vdr/osd.h
Klaus Schmidinger f836711024 Version 1.3.25
- Updated the Estonian OSD texts (thanks to Arthur Konovalov).
- Some cable providers don't mark short channel names according to the standard,
  but rather go their own way and use "name>short name". VDR now splits at this
  character for cable channels (thanks to Gerhard Steiner for reporting this one).
- Added a check for Setup.DiSEqC in cDvbDevice::ProvidesTransponder(), otherwise
  the EPG scan didn't work on systems that don't use DiSEqC (thanks to Michael
  Reinelt for reporting this one).
- Made the Makefile patch friendlier (thanks to Ludwig Nussel).
- Made cOsd::isOpen an integer counter to avoid problems with messages when a
  cOsdObject uses the raw OSD (thanks to Andreas Regel for reporting this one).
- Updated the Danish OSD texts (thanks to Mogens Elneff).
- The file 'summary.vdr' has been replaced with 'info.vdr' and now contains the
  information about a recording, in the same format as the events are stored in
  'epg.data' (see man vdr(5) for details). Existing summary files can be converted
  to the new format by running the Perl script 'summary2info.pl', as in

  summary2info.pl /video

  (the parameter given has to be the video directory). If there is no 'info.vdr'
  file for a recording, an attempt is made to read a 'summary.vdr'.
- The "Summary" button in the "Recordings" menu has been renamed to "Info", and
  the page it brings up now shows the recording's information, much like the EPG
  event page. Therefore it now no longer uses the skin's SetText() function, but
  rather the SetRecording() function. Skin plugins may need to adjust that function
  accordingly (see skinsttng.c, for instance).
- The SVDRP command LSTR now lists the recording information in the same tagged
  format as the LSTE command lists the EPG data.
- The audio track menu now contains track descriptions when replaying (provided
  such descriptions were available in the EPG data when the recording was made,
  and are stored in the info.vdr file).
- Avoiding extra blanks at the end of names of instant recordings.
- Removed converting byte order on big endian systems from cDvbOsd::Flush(),
  which, according to Johannes Stezenbach and Paavo Hartikainen, is wrong.
- Added cPlayer::DeviceSetVideoDisplayFormat() (thanks to Marco Schlüßler).
- No longer saving the setup in case of a fatal error, to keep the volume level
  from being set to a wrong value (thanks to Marco Schlüßler).
- Fixed a possible hangup when ending a replay session while cIndexFile::CatchUp()
  is waiting (thanks to Marco Schlüßler).
- The SVDRP command DELR no longer deletes recordings that are currently being
  written to by a timer (thanks to Sascha Volkenandt for pointing out this one).
- Pressing the "Play" key in live viewing mode now resumes a previous replay
  session (thanks to Mirko Dölle).
- Now dropping EPG events that have a zero start time or duration (thanks to
  Oliver Endriss).
- No longer stopping Transfer Mode or replay immediately when the Power button
  is pressed (thanks to Rolf Ahrenberg).
- Moved the NPTL and UTF-8 checks after the version and help output (thanks to
  Andreas Kool for pointing out that 'vdr --version' failed on an UTF-8 system).
- Made tChannelID::operator==() inline for better performance (thanks to Georg
  Acher).
- Introduced cListBase::count for better performance (thanks to Georg Acher).
- cEvent no longer stores the channelID directly, but rather has a pointer to
  the schedule it is in.
- Now using hash tables to speed up cSchedule::GetEvent() (partially based on
  a patch from Georg Acher).
- Avoiding unnecessary calls to getLength() in libsi/si.c, and avoiding the
  '& 0xff' in CRC32::crc32() of libsi/util.c (thanks to Georg Acher).
- Speeded up deleting duplicate channels.
- Fixed listing recordings with empty episode names in the LSTR command (thanks
  to Stefan Huelswitt for pointing this out).
- Added cThread::SetPriority() and using it in cSectionHandler::Action() to
  reduce the priority of the section handler threads (as suggested by Georg Acher).
2005-05-29 18:00:00 +02:00

368 lines
18 KiB
C++

/*
* osd.h: Abstract On Screen Display layer
*
* See the main source file 'vdr.c' for copyright information and
* how to reach the author.
