This issue can be reproduced:
1. Create osgViewer window,
2. Push right&left mouse buttons on the osgViewer window,
3. Move mouse out of window, and release right&left mouse buttons.
osgViewer window handle only first mouse release, as result window thinks that we did not released second mouse button.
I attached fix for this issue."
I fixed some bugs and did some more tests with both of the video-plugins. I integrated CoreVideo with osgPresentation, ImageStream has a new virtual method called createSuitableTexture which returns NULL for default implementations. Specialized implementations like the QTKit-plugin return a CoreVideo-texture. I refactored the code in SlideShowConstructor::createTexturedQuad to use a texture returned from ImageStream::createSuitableTexture.
I did not use osgDB::readObjectFile to get the texture-object, as a lot of image-related code in SlideShowConstructor had to be refactored to use a texture. My changes are minimal and should not break existing code.
There's one minor issue with CoreVideo in general: As the implementation is asynchronous, there might be no texture available, when first showing the video the first frame. I am a bit unsure how to tackle this problem, any input on this is appreciated.
Back to the AVFoundation-plugin: the current implementation does not support CoreVideo as the QTKit-plugin supports it. There's no way to get decoded frames from AVFoundation stored on the GPU, which is kind of sad. I added some support for CoreVideo to transfer decoded frames back to the GPU, but in my testings the performance was worse than using the normal approach using glTexSubImage. This is why I disabled CoreVideo for AVFoundation. You can still request a CoreVideoTexture via readObjectFile, though.
"
Added template readFile(..) function to make it more convinient to cast to a specific object type.
Added support for osgGA::Device to osgViewer.
Added sdl plugin to provides very basic joystick osgGA::Device integration.
macro, which could set version within brackets and reset it after
that. All related serializers are also modified so that the
backward-compatibility bug reported by Farshid can be fixed.
"
From Robert Osfield, removed the use of osg::Referenced and creating the proxy object on the heap.
I worked with a osg::Constraint and found strange part of code:
class OSGMANIPULATOR_EXPORT Constraint : public osg::Referenced
{
public:
...
virtual bool constrain(ScaleUniformCommand& command) const { return constrain((MotionCommand&)command); }
virtual bool constrain(const Rotate3DCommand& command) { return constrain((MotionCommand&)command); }
...
If i use osgManipulator::Rotate3DCommand then method Rotate3DCommand::accept(const Constraint& constraint) calls Constraint::constrain(MotionCommand&) instead Constraint:: constrain(const Rotate3DCommand&).
If you replace
virtual bool constrain(const Rotate3DCommand& command) { return constrain((MotionCommand&)command); }
on to
virtual bool constrain(Rotate3DCommand& command) const { return constrain((MotionCommand&)command); }
then all works correctly.
"
I tested it with clang 3.1 and it seems that clang is enforcing the use of the same type for all parameters in this builtin. Looking at the function declaration [1]
bool __sync_bool_compare_and_swap (type *ptr, type oldval type newval, ...)
it seems to be doing the right thing: here the same type is used for *ptr, oldval and newval.
[1] http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/_005f_005fsync-Builtins.html#g_t_005f_005fsync-Builtins
"