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* Added support for video surfaces to Phonon MMF backendGareth Stockwell2010-03-181-5/+5
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Symbian^3 introduces a new compositing graphics subsystem in which non-UI content such as video is provided by client applications via graphics surfaces. This patch modifies the video playback part of the Phonon MMF backend so that, on devices which use the new graphics architecture (NGA), video is rendered to a surface. On devices which use the legacy graphics architecture, the existing video rendering path, which uses Direct Screen Access (DSA) is maintained. On NGA devices, video playback applications do not deal with surfaces directly; instead, they use a new MMF client API called CVideoPlayerUtility2. The implementation of this API takes care of creating a graphics surface, registering it with the window manager, and directing the output of the video decoder into this surface. CVideoPlayerUtility2 inherits from the legacy video playback API, CVideoPlayerUtility, deprecating certain functions and adding new ones. The main changes involved in modifying CVideoPlayerUtility client code to instead use CVideoPlayerUtility2 are: 1. CVideoPlayerUtility requires a window handle to be provided at object construction time. The CVideoPlayerUtility2 constructor does not take a window handle; it is provided by the client later via the SetDisplayWindowL function. 2. CVideoPlayerUtility requires the client to provide an absolute screen rectangle at construction time, and then to call SetDisplayWindowL whenever this rectangle changes due to either window repositioning or resizing. CVideoPlayerUtility2 requires the client to provide a display rectangle which is relative to the display window. This rectangle must be updated via SetVideoExtentL / SetWindowClipRectL when the window is resized, but no update is required when the window is repositioned - the compositing window system takes care of repositioning the video content on the screen. 3. CVideoPlayerUtility requires the client to paint transparent black into the region of the window in which video will be displayed. CVideoPlayerUtility2 does not require the client to paint the video window. In order to accomodate these differences, the existing VideoPlayer and VideoOutput classes are replaced with AbstractVideoPlayer and AbstractVideoOutput respectively. These abstract base classes encapsulate functionality which is common between the DSA and surface rendering client code. Because CVideoPlayerUtility2 inherits from CVideoPlayerUtility, AbstractVideoPlayer is able to hold a pointer to CVideoPlayerUtility, via which it controls functionality which is not affected by the details of the rendering path, such as play/pause/stop, seek and metadata access. The three areas of divergence listed above are encapsulated in the derived classes DsaVideoOutput/SurfaceVideoOutput and DsaVideoPlayer/ SurfaceVideoPlayer. Of the three, (1) and (3) are fairly straightforward. For DSA video playback, the need to respond to changes in video widget absolute screen position in (2) necessitated the AncestorMoveMonitor class, which installs an event filter on each ancestor of the video widget. This class is not required for surface video playback and is therefore removed from the surface-rendering code path. Selection of either the DSA- or surface-rendering code path is done at qmake time, via the exists(...) check introduced in mmf.pro. This checks for existence of the header in which CVideoPlayerUtility2 is defined; if this file is found, surface rendering is selected, otherwise the DSA rendering version of the backend is built. Note that this approach is not completely robust, since it is possible for an environment to include the videoplayer2.h header and yet be configured to use the legacy graphics subsystem. This could be dealt with by instead performing the check for surface support at configuration time, building and executing a small Symbian program which will return different output according to which of the two graphics subsystems is in use. Task-number: QTBUG-8919 Reviewed-by: Frans Englich
* Video screen region is updated in response to ancestors of video widgetGareth Stockwell2009-10-231-0/+95
being moved. Because QWidget::moveEvent is only called when a widget moves relative to its parent, a widget's absolute screen position may change without it receiving a moveEvent (for example, as a result of its parent being moved). The MMF video playback API on Symbian v9.4 requires, in addition to a window handle, an absolute screen rectangle. Changes in the video widget's absolute screen position therefore need to be propagated into the MMF. This change introduces a new object, AncestorMoveMonitor, which installs an event filter on the QCoreApplication instance. A VideoOutput object registers with the AncestorMoveMonitor, which listens on its behalf for MoveEvents and ParentChangeEvents directed at any of the ancestors of the VideoOutput. MoveEvents trigger a callback to the VideoOutput instance, which then notifies the MMF of the new screen rectangle. ParentChangeEvents cause the AncestorMoveMonitor to update the ancestor list associated with the target VideoOutput instance. The video position now tracks that of the associated widget, but there are two problems which require further investigation: 1. The video window lags behind. This may be an unavoidable consequence of the fact that setting a new screen rectangle causes the MMF to tear down its DSA session and start a new one; this is known to block the window server and take some time to complete. 2. Artifacts are visible around the edges of the moving video widget. Task-number: QTBUG-4787 Reviewed-by: Frans Englich