
diff --git a/doc/src/platforms/emb-hardwareacceleration.qdocinc b/doc/src/platforms/emb-hardwareacceleration.qdocinc
index 3851628..fb00e09 100644
--- a/doc/src/platforms/emb-hardwareacceleration.qdocinc
+++ b/doc/src/platforms/emb-hardwareacceleration.qdocinc
@@ -1,129 +1,140 @@
-
-\section1 Hardware Acceleration
-
-When designing applications for embedded devices the choice often stands
-between graphics effects and performance. On most devices, you cannot have
-both simply because the hardware needed for such operations just is not
-there. Still a growing number of devices use hardware dedicated to graphics
-operations to improve performance.
-
-Using graphics acceleration hardware is more power efficient than using the
-CPU. The reason for this is that the CPU might require a clock speed that
-is up to 20 times higher than the GPU, achieving the same results. E.g. a
-typical hardware accelerated mobile graphics unit can rasterize one or two
-bilinear texture fetches in one cycle, while a software implementation
-takes easily more than 20 cycles. Graphics hardware generally have a much
-lower clock speed and memory bandwidth and different level of acceleration
-than desktop GPUs. One example is that many GPUs leave out transformation
-and lighting from the graphics pipeline and only implements rasterization.
-
-So the key to write good applications for devices is therefore to limit the
-wow factor down to what the target hardware can handle, and to take
-advantage of any graphics dedicated hardware. Qt provides several ways to
-both render advanced effects on the screen and speed up your application
-using hardware accelerated graphics.
-
-\tableofcontents
-
-\section2 Qt for Embedded Graphics pipeline
-
-Qt uses QPainter for all graphics operations. By using the same API
-regardless of platform, the code can be reused on different devices.
-QPainter use different paint engines implemented in the QPaintEngine API to
-do the actual painting.
-
-The QPaintEngine API provides paint engines for each window system and
-painting framework supported by Qt. In regards to Qt for Embedded, this
-also includes implementations for OpenGL ES versions 1.1 and 2.0, as well
-as OpenVG and DirectFB(Embedded Linux only).
-
-By using one of these paint engines, you will be able to improve the
-graphics performance of your Qt application. However, if the graphics
-operations used are not supported, this might as well be a trap, slowing
-down your application significantly. This all depends on what kind of
-graphics operations that are supported by the target devices hardware
-configuration.
-
-\image platformHWAcc.png
-
-The paint engine will direct all graphics operations supported by the
-devices hardware to the GPU, and from there they are sent to the
-framebuffer. Unsupported graphics operations falls back to the
-QRasterPaintEngine and are handled by the CPU before sent to the
-framebuffer. In the end, the operating system sends the paint updates off
-to the screen/display. The fallback operation is quite expensive in regards
-to memory consumption, and should be avoided.
-
-\section2 Hardware configuration requirements
-
-Before implementing any application using hardware acceleration, it is wise
-to get an overview of what kind of hardware accelerated graphics operations
-that are available for the target device.
-
-\note On devices with no hardware acceleration, Qt will use
-QRasterPaintEngine, which handles the acceleration using software. On
-devices supporting OpenGL ES, OpenVG or DirectFB(not supported by Windows
-CE), Qt will use the
-respective paint engines to accelerate painting. However, hardware
-configurations that only support a limited set of hardware acceleration
-features, might slow the application graphics down rather than speeding it
-up when using unsupported operations that must fall back to the raster
-engine.
-
-\section3 Different architectures
-
-Based on the architecture used in a device we can make a recommendation on
-which hardware acceleration techniques to use. There are mainly two
-different architectures on embedded devices. These are devices with a
-Unified Memory Architecture (UMA), and devices with dedicated graphics
-memory. Generally, high-end devices will have dedicated graphics memory.
-Low-end devices will just use system memory, sometimes reserving a memory
-region and sometimes not.
