This reverts commit 0532a5c1f0296098a268dc43d889a08c932e1c48.
Ubuntu 21.10 is from OBS 28 onwards not longer supported and as such we
can raise the requirement of the PipeWire dependency to 0.3.33.
Sorry this is such a massive commit. The entangled nature of the
code in pipewire.c makes it impossible to reasonably split this
in smaller commits.
Move all D-Bus / portals code from pipewire.c into the recently
introduced screencast-portal.c.
This is the start of what will be a rather incisive surgery on
pipewire.c. Move a couple of functions to portal.c, since they're
not really related to the PipeWire code.
This is very much like previous commit, but there's a catch: there
already was an enumeration in place, which is replaced in this
commit. The obs_pw_capture_type enum was introduced before splitting
the portal code into a separate file, and the enum itself is specific
to the screencast portal, so the appropriate place to enumerate it
is in portal.h.
For completude, PORTAL_CAPTURE_TYPE_VIRTUAL was added to the enum,
even though we never used, and probably never will.
The values are still the same, since both the old and this new enum
were extracted from the screencast portal [1].
https://github.com/flatpak/xdg-desktop-portal/blob/main/data/org.freedesktop.portal.ScreenCast.xml#L290-300
The ScreenCast portal defines 3 cursor modes [1]:
* Hidden: no visible cursor (value: 1)
* Embedded: cursor is drawn in the frames (value: 2)
* Metadata: cursor is sent as stream metadata (value: 4)
The values are power-of-two due to be used as flags.
Explicitly listing these values in an enum improves legibility
of the code, so do that instead of hardcoding 1, 2, and 4.
[1] https://github.com/flatpak/xdg-desktop-portal/blob/main/data/org.freedesktop.portal.ScreenCast.xml#L302-L316
The portal.c file was introduced after the PipeWire code landed, and
handles acquiring a D-Bus connection to the portal interface, and also
has helpers to get properties from portals. The available cursor modes
property fits nicely in portal.c.
Move fetching the cursor mode to portal.c.
Ellipses in log messages bring a tone of vagueness and insecurity
that does not match the geist of the OBS Studio community. We're
a bold, industry-leading community producing software that is at
the heart of the biggest services of today's world. When it comes
to PipeWire and Wayland adoption, we're quite literally the app
that protocols and portals are designed for.
Therefore, it is unacceptable that the log messages in the PipeWire
capture don't communicate how strong of a community we are. Not
only that, these ellipses bring harm on the long run. After all,
who on their right mind would design protocols, portals, and user
interactions for an app that doesn't even log their messages in
accordance to its community values?
Our logs must shout strength. They must reflect that OBS Studio
is here to stay. Readers of such logs must fasten their seatbelts
before opening these files. Competition tremble with dread and
fear when presented with these logs. Only extreme metal singers
should be able to read these logs out loud.
No compromise.
Remove ellipses from PipeWire log messages.
They are inconsistently capitalized, some with sentence capitalization,
some completely lower-cased.
Capitalize all log messages using sentence capitalization.
The information that we currently log is not enough to give proper
support, and at best allows us to know that the first few steps of
negotiation worked.
Transform a few key debug messages into infos.