- State the Godot version and full hash in the backtrace.
- Add decoration around the crash backtrace, both to make it stand out
from other messages and help the user figure out what they should copy.
(cherry picked from commit 8556dd1bef)
After input buffering was reworked, input accumulation is now handled
outside of OS, and the JavaScript plaform never implemented that.
Additionally, the JavaScript platform is quite obnoxious about calling
specific APIs outside specific user triggered events.
This commit adds event flushing during the main iteration, and forces it
during keydown/keyup/mousedown/mouseup/touchstart/touchend/touchcanel
events (effectively only accumulating only "move" events).
This prevents the D-pad up arrow from being registered as pressed
when it isn't, and pressing any direction from activating the next
arrow clockwise of it.
Co-authored-by: Scott Wadden <scott.wadden@gmail.com>
This is done by providing API access to app specific directories which don't have any limitations and allows us to bump the target sdk version to 30.
In addition, we're also bumping the min sdk version to 19 as version 18 is no longer supported by Google Play Services and only account of 0.3% of Android devices.
This was caused by the fact that a new instance of Godot was created at resume while a previous instance already existed.
The previous instance would then go through its cleanup lifecycle, and would thus attempt to close the entire app, leading to the system to restart the app, thus starting the cycle anew.
The fix involves reusing the previous instance of Godot if one is available instead of creating a new one, as well as giving control to the host activity for how the process should be terminated.
Aside from the cosmetic improvement of using the Godot-style type, this switches to acquire-release semantics, which may improve performance by not forcing a full barrier to be issued if the CPU architecture can use a cheaper one.
Key, touch and joystick events will be passed directly from the UI thread to Godot, so they can benefit from agile input flushing.
As another consequence of this new way of passing events, less Java object are created at runtime (`Runnable`), which is good since the garbage collector needs to run less.
`AndroidInputHandler` is introduced to have a smaller cross-thread surface. `main_loop_request_go_back()` is removed in favor just inline calling `notification()` on the `MainLoop` at the most caller's convenience.
Lastly, `get_mouse_position()` and `get_mouse_button_state()` now just call through `InputDefault` to avoid the need of sync of mouse data tracked on the UI thread.
Input buffering is implicitly used by event accumulation, but this commit makes it more generic so it can be enabled for other uses.
For desktop OSs it's currently not feasible given main and UI threads are the same).
- API has been simplified: all events now go through `parse_input_event()`. Whether they are accumulated or not depends on the `use_accumulated_input` flag.
- Event accumulation is now thread-safe (it was not needed so far, but it prepares the ground for the following changes).
- Touch drag events now support accumulation.
* If not present, the dialog asks to load build sources from a file.
* The export templates check now also verifies that build sources are installed and skips the template check.
This makes Android development easier.
(cherry picked from commit 6639cc9853)
The `android:icon` attribute is expected to be the last one in the application
definition, as documented by the comment. cd64bcd missed that and caused some
arguments to be truncated.
Fixes#50224.
It can be turned off in the export preset with `package/classify_as_game`.
Upstream definition: https://developer.android.com/guide/topics/manifest/application-element#isGame
> `android:isGame`
>
> Whether or not the application is a game. The system may group together
> applications classifed as games or display them separately from other
> applications.
Also fixes replacing `android:allowBackup` in custom builds.
(cherry picked from commit 40a594c6ea)
The previous code used `camelcase_to_underscore` to prettify the names for
display in the export preset, but it leads to inconsistencies if we don't make
sure to do the reverse operation when writing to the `AppxManifest.xml`.
It's simpler to keep the same names as in the manifest, which is also what
users will see referenced in MS documentation.
Fixes#47900.
Co-authored-by: Rémi Verschelde <rverschelde@gmail.com>
(cherry picked from commit c87e49d7bc)
The XDG Base Directory specification does not allow using relative paths
(which broke things in Godot anyway). If a relative path is detected,
it should be ignored.
(cherry picked from commits 011a99316a
and 0e1d45b210)
We found that this flag causes this error on PR #48812 which does not add any
fancy inline assembly:
```
/tmp/tile_set-ce236a.s: Assembler messages:
/tmp/tile_set-ce236a.s:34676: Error: selected processor does not support `bfc x0,#32,#32'
clang++: error: assembler command failed with exit code 1 (use -v to see invocation)
```
That flag is mentioned in various errors related to assembler failures on
arm64v8 with Clang from the Android NDK.
