1. Non-Kindle-specific `hasFiveWay` behavior is changed to `hasDPad and useDPadAsActionKeys`. For now they remain Kindle-specific in practice, unless one sets `useDPadAsActionKeys = yes` in a user patch.
2. With that disambiguation out of the way, `hasFiveWay` itself is further disambiguated into `hasScreenKB` and `hasSymKey`, as per the actual property being used, rather than something that tends to correlate with it. (It needn't be Kindle-specific per se, but non-Kindle devices have equivalent shortcuts with for example `Shift`.)
Running the emulator with `DISABLE_TOUCH=1` will set `hasSymKey = yes`, which can be tested with right shift.
Closes#11887.
* Kobo: Drop a bunch of if ladder crap and switch to auto-detection of input devices via fbink_input
* Kindle: Drop an even larger bundle of crap to do the same ;p. (re: #11392)
* ExternalKeyboard: Switch to fbink_input to whitelist keyboards instead of the manual parsing of caps via its FindKeyboard class
* Input: Extended open/close wrappers to handle logging & tracking of dupe open/close calls.
* Support the Clara B&W, Clara Colour & Libra Colour
* Enable HW dithering on *all* the Kobo MTK devices
* Enforce 32bpp instead of 8bpp for Kobo devices with a color panel (the driver doesn't actually support 8bpp anyway)
* Enable standby support on MTK (whenever possible, i.e., not when plugged in, as that is horribly, horribly broken).
* Enforce the dedicated "color" waveform mode for image content in ScreenSaver, ImageViewer & Reader.
* Fix charging LED support on MTK
* Tweak the frontlight ramp on MTK + LM3630 so that it actually ramps smoothly
* UIManager: Init a full Geom on region-less refreshes in _refresh
* Never call refreshFull with no arguments
I got rid of the low-level nil guards, because UIManager itself guarantees that it can never happen
* Bump base (https://github.com/koreader/koreader-base/pull/1718) (fix#11303)
* Kindle: Re-enable HW dithering on the Scribe
Now that the underlying issue is fixed in base ;).
* afterResume had *two* different implementations, so the historical one
that handled frontlight fixups no longer ran
(regression since #10426)
* isFrontlightOn was completely broken, for a couple of reasons:
* There was no is isFrontlightOnHW implementation, so when it ran, it
mostly always thought the frontlight was on, because
self.fl_intensity doesn't change on toggle off.
* _decideFrontlightState was never called on Kindle,
so isFrontlightOnHW was never really called, making isFrontlightOn
completely useless. Call it in setIntensityHW's coda, as it ought to
be. And properly document that.
Generic *was* calling _decideFrontlightState is setIntensity, but
*before* actually setting the frontlight, which makes no goddamn sense,
so get rid of that, too.
* Also fix frontlight toggle notifications (regression since #10305)
TL;DR: The PowerD API being a mess strikes again.
They were only sent when said action was triggered manually.
Note that this is perfectly harmless, since, currently,
nothing actually responds to those events ;).
* Device: Add a `hasSeamlessWifiToggle` devcap to complement `hasWifiToggle`, to denote platforms where we can toggle WiFi without losing focus, as this has obvious UX impacts, and less obvious technical impacts on some of the NetworkMgr innards...
* Android: Mark as `!hasSeamlessWifiToggle`, as it requires losing focus to the system settings. Moreover, `turnOnWifi` returns *immediately* and we *still* run in the background during that time, for extra spiciness...
* NetworkMgr: Ensure only *one* call to `turnOnWifi` will actually go on when stuff gets re-scheduled by the `beforeWifiAction` framework.
* NetworkMgr: Ensure the `beforeWifiAction` framework will not re-schedule the same thing *ad vitam aeternam* if a previous connection attempt is still ongoing. (i.e., previously, on Android, if you backed out of the system settings, you entered the Benny Hill dimension, as NetworkMgr would keep throwing you back into the system settings ;p). This has a few implications on callbacks requested by subsequent connection attempts, though. Generally, we'll try to honor *explicitly interactive* callbacks, but `beforeWifiAction` stuff will be dropped (only the original cb is preserved). That's what prevents the aforementioned infinite loop, as the `beforeWifiAction` framework was based on the assumption that `turnOnWifi` somewhat guaranteed `isConnected` to be true on return, something which is only actually true on `hasWifiManager` platforms.
* NetworkMgr: In `prompt` mode, the above implies that the prompt will not even be shown for concurrent attempts, as it's otherwise extremely confusing (KOSync on Android being a prime example, as it has a pair of Suspend/Resume handlers, so the initial attempt trips those two because of the focus switch >_<").
* NetworkMgr: Don't attempt to kill wifi when aborting a connection attempt on `!hasSeamlessWifiToggle` (because, again, it'll break UX, and also because it might run at very awkward times (e.g., I managed to go back to KOReader *between* a FM/Reader switch at one point, which promptly caused `UIManager` to exit because there was nothing to show ;p).
* NetworkMgr: Don't drop the connectivity callback when `beforeWifiAction` is set to prompt and the target happens to use a connectivity check in its `turnOnWifi` implementation (e.g., on Kindle).
