The old icons looked exactly like the mono version, and all >1 bpp drivers
support rendering mono bitmaps. Therefore a mono bitmap can be used which
requires less ram.
This affects only the builtin icons, not the ones used by cabbiev2.
Change-Id: I3b02b5b04fe8b4bcc69e83310871254d336b648a
Some seldomly used drawmode combinations did not work in conjunction with
alpha bitmaps and backdrops. Now all should work (see comment added) by using
more bits.
Change-Id: I2bc96ecf471fa8c1a608a321a235b9c8527b3dc5
OS X ar operates on fat libaries. In this case updating the library isn't
possible and when those change ar will only return an error. Remove the output
file prior to running ar to work around this limitation.
Change-Id: I7ebc66efd092a8e6037ae86a3658afe6b4da777f
Instead of having to update it every year just drop it. We have the build date
in the binaries we provide, and the years it has been developed can be
retrieved via git anyway.
Change-Id: Ib33ee851883146509034c405cd65552a0f67194e
This reverts commit 61a096499b.
The original issue was caused by a new structure member which caused
bmp_args::buf to be unaligned for 2-byte reads. Enforcing that alignment
should be the faster fix. Aligning to cache (while at it) should
improve bmp loading times even more.
Change-Id: I58a2caaf08c0ce46e2fb9666de628a30a36ea5f4
bpb_is_sane() used to effectively multiplying the sector size (relative
to 512 bytes) twice, which meant that filesystems with e.g. 2K sectors and
32 sectors per cluster were rejected because while this adds up to 64K
clusters (i.e. the upper limit), the calculation wrongly came to 256K.
This bug tends to affect 5.5G ipods when formatted using dosfstools.
Change-Id: Ia3f1e1303b2af953f497ccdbf23cd49c3d72e46a
On hwcodec talk.c has the entire audio buffer (not just parts of it), therefore
it must give up everything and cannot count on core_alloc_maximum() to return
the remaining space. This is equivalent to it was handled before 22e802e.
You could probaby do smarter and shrink for example the .talk clip buffer
but is it really worth it?
Change-Id: Idc3431c59fb41b05338559c615093358c5d8ed9b
This fixes the radioart crash that was the result of buffering.c working
on a freed buffer at the same time as buflib (radioart uses buffering.c for the
images). With this change the buffer is owned by buflib exclusively so this
cannot happen.
As a result, audio_get_buffer() doesn't exist anymore. Callers should call
core_alloc_maximum() directly. This buffer needs to be protected as usual
against movement if necessary (previously it was not protected at all which
cased the radioart crash), To get most of it they can adjust the willingness of
the talk engine to give its buffer away (at the expense of disabling voice
interface) with the new talk_buffer_set_policy() function.
Change-Id: I52123012208d04967876a304451d634e2bef3a33
This function relocates a buflib back buffer, updating pointers in struct
buflib_context. It does not move any data by itself.
The intended use-case is buflib-on-buflib, where a buflib back buffer is
allocated with buflib and attempted to be moved. The move_callback() can call
this and return BUFLIB_CB_OK on success. No move_callback() is called for the
subordinate buflib buffer, therefore it must not contain non-movable
allocations. The caller is generally responsible moving the data and all its
implications.
Change-Id: I869219f9cff786a172c9e917a5f34470073892e6
This function will now ask shrinkable allocations to give up all of their
memory. With future support of playback.c this can be used as a safe
replacement for audio_get_buffer().
Change-Id: I290a51d2c75254e66baf5698c41dc444dea6247a