*
* $Id: osd.h 1.48 2005/05/14 11:15:55 kls Exp $
*/
#ifndef __OSD_H
#define __OSD_H
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdint.h>
#include "font.h"
#define MAXNUMCOLORS 256
enum {
//AARRGGBB
clrTransparent = 0x00000000,
clrGray50 = 0x7F000000, // 50% gray
clrBlack = 0xFF000000,
clrRed = 0xFFFC1414,
clrGreen = 0xFF24FC24,
clrYellow = 0xFFFCC024,
clrMagenta = 0xFFB000FC,
clrBlue = 0xFF0000FC,
clrCyan = 0xFF00FCFC,
clrWhite = 0xFFFCFCFC,
};
enum eOsdError { oeOk,
oeTooManyAreas,
oeTooManyColors,
oeBppNotSupported,
oeAreasOverlap,
oeWrongAlignment,
oeOutOfMemory,
oeUnknown,
};
typedef uint32_t tColor;
typedef uint8_t tIndex;
class cPalette {
private:
tColor color[MAXNUMCOLORS];
int bpp;
int maxColors, numColors;
bool modified;
protected:
typedef tIndex tIndexes[MAXNUMCOLORS];
public:
cPalette(int Bpp = 8);
///< Initializes the palette with the given color depth.
int Bpp(void) { return bpp; }
void Reset(void);
///< Resets the palette, making it contain no colors.
int Index(tColor Color);
///< Returns the index of the given Color (the first color has index 0).
///< If Color is not yet contained in this palette, it will be added if
///< there is a free slot. If the color can't be added to this palette,
///< 0 will be returned.
tColor Color(int Index) { return Index < maxColors ? color[Index] : 0; }
///< Returns the color at the given Index. If Index is outside the valid
///< range, 0 will be returned.
void SetBpp(int Bpp);
///< Sets the color depth of this palette to the given value.
///< The palette contents will be reset, so that it contains no colors.
void SetColor(int Index, tColor Color);
///< Sets the palette entry at Index to Color. If Index is larger than
///< the number of currently used entries in this palette, the entries
///< in between will have undefined values.
const tColor *Colors(int &NumColors);
///< Returns a pointer to the complete color table and stores the
///< number of valid entries in NumColors. If no colors have been
///< stored yet, NumColors will be set to 0 and the function will
///< return NULL.
void Take(const cPalette &Palette, tIndexes *Indexes = NULL, tColor ColorFg = 0, tColor ColorBg = 0);
///< Takes the colors from the given Palette and adds them to this palette,
///< using existing entries if possible. If Indexes is given, it will be
///< filled with the index values that each color of Palette has in this
///< palette. If either of ColorFg or ColorBg is not zero, the first color
///< in Palette will be taken as ColorBg, and the second color will become
///< ColorFg.
};
enum eTextAlignment { taCenter = 0x00,
taLeft = 0x01,
taRight = 0x02,
taTop = 0x04,
taBottom = 0x08,
taDefault = taTop | taLeft
};
class cBitmap : public cPalette {
private:
tIndex *bitmap;
int x0, y0;
int width, height;
int dirtyX1, dirtyY1, dirtyX2, dirtyY2;
public:
cBitmap(int Width, int Height, int Bpp, int X0 = 0, int Y0 = 0);
///< Creates a bitmap with the given Width, Height and color depth (Bpp).
///< X0 and Y0 define the offset at which this bitmap will be located on the OSD.
///< All coordinates given in the other functions will be relative to
///< this offset (unless specified otherwise).
cBitmap(const char *FileName);
///< Creates a bitmap and loads an XPM image from the given file.
cBitmap(char *Xpm[]);
///< Creates a bitmap from the given XPM data.
virtual ~cBitmap();
int X0(void) const { return x0; }
int Y0(void) const { return y0; }
int Width(void) const { return width; }
int Height(void) const { return height; }
void SetSize(int Width, int Height);
///< Sets the size of this bitmap to the given values. Any previous
///< contents of the bitmap will be lost. If Width and Height are the same
///< as the current values, nothing will happen and the bitmap remains
///< unchanged.