* Android: Add an `"ignore"` `beforeWifiAction` mode, that'll do nothing but schedule the connectivity check with its callback (with the intent being the system will eventually enable wifi on its own Soon(TM)). If you're already online, the callback will run immediately, obviously. If you followed the early discussions on this PR, this closely matches what happens on `!hasWifiToggle` platforms (as flagging Android that way was one of the possible approaches here).
* NetworkMgr: Bail out early in `goOnlineToRun` if `beforeWifiAction` isn't `"turn_on"`. Prompt cannot work there, and while ignore technically could, it would serve very little purpose given its intended use case.
* KOSync: Neuter the Resume/Suspend handlers early on `CloseDocument`, as this is how focus switches are handled on Android, and if `beforeWifiAction` is `turn_on` and you were offline at the time, we'd trip them because of the swap to system settings to enable wifi.
* KOSync: Allow `auto_sync` to be enabled regardless of the `beforeWifiAction` mode on `!hasSeamlessWifiToggle` platforms. Prompt is still a terrible idea, but given that `goOnlineToRun` now aborts early if the mode is not supported, it's less of a problem.
Re #10743
Note that this only makes faulty switches slightly less annoying: for a
stuck switch, instead of a string of page turns, you'll get a single
missed page turn on the tap that actually releases the stuck contact...
* Enable before_wifi_action & after_wifi_action on hasWifiToggle platforms (which is basically all of 'em except naked SDL).
* Decouple restoreWifiAsync from hasWifiManger, because we can do that on other platforms (namely, Kindle. Probably PB, too, but WiFi is already a mess there, and I can't test it).
* Implement restoreWifiAsync on Kindle.
* Properly flag rM as hasWifiManager & hasFastWifiStatusQuery, because it is actually both of those (it uses our wpa_supplicant backend).
* Update the KOSync checks to take these changes into account, to properly disable auto_sync if necessary.
* Really made the Network* event signaling consistent. For realz this time.
* In an effort to make the whole beforeWifiAction framework somewhat usable there, we now assume connectivity is always available on !hasWifiToggle platforms...
Fix: #10539, and for context #6489, #6733, #6534
Reorganize and reword most of the settings to make it clear what actually ties into auto sync, and what doesn't. (Specifically, what happens when a pull attempts to sync forward or backward has nothing to do with auto sync, it applies in all cases; while the periodic sync *does* require auto sync).
The main point of contention, though, is that auto sync will now *always* attempt to setup network connectivity (i.e., on resume/suspend/close). Periodic sync will *not* though (the intent being that, if you use periodic sync, you're relying on the activity check to actually keep wifi on at all times)).
Since this may lead to a large amount of nagging about wifi toggles on devices w/ NetworkManager support, it is now *disabled* by default on those devices. (And given that it wouldn't have worked because of the lack of connectivity, that doesn't really make any practical difference ;p).
Additionally, given the fact that there's no way to make this behavior viable if the "before wifi" action is left at its default of "prompt", this feature now *requires* that to be set to "turn_on" (on devices where it can, of course); attempting to toggle it on will warn about that if necessary.
This change is retroactive (OTM).
Includes an assortment of fixes and cleanups, including migrating to the new LuaSettings API, which is why there's no longer a smattering of superfluous flushes.
Fix#10588
Regression since #10305
While we're there, rejig the FL toggle callback shenanigans so that implementation details don't leak through to *other* implementations.
(i.e., leave the Kobo mess in Kobo land, with only a minimal impact on the public API and its implementation).
Make sure we only send Suspend/Resume events when we *actually* suspend/resume. This is done via the Device `_beforeSuspend`/`_afterResume` methods, and those were called by the *input handlers*, not the PM logic; which means they would fire, while the PM logic could actually take a smarter decision and *not* do what the event just sent implied ;).
(i.e., sleep with a cover -> suspend + actual suspend, OK; but if you then resume with a button -> input assumes resume, but PM will actually suspend again!).
Existing design issue made more apparent by #9448 ;).
Also fixes/generalizes a few corner-cases related to screen_saver_lock handling (e.g., don't allow USBMS during a lock).
And deal with the fallout of the main change to the Kobo frontlight ramp behavior ;).
* Rewrite the loop mechanism to use scheduled tasks instead of a single blocking-ish subprocess.
* Change the actual logic to be more pleasing to the eye, especially on newer devices, as those *may* natively ramp on set; and fix a bad interaction with that behavior that could lead to no ramp at all on ramp down.
* Simplify Generic's Suspend handling to deal with the refresh ordering in a saner manner. The screensaver might be visible a tad longer than before this change before the frontlight actually ramps off.
For example, to determine whether the Japanese or Chinese form should be shown.
* Dictionaries.lua - use iso3 codes everywhere
readerdictionary.lua - convert iso to bcp tag, to construct ifo_lang
isolanguage.lua - map from iso3 to full language name, map from iso3 to bcp language tag
* Make the full language names translatable
* Store ifo information from dictionaries.lua in downloaded dictionaries
Some devices don't ship with iproute2 compatible tools, but may ship
with net-tools compatible ones.