-
-In addition to this, we can categorize the devices into five types based on
-the different graphics operations supported by their hardware.
-
-\list 1
- \o No support for graphics acceleration.
- \o Support for blitter and alpha blending.
- \o Support for path based 2D vector graphics.
- \o Support for fixed function 3D graphics.
- \o Support for programmable 3D graphics.
-\endlist
-
-Based on these characteristics the table below recommends which paint
-engines to use with the different types of hardware configurations.
-
-\section3 Recommended use of hardware acceleration based on hardware
-
- \table
- \header
- \o Type
- \o UMA
- \o Non-UMA
- \row
- \o \bold {None}
- \o Qt Raster Engine
- \o Qt Raster Engine
- \row
- \o \bold {Blitter}
- \o DirectFB
- \o DirectFB
- \row
- \o \bold {2D Vector}
- \o OpenVG
- \o OpenVG
- \row
- \o \bold {Fixed 3D}
- \o OpenGL (ES) 1.x
- \o OpenGL (ES) 1.x
- \row
- \o \bold {Programmable 3D}
- \o OpenGL (ES) 2.x
- \o OpenGL (ES) 2.x
-
- \endtable
-
-\note Since the DirectFB API is quite primitive, the raster paint engine
-handles most of the operations.
-\note Blitter and Alpha blending is currently not supported on Windows CE.
+ \section1 Hardware Acceleration
+
+ When designing applications for embedded devices there is often a
+ compromise between graphics effects and performance. On most
+ devices, you cannot have both simply because the hardware needed
+ for such operations just is not there. With a growing number of
+ devices that use hardware dedicated to graphics operations there is
+ less need to compromise.
+
+ In addition to enabling dynamic graphics effects, there are two
+ other benefits to using graphics acceleration. One is that graphics
+ acceleration hardware is more power efficient than using the CPU.
+ The reason for this is that the CPU might require a clock speed
+ that is up to 20 times higher than the GPU, achieving the same
+ results. E.g. a typical hardware accelerated mobile graphics unit
+ can rasterize one or two bilinear texture fetches in one cycle,
+ while a software implementation takes easily more than 20 cycles.
+ Typical \e {System-on-a-chip} (SoC) graphics hardware generally have
+ a much lower clock speed and memory bandwidth, and different level
+ of acceleration than desktop GPUs. One example is that many GPUs
+ leave out transformation and lighting from the graphics pipeline
+ and only implements rasterization.
+
+ Another reason to use a GPU is to offload the main CPU, either for
+ power saving or to perform other operations in parallel. Often
+ drawing speed with a GPU is not that much faster than a CPU but
+ the clear benefit of using the GPU is to free up the CPU to perform
+ other tasks which can be used to create a more responsive use
+ experience.
+
+ The key to writing good applications for devices is therefore to
+ limit the wow factor down to what the target hardware can handle,
+ and to take advantage of any graphics dedicated hardware. Qt
+ provides several ways to both render advanced effects on the screen
+ and speed up your application using hardware accelerated graphics.
+
+ \tableofcontents
+
+ \section2 Qt for Embedded Graphics pipeline
+
+ Qt uses QPainter for all graphics operations. By using the same API
+ regardless of platform, the code can be reused on different devices.
+ QPainter use different paint engines implemented in the QPaintEngine API to
+ do the actual painting.
+
+ The QPaintEngine API provides paint engines for each window system and
+ painting framework supported by Qt. In regards to Qt for Embedded, this
+ also includes implementations for OpenGL ES versions 1.1 and 2.0, as well
+ as OpenVG and DirectFB(Embedded Linux only).
+
+ By using one of these paint engines, you will be able to improve the
+ graphics performance of your Qt application. However, if the graphics
+ operations used are not supported, this might as well be a trap, slowing
+ down your application significantly. This all depends on what kind of
+ graphics operations that are supported by the target devices hardware
+ configuration.