bool Contains(int x, int y) const;
///< Returns true if this bitmap contains the point (x, y).
bool Covers(int x1, int y1, int x2, int y2) const;
///< Returns true if the rectangle defined by the given coordinates
///< completely covers this bitmap.
bool Intersects(int x1, int y1, int x2, int y2) const;
///< Returns true if the rectangle defined by the given coordinates
///< intersects with this bitmap.
bool Dirty(int &x1, int &y1, int &x2, int &y2);
///< Tells whether there is a dirty area and returns the bounding
///< rectangle of that area (relative to the bitmaps origin).
void Clean(void);
///< Marks the dirty area as clean.
bool LoadXpm(const char *FileName);
///< Calls SetXpm() with the data from the file FileName.
///< Returns true if the operation was successful.
bool SetXpm(char *Xpm[], bool IgnoreNone = false);
///< Sets this bitmap to the given XPM data. Any previous bitmap or
///< palette data will be overwritten with the new data.
///< If IgnoreNone is true, a "none" color entry will be ignored.
///< Only set IgnoreNone to true if you know that there is a "none"
///< color entry in the XPM data and that this entry is not used!
///< If SetXpm() is called with IgnoreNone set to false and the XPM
///< data contains an unused "none" entry, it will be automatically
///< called again with IgnoreNone set to true.
///< Returns true if the operation was successful.
void SetIndex(int x, int y, tIndex Index);
///< Sets the index at the given coordinates to Index.
///< Coordinates are relative to the bitmap's origin.
void DrawPixel(int x, int y, tColor Color);
///< Sets the pixel at the given coordinates to the given Color, which is
///< a full 32 bit ARGB value.
///< If the coordinates are outside the bitmap area, no pixel will be set.
void DrawBitmap(int x, int y, const cBitmap &Bitmap, tColor ColorFg = 0, tColor ColorBg = 0);
///< Sets the pixels in this bitmap with the data from the given
///< Bitmap, putting the upper left corner of the Bitmap at (x, y).
///< If ColorFg or ColorBg is given, the first palette entry of the Bitmap
///< will be mapped to ColorBg and the second palette entry will be mapped to
///< ColorFg (palette indexes are defined so that 0 is the background and
///< 1 is the foreground color).
void DrawText(int x, int y, const char *s, tColor ColorFg, tColor ColorBg, const cFont *Font, int Width = 0, int Height = 0, int Alignment = taDefault);
///< Draws the given string at coordinates (x, y) with the given foreground
///< and background color and font. If Width and Height are given, the text
///< will be drawn into a rectangle with the given size and the given
///< Alignment (default is top-left). If ColorBg is clrTransparent, no
///< background pixels will be drawn, which allows drawing "transparent" text.
void DrawRectangle(int x1, int y1, int x2, int y2, tColor Color);
///< Draws a filled rectangle defined by the upper left (x1, y1) and lower right
///< (x2, y2) corners with the given Color. If the rectangle covers the entire
///< bitmap area, the color palette will be reset, so that new colors can be
///< used for drawing.
void DrawEllipse(int x1, int y1, int x2, int y2, tColor Color, int Quadrants = 0);
///< Draws a filled ellipse defined by the upper left (x1, y1) and lower right
///< (x2, y2) corners with the given Color. Quadrants controls which parts of
///< the ellipse are actually drawn:
///< 0 draws the entire ellipse
///< 1..4 draws only the first, second, third or fourth quadrant, respectively
///< 5..8 draws the right, top, left or bottom half, respectively
///< -1..-8 draws the inverted part of the given quadrant(s)
///< If Quadrants is not 0, the coordinates are those of the actual area, not
///< the full circle!
void DrawSlope(int x1, int y1, int x2, int y2, tColor Color, int Type);
///< Draws a "slope" into the rectangle defined by the upper left (x1, y1) and
///< lower right (x2, y2) corners with the given Color. Type controls the
///< direction of the slope and which side of it will be drawn:
///< 0: horizontal, rising, lower
///< 1: horizontal, rising, upper
///< 2: horizontal, falling, lower
///< 3: horizontal, falling, upper
///< 4: vertical, rising, lower
///< 5: vertical, rising, upper
///< 6: vertical, falling, lower
///< 7: vertical, falling, upper
const tIndex *Data(int x, int y);
///< Returns the address of the index byte at the given coordinates.