It was added in Godot in #6958 when migrating from GCC to Clang, and is indeed
referenced in the NDK's Clang migration guide:
https://android.googlesource.com/platform/ndk/+/master/docs/ClangMigration.md
> Especially for ARM and ARM64, Clang is much stricter about assembler rules
> than GCC/GAS. Use `-fno-integrated-as` if Clang reports errors in inline
> assembly or assembly files that you don't wish to modernize.
We don't get those errors nowadays so it seems the flag is no longer needed.
(cherry picked from commit 23f7c75126)
Add `WARN_ON_UNDEFINED_SYMBOLS=0` for the main module (which defines
`godot_js_main` as extern coming from the "side" module, i.e. the main
Godot binary).
(cherry picked from commit 14c057eab6)
This changes the types of a big number of variables.
General rules:
- Using `uint64_t` in general. We also considered `int64_t` but eventually
settled on keeping it unsigned, which is also closer to what one would expect
with `size_t`/`off_t`.
- We only keep `int64_t` for `seek_end` (takes a negative offset from the end)
and for the `Variant` bindings, since `Variant::INT` is `int64_t`. This means
we only need to guard against passing negative values in `core_bind.cpp`.
- Using `uint32_t` integers for concepts not needing such a huge range, like
pages, blocks, etc.
In addition:
- Improve usage of integer types in some related places; namely, `DirAccess`,
core binds.
Note:
- On Windows, `_ftelli64` reports invalid values when using 32-bit MinGW with
version < 8.0. This was an upstream bug fixed in 8.0. It breaks support for
big files on 32-bit Windows builds made with that toolchain. We might add a
workaround.
Fixes#44363.
Fixesgodotengine/godot-proposals#400.
Co-authored-by: Rémi Verschelde <rverschelde@gmail.com>
We don't get updates when the window is unfocused/minimized, so we must
detect the situation where the counted ticks start drifting away
resulting in more frames drawn than needed.
This commit adds a check to ensure that the target ticks do not drift
away more than one second.
(cherry picked from commit a1fe6d6899)
This uses the `event.code` value to retrieve the physical code, while
still using the extra logic to map the unicode value to our keylist,
when computing the `scancode` (supporting ASCII and Latin-1).
Since we clone the environments to build thirdparty code, we don't get an
explicit dependency on the build objects produced by that environment.
So when we update thirdparty code, Godot code using it is not necessarily
rebuilt (I think it is for changed headers, but not for changed .c/.cpp files),
which can lead to an invalid compilation output (linking old Godot .o files
with a newer, potentially ABI breaking version of thirdparty code).
This was only seen as really problematic with bullet updates (leading to
crashes when rebuilding Godot after a bullet update without cleaning .o files),
but it's safer to fix it everywhere, even if it's a LOT of hacky boilerplate.
(cherry picked from commit c7b53c03ae)
We've been using standard C library functions `memcpy`/`memset` for these since
2016 with 67f65f6639.
There was still the possibility for third-party platform ports to override the
definitions with a custom header, but this doesn't seem useful anymore.
Backport of #48239.
It seems 30.0.1 had issues with compatibility with JDK 8 and 11,
which appear to be solved in 30.0.3 as per godotengine/godot-docs#4796.
(cherry picked from commit d88e1f04df)
Generates a key/cert snakeoil pair or use a custom SSL cert/key.
This is of course false security, and potentially detrimental for it.
But, so long, those are the requirements browser vendors agreed on to
use things like the Gamepad API, and more advanced topics like wasm
threads.
You don't need this if you run on localhost (at least!), but you do
need this (or a much safer nginx proxy) to try those things on your
local network (e.g. when debugging a phone, networking, etc).
We used to only generate the favicon if it was specified in the user
project settings, now it's optional, will export it to `NAME.icon.png`,
(falling back to the default project icon if none is set in project
settings), and the `<link>` tag is added using the `$HEAD_INCLUDE`
instead of being hardcoded in the template.
After further testing it seems to work fine now when building binaries with GCC 5
on Ubuntu 16.04 (previously we were using GCC 9 on Ubuntu 14.04).
Follow-up to #45629.
(cherry picked from commit aa15ad72ee)
We need to propagate the hacky checks from the raycast config to the
lightmapper config, as the failure of a `can_build()` check is not notified to
other modules (which might even be checked further depending on the processing
order in SConstruct).
A more thorough fix would be to change SConstruct to do two loops on modules:
one to check `can_build()` and disable modules which can't build, then another
one to rechecked `can_build()` with the new lineup and do further config.
But there would be more risk for regressions than with this ad hoc hack.
Similar story for the `platform/x11/detect.py` change... oh my eyes :(