+
+ \image platformHWAcc.png
+
+ The paint engine will direct all graphics operations supported by the
+ devices hardware to the GPU, and from there they are sent to the
+ framebuffer. Unsupported graphics operations falls back to the
+ QRasterPaintEngine and are handled by the CPU before sent to the
+ framebuffer. In the end, the operating system sends the paint updates off
+ to the screen/display. The fallback operation is quite expensive in regards
+ to memory consumption, and should be avoided.
+
+ \section2 Hardware configuration requirements
+
+ Before implementing any application using hardware acceleration, it is wise
+ to get an overview of what kind of hardware accelerated graphics operations
+ that are available for the target device.
+
+ \note On devices with no hardware acceleration, Qt will use
+ QRasterPaintEngine, which handles the acceleration using software. On
+ devices supporting OpenGL ES, OpenVG or DirectFB(not supported by Windows
+ CE), Qt will use the
+ respective paint engines to accelerate painting. However, hardware
+ configurations that only support a limited set of hardware acceleration
+ features, might slow the application graphics down rather than speeding it
+ up when using unsupported operations that must fall back to the raster
+ engine.
+
+ \section3 Different architectures
+
+ Based on the architecture used in a device we can make a recommendation on
+ which hardware acceleration techniques to use. There are mainly two
+ different architectures on embedded devices. These are devices with a
+ Unified Memory Architecture (UMA), and devices with dedicated graphics
+ memory. Generally, high-end devices will have dedicated graphics memory.
+ Low-end devices will just use system memory, sometimes reserving a memory
+ region and sometimes not.
+
+ In addition to this, we can categorize the devices into five types based on
+ the different graphics operations supported by their hardware.
+
+ \list 1
+ \o No support for graphics acceleration.
+ \o Support for blitter and alpha blending.
+ \o Support for path based 2D vector graphics.
+ \o Support for fixed function 3D graphics.
+ \o Support for programmable 3D graphics.
+ \endlist
+
+ Based on these characteristics the table below recommends which paint
+ engines to use with the different types of hardware configurations.
+
+ \section3 Recommended use of hardware acceleration based on hardware
+
+ \table
+ \header
+ \o Type
+ \o UMA
+ \o Non-UMA
+ \row
+ \o \bold {None}
+ \o Qt Raster Engine
+ \o Qt Raster Engine
+ \row
+ \o \bold {Blitter}
+ \o DirectFB
+ \o DirectFB
+ \row
+ \o \bold {2D Vector}
+ \o OpenVG
+ \o OpenVG
+ \row
+ \o \bold {Fixed 3D}
+ \o OpenGL (ES) 1.x
+ \o OpenGL (ES) 1.x
+ \row
+ \o \bold {Programmable 3D}
+ \o OpenGL (ES) 2.x
+ \o OpenGL (ES) 2.x
+ \endtable
+
+ \note Since the DirectFB API is quite primitive, the raster paint engine
+ handles most of the operations.
+
+ \note Blitter and Alpha blending is currently not supported on Windows CE.
diff --git a/doc/src/platforms/platform-notes.qdoc b/doc/src/platforms/platform-notes.qdoc
index 68015a6..85b9ff8 100644
--- a/doc/src/platforms/platform-notes.qdoc
+++ b/doc/src/platforms/platform-notes.qdoc
@@ -515,11 +515,8 @@
In addition, there exists a backend for the Helix framework. However, due
to it not shipping with Qt, its availability depends on the Symbian
platform in use. If available, it is loaded in preference over the MMF
- plugin. The Helix plugin requires Symbian signed capabilities. If the
- application does not have those capabilities, the MMF plugin, if present on
- the device, will be loaded instead. The capabilities the Helix backend
- requires are AllFiles, DiskAdmin and MultimediaDD.
-
+ plugin. If the Helix plugin fails to load, the MMF plugin, if present on
+ the device, will be loaded instead.
*/
/*!