};
struct tArea {
int x1, y1, x2, y2;
int bpp;
int Width(void) const { return x2 - x1 + 1; }
int Height(void) const { return y2 - y1 + 1; }
bool Intersects(const tArea &Area) const { return !(x2 < Area.x1 || x1 > Area.x2 || y2 < Area.y1 || y1 > Area.y2); }
};
#define MAXOSDAREAS 16
class cOsd {
friend class cOsdProvider;
private:
static int isOpen;
cBitmap *savedRegion;
cBitmap *bitmaps[MAXOSDAREAS];
int numBitmaps;
int left, top, width, height;
protected:
cOsd(int Left, int Top);
///< Initializes the OSD with the given coordinates.
///< By default it is assumed that the full area will be able to display
///< full 32 bit graphics (ARGB with eight bit for each color and the alpha
///< value, repectively). However, the actual hardware in use may not be
///< able to display such a high resolution OSD, so there is an option to
///< divide the full OSD area into several sub-areas with lower color depths
///< and individual palettes. The sub-areas need not necessarily cover the
///< entire OSD area, but only the OSD area actually covered by sub-areas
///< will be available for drawing.
///< At least one area must be defined in order to set the actual width and
///< height of the OSD. Also, the caller must first try to use an area that
///< consists of only one sub-area that covers the entire drawing space,
///< and should require only the minimum necessary color depth. This is
///< because a derived cOsd class may or may not be able to handle more
///< than one area.
public:
virtual ~cOsd();
///< Shuts down the OSD.
static int IsOpen(void) { return isOpen; }
int Left(void) { return left; }
int Top(void) { return top; }
int Width(void) { return width; }
int Height(void) { return height; }
cBitmap *GetBitmap(int Area);
///< Returns a pointer to the bitmap for the given Area, or NULL if no
///< such bitmap exists.
virtual eOsdError CanHandleAreas(const tArea *Areas, int NumAreas);
///< Checks whether the OSD can display the given set of sub-areas.
///< The return value indicates whether a call to SetAreas() with this
///< set of areas will succeed. CanHandleAreas() may be called with an
///< OSD that is already in use with other areas and will not interfere
///< with the current operation of the OSD.
///< A derived class must first call the base class CanHandleAreas()
///< to check the basic conditions, like not overlapping etc.
virtual eOsdError SetAreas(const tArea *Areas, int NumAreas);
///< Sets the sub-areas to the given areas.
///< The return value indicates whether the operation was successful.
///< If an error is reported, nothing will have changed and the previous
///< OSD (if any) will still be displayed as before.
///< If the OSD has been divided into several sub-areas, all areas that
///< are part of the rectangle that surrounds a given drawing operation
///< will be drawn into, with the proper offsets.
virtual void SaveRegion(int x1, int y1, int x2, int y2);
///< Saves the region defined by the given coordinates for later restoration
///< through RestoreRegion(). Only one saved region can be active at any
///< given time.
virtual void RestoreRegion(void);
///< Restores the region previously saved by a call to SaveRegion().
///< If SaveRegion() has not been called before, nothing will happen.
virtual eOsdError SetPalette(const cPalette &Palette, int Area);
///< Sets the Palette for the given Area (the first area is numbered 0).
virtual void DrawPixel(int x, int y, tColor Color);
///< Sets the pixel at the given coordinates to the given Color, which is
///< a full 32 bit ARGB value.
///< If the OSD area has been divided into separate sub-areas, and the
///< given coordinates don't fall into any of these sub-areas, no pixel will
///< be set.
virtual void DrawBitmap(int x, int y, const cBitmap &Bitmap, tColor ColorFg = 0, tColor ColorBg = 0);
///< Sets the pixels in the OSD with the data from the given
///< Bitmap, putting the upper left corner of the Bitmap at (x, y).
