With this, you can now cast normal obs objects (services, outputs,
sources, encoders) to an obs_object_t, and then use obs_object_*
functions to get references, release references, and similar for weak
object references as well. This allows the ability for the frontend to
use an object of any of those types interchangeably in certain
situations without having to handle each specific type individually.
This is useful because the properties view in particular doesn't care
what type of object it uses, it just needs to be able to hold weak
references to abstract OBS objects.
The *AutoRelease helpers should not take references from OBSRef objects.
Instead, make an OBSRefAutoRelease base class, and OBSRef a subclass of
that to allow moves, and then perform moves from those objects.
This fixes an issue where *AutoRelease OBSRef objects would cause an
unintended double release of objects after having been assigned values
from non-*AutoRelease OBSRef objects.
These AutoRelease versions of the C++ OBSRef types do not add a ref on
construction, which is useful when accepting the result of a function
that turns a raw C pointer type that has had a reference added.
Not having these types has resulted in multiple awkward anti-patterns.
Such as immediately releasing after construction to account for the
extra addref, or avoiding using the C++ type entirely and manually
releasing it later.
Example:
```
OBSSource source = obs_get_source_by_name(name.c_str());
obs_source_release(source);
```
The whole point of these types is to avoid the need for manual releases,
and rely on the RAII mechanisms inside of C++. Additionally, the
immediate release isn't commented anywhere, resulting in confusion for
other developers looking at the code as to why things are being
immediately released.
The AutoRelease types and names are taken from obs-websocket.
The OBSContext never called obs_startup but would always call
obs_shutdown in its destructor, resulting in shutdown calls even if
libobs wasn't initialized (eg due to a startup error). Instead, we now
track if libobs was initialized in OBSApp and call shutdown in the
destructor.
Code submissions have continually suffered from formatting
inconsistencies that constantly have to be addressed. Using
clang-format simplifies this by making code formatting more consistent,
and allows automation of the code formatting so that maintainers can
focus more on the code itself instead of code formatting.
Adds a simple signal reference counting function
(signal_handler_connect_ref) that makes it so that signals keep the
handler around until the all the signal itself is disconnected. This
prevents potential crashes where a signal might try to disconnect after
a handler has already been destroyed (typically in C++ with
OBSSignalHandler helper objects, where destruction isn't guaranteed to
be predictable).
This also modifies OBSSignalHandler to use the reference-counting
connections.
API Changed:
---------------------------
From:
- bool obs_startup(const char *locale, profiler_name_store_t *store);
To:
- bool obs_startup(const char *locale, const char *module_config_path,
profiler_name_store_t *store);
Summary:
---------------------------
This allows plugin modules to store plugin-specific configuration data
(rather than only allowing objects to store configuration data). This
will be useful for things like caching data, for example looking up and
storing ingests from remote (rather than storing locally), or caching
font data (so it doesn't have to build a font cache each time), among
other things.
Also adds a module-specific directory for the UI
Due to all the threads in libobs it wouldn't be safe to make that
parameter reconfigurable after libobs is initialized without adding
even more synchronization. On the other hand, adding a function to set
the name store before calling obs_startup would solve the problem of
passing a name store into libobs, but it can lead to more complicated
semantics for obs_get_profiler_name_store (e.g., should it always return
the current name store even if libobs isn't initialized until someone
calls set_name_store(NULL)? should obs_shutdown call
set_name_store(NULL)? Passing it as obs_startup parameter avoids
these (and hopefully other) potential misunderstandings
Typedef pointers are unsafe. If you do:
typedef struct bla *bla_t;
then you cannot use it as a constant, such as: const bla_t, because
that constant will be to the pointer itself rather than to the
underlying data. I admit this was a fundamental mistake that must
be corrected.
All typedefs that were pointer types will now have their pointers
removed from the type itself, and the pointers will be used when they
are actually used as variables/parameters/returns instead.
This does not break ABI though, which is pretty nice.
- Add a properties window for sources so that you can now actually edit
the settings for sources. Also, display the source by itself in the
window (Note: not working on mac, and possibly not working on linux).
When changing the settings for a source, it will call
obs_source_update on that source when you have modified any values
automatically.
- Add a properties 'widget', eventually I want to turn this in to a
regular nice properties view like you'd see in the designer, but
right now it just uses a form layout in a QScrollArea with regular
controls to display the properties. It's clunky but works for the
time being.
- Make it so that swap chains and the main graphics subsystem will
automatically use at least one backbuffer if none was specified
- Fix bug where displays weren't added to the main display array
- Make it so that you can get the properties of a source via the actual
pointer of a source/encoder/output in addition to being able to look
up properties via identifier.
- When registering source types, check for required functions (wasn't
doing it before). getheight/getwidth should not be optional if it's
a video source as well.
- Add an RAII OBSObj wrapper to obs.hpp for non-reference-counted
libobs pointers
- Add an RAII OBSSignal wrapper to obs.hpp for libobs signals to
automatically disconnect them on destruction
- Move the "scale and center" calculation in window-basic-main.cpp to
its own function and in its own source file
- Add an 'update' callback to WASAPI audio sources
- Implemented better C++ classes for handling scenes/sources/items in
obs.hpp, allowing them to automatically increment and decrement the
references of each, as well as assign them to QVariants.
- Because QVariants are now using the C++ classes, remove the pointer
QVariant wrapper.
- Use the new C++ classes with the QVariant user data of list box items,
both for the sake of thread safety and to ensure that the data
referenced is not freed until removed. NOTE: still might need some
testing.
- Implemented a source-remove signal from libobs, and start using that
signal instead of the source-destroy signal for signalling item
removal.