Other Alias
ggi_directbuffer, ggi_pixellinearbuffer, ggi_pixelplanarbuffer, ggi_sampleplanarbufferSYNOPSIS
#include <ggi/ggi.h>
typedef struct {
uint32_t type;
int frame;
ggi_resource_t resource;
void *read;
void *write;
unsigned int page_size;
uint32_t noaccess;
uint32_t align;
ggi_bufferlayout layout;
union {
ggi_pixellinearbuffer plb;
ggi_pixelplanarbuffer plan;
ggi_samplelinearbuffer slb;
ggi_sampleplanarbuffer splan;
void *extended;
} buffer;
} ggi_directbuffer;
DESCRIPTION
The ggi_directbuffer structure contains information on target-dependent buffers to allow applications to access them directly.STRUCTURE MEMBERS
type-
/* Buffer types */ #define GGI_DB_NORMAL 0x0001 /* "frame" is valid when set */ #define GGI_DB_EXTENDED 0x0002 #define GGI_DB_MULTI_LEFT 0x0004 #define GGI_DB_MULTI_RIGHT 0x0008 /* Flags that may be or'ed with the buffer type */ #define GGI_DB_SIMPLE_PLB 0x01000000 /* GGI_DB_SIMPLE_PLB means that the buffer has the following properties: type == GGI_DB_NORMAL read == write noaccess == 0 align == 0 layout == blPixelLinearBuffer */
- frame
-
is the frame number as used in multiple buffering. Note that each
frame can export more than one DirectBuffer.
- resource
-
is a pointer to a lowlevel resource. Certain DirectBuffers need to
be explicitly acquired (i.e. locked) before using them
(i.e. accessing their pointers). Such a situation may arise if
the underlying visual supports mixed acceleration and framebuffer
access, but they cannot occur at the same time. In that case,
LibGGI needs to be informed when the application is using the
framebuffer.
You can determine whether the DirectBuffer needs to be acquired by using ggiResourceMustAcquire(3). An acquire is done by using ggiResourceAcquire(3) and it is released by calling ggiResourceRelease(3).
- read, write
-
are the addresses where the buffer is mapped to the application.
Read and write access to the buffer is done using load and store
instructions of the host CPU. Read operations should be performed
using the read buffer and write operations should be performed
using the write buffer. These might be the same, but need
not. If they are, read/write may be done to either buffer. Please
note, that either read or write may be NULL. These are
write-only or read-only buffers, which might be caused by hardware
limitations. Such buffers are not suited to do Read-Modify-Write
operations, so take care.
Be aware that these fields may be changed by an acquire, and that they may be NULL or invalid when the DirectBuffer is not acquired.
- page_size
-
indicates a Paged buffer if not 0.
Successive access to addresses addr0 and addr1 of either read or write buffers with addr0/page_size != addr1/page_size may be very expensive compared to successive accesses with addr0/page_size == addr1/page_size.
On i386 the penalty will be about 1500 cycles plus 4 cycles per to be remapped. Because of this, block transfer operations might become very inefficient for paged buffers. If there are two different buffers provided for read and write operations, you should do successive reads from one and do successive writes to the other. If not, it is recommended to copy pagewise into a temporary buffer and then to copy this temporary buffer back to screen.
- noaccess
-
is a bitfield specifying an access restriction. When bit x is set,
you may not access this DirectBuffer at the width of 2^x bytes. It
is usually 0, but check it.
- align
-
is a bitfield specifying another access restriction. When bit x
is set, you may only access this DirectBuffer at the width of 2^x
bytes, when the access is aligned to a multiple of 2^x. Note that
bit 0 is a bit bogus here, but it should be always 0, as then
((noaccess|align)==0) is a quick check for "no restrictions".
- layout
-
is an enumeration specifying the buffer addressing scheme.
Possible values are blPixelLinearBuffer, blPixelPlanarBuffer,
blExtended, blSampleLinearBuffer and blSamplePlanarBuffer.
See below for their definition.
- buffer
-
is a union of all buffer info. Check the layout member to see
which member of use.
PIXEL LINEAR BUFFER
typedef struct { int stride; /* bytes per row */ ggi_pixelformat *pixelformat; /* format of the pixels */ } ggi_pixellinearbuffer;
A linear buffer is a region in the application's virtual memory address space. A pixel with the pixel coordinates (x, y) is assigned a pixel number according to the following formula:
pixel_number = (origin_y + y) * stride + origin_x + x;
In any case both x and y must not be negative, and less than the buffer's width and height respectively. For top-left-origin screen coordinates, stride and origin_y will both be positive. For bottom-left-origin screen coordinates, stride and origin_y will both be negative. This will result in the correct pixel number with the same formula in both cases. The pixel number will be used to address the pixel.
A certain number of bits is stored per pixel, and this is indicated in the ggi_pixelformat.access field. For some visuals, the buffer might not be in host CPU native format and swapping operations need to be performed before writes or after reads.
PIXEL PLANAR BUFFER
typedef struct { int next_line; /* bytes until next line */ int next_plane; /* bytes until next plane */ ggi_pixelformat *pixelformat; /* format of the pixels */ } ggi_pixelplanarbuffer;
SAMPLE LINEAR BUFFER
typedef struct { int num_pixels; /* how many pixelformats */ int stride; /* bytes per row */ ggi_pixelformat *pixelformat[4];/* format of the pixels */ } ggi_samplelinearbuffer;
SAMPLE PLANAR BUFFER
typedef struct { int next_line[3]; /* bytes until next line */ int next_plane[3]; /* bytes until next plane */ ggi_pixelformat *pixelformat[4];/* format of the pixels */ } ggi_sampleplanarbuffer;