///< If ColorFg or ColorBg is given, the first palette entry of the Bitmap
///< will be mapped to ColorBg and the second palette entry will be mapped to
///< ColorFg (palette indexes are defined so that 0 is the background and
///< 1 is the foreground color).
virtual void DrawText(int x, int y, const char *s, tColor ColorFg, tColor ColorBg, const cFont *Font, int Width = 0, int Height = 0, int Alignment = taDefault);
///< Draws the given string at coordinates (x, y) with the given foreground
///< and background color and font. If Width and Height are given, the text
///< will be drawn into a rectangle with the given size and the given
///< Alignment (default is top-left). If ColorBg is clrTransparent, no
///< background pixels will be drawn, which allows drawing "transparent" text.
virtual void DrawRectangle(int x1, int y1, int x2, int y2, tColor Color);
///< Draws a filled rectangle defined by the upper left (x1, y1) and lower right
///< (x2, y2) corners with the given Color.
virtual void DrawEllipse(int x1, int y1, int x2, int y2, tColor Color, int Quadrants = 0);
///< Draws a filled ellipse defined by the upper left (x1, y1) and lower right
///< (x2, y2) corners with the given Color. Quadrants controls which parts of
///< the ellipse are actually drawn:
///< 0 draws the entire ellipse
///< 1..4 draws only the first, second, third or fourth quadrant, respectively
///< 5..8 draws the right, top, left or bottom half, respectively
///< -1..-8 draws the inverted part of the given quadrant(s)
///< If Quadrants is not 0, the coordinates are those of the actual area, not
///< the full circle!
virtual void DrawSlope(int x1, int y1, int x2, int y2, tColor Color, int Type);
///< Draws a "slope" into the rectangle defined by the upper left (x1, y1) and
///< lower right (x2, y2) corners with the given Color. Type controls the
///< direction of the slope and which side of it will be drawn:
///< 0: horizontal, rising, lower
///< 1: horizontal, rising, upper
///< 2: horizontal, falling, lower
///< 3: horizontal, falling, upper
///< 4: vertical, rising, lower
///< 5: vertical, rising, upper
///< 6: vertical, falling, lower
///< 7: vertical, falling, upper
virtual void Flush(void);
///< Actually commits all data to the OSD hardware.
};
class cOsdProvider {
private:
static cOsdProvider *osdProvider;
protected:
virtual cOsd *CreateOsd(int Left, int Top) = 0;
///< Returns a pointer to a newly created cOsd object, which will be located
///< at the given coordinates.
public:
cOsdProvider(void);
//XXX maybe parameter to make this one "sticky"??? (frame-buffer etc.)
virtual ~cOsdProvider();
static cOsd *NewOsd(int Left, int Top);
///< Returns a pointer to a newly created cOsd object, which will be located
///< at the given coordinates. When the cOsd object is no longer needed, the
///< caller must delete it. If the OSD is already in use, or there is no OSD
///< provider, a dummy OSD is returned so that the caller may always use the
///< returned pointer without having to check it every time it is accessed.
static void Shutdown(void);
///< Shuts down the OSD provider facility by deleting the current OSD provider.
};
class cTextScroller {
private:
cOsd *osd;
int left, top, width, height;
const cFont *font;
tColor colorFg, colorBg;
int offset, shown;
cTextWrapper textWrapper;
void DrawText(void);
public:
cTextScroller(void);
cTextScroller(cOsd *Osd, int Left, int Top, int Width, int Height, const char *Text, const cFont *Font, tColor ColorFg, tColor ColorBg);
void Set(cOsd *Osd, int Left, int Top, int Width, int Height, const char *Text, const cFont *Font, tColor ColorFg, tColor ColorBg);
void Reset(void);
int Left(void) { return left; }
int Top(void) { return top; }
int Width(void) { return width; }
int Height(void) { return height; }
int Total(void) { return textWrapper.Lines(); }
int Offset(void) { return offset; }
int Shown(void) { return shown; }
bool CanScroll(void) { return CanScrollUp() || CanScrollDown(); }
bool CanScrollUp(void) { return offset > 0; }
bool CanScrollDown(void) { return offset + shown < Total(); }
void Scroll(bool Up, bool Page);
};
#endif //__OSD_H