Unify code w/ SDL's similar codepaths for its NetworkMgr:isConnected
implementation
cervantes kindle kobo remarkable: use sysfs carrier file to determine connection state
cleanup hasWifiManager checks
gateway check: use ip if available
Fixes: #10087Closes: #10092
Generic is responsible for setting up the translation via input hooks;
since our own input hooks involve swapping or mirroring X/Y, we need to
run our own hooks *first*, so that the viewport translation actually
does the right thing...
Probably broken for a good long while, I'd just assumed the inaccuracies
on the H2O were due to the IR grid... :/.
Reported @ https://www.mobileread.com/forums/showthread.php?t=351340
If Wi-Fi is restored on resume, going back to suspend while the
screensaver is shown via the screen_saver_lock flag would have attempted
to suspend *without* killing Wi-Fi first.
This implodes on the vast majority of NTX boards, so take the usual
precautions.
* Get rid of the `canToggleGSensor` Device cap, it's now mandatory for `hasGSensor` devices. (This means Kindles can now toggle the gyro, fix#9136).
* This also means that `Device:toggleGSensor` is now implemented by `Generic`.
* Update the Screen & Gyro rotation constants to be clearer (c.f., https://github.com/koreader/koreader-base/pull/1568) (/!\ This might conceivably break some `rotation_map` user-patches).
* Input: Move the platform-specific gyro handling to Device implementations, and let Input only handle a single, custom protocol (`EV_MSC:MSC_GYRO`).
* Input: Refine the `rotation_map` disable method implemented in 43b021d37c. Instead of directly poking at the internal field, use a new method, `disableRotationMap` (/!\ Again, this might break some `rotation_map` user-patches).
* Input: Minor tweaks to event adjust hooks to make them more modular, allowing the Kobo implementation to build and use a single composite hook. API compatibility maintained with wrappers.
Basically:
* Use `extend` for class definitions
* Use `new` for object instantiations
That includes some minor code cleanups along the way:
* Updated `Widget`'s docs to make the semantics clearer.
* Removed `should_restrict_JIT` (it's been dead code since https://github.com/koreader/android-luajit-launcher/pull/283)
* Minor refactoring of LuaSettings/LuaData/LuaDefaults/DocSettings to behave (mostly, they are instantiated via `open` instead of `new`) like everything else and handle inheritance properly (i.e., DocSettings is now a proper LuaSettings subclass).
* Default to `WidgetContainer` instead of `InputContainer` for stuff that doesn't actually setup key/gesture events.
* Ditto for explicit `*Listener` only classes, make sure they're based on `EventListener` instead of something uselessly fancier.
* Unless absolutely necessary, do not store references in class objects, ever; only values. Instead, always store references in instances, to avoid both sneaky inheritance issues, and sneaky GC pinning of stale references.
* ReaderUI: Fix one such issue with its `active_widgets` array, with critical implications, as it essentially pinned *all* of ReaderUI's modules, including their reference to the `Document` instance (i.e., that was a big-ass leak).
* Terminal: Make sure the shell is killed on plugin teardown.
* InputText: Fix Home/End/Del physical keys to behave sensibly.
* InputContainer/WidgetContainer: If necessary, compute self.dimen at paintTo time (previously, only InputContainers did, which might have had something to do with random widgets unconcerned about input using it as a baseclass instead of WidgetContainer...).
* OverlapGroup: Compute self.dimen at *init* time, because for some reason it needs to do that, but do it directly in OverlapGroup instead of going through a weird WidgetContainer method that it was the sole user of.
* ReaderCropping: Under no circumstances should a Document instance member (here, self.bbox) risk being `nil`ed!
* Kobo: Minor code cleanups.
* UIManager: Support more specialized update modes for corner-cases:
* A2, which we'll use for the VirtualKeyboards keys (they'd... inadvertently switched to UI with the highlight refactor).
* NO_MERGE variants of ui & partial (for sunxi). Use `[ui]` in ReaderHighlight's popup, because of a Sage kernel bug that could otherwise make it translucent, sometimes completely so (*sigh*).
* UIManager: Assorted code cleanups & simplifications.
* Logger & dbg: Unify logging style, and code cleanups.
* SDL: Unbreak suspend/resume outside of the emulator (fix#9567).
* NetworkMgr: Cache the network status, and allow it to be queried. (Used by AutoSuspend to avoid repeatedly poking the system when computing the standby schedule delay).
* OneTimeMigration: Don't forget about `NETWORK_PROXY` & `STARDICT_DATA_DIR` when migrating `defaults.persistent.lua` (fix#9573)
* WakeupMgr: Workaround an apparent limitation of the RTC found on i.MX5 Kobo devices, where setting a wakealarm further than UINT16_MAX seconds in the future would apparently overflow and wraparound... (fix#8039, many thanks to @yfede for the extensive deep-dive and for actually accurately pinpointing the issue!).
* Kobo: Handle standby transitions at full CPU clock speeds, in order to limit the latency hit.
* UIManager: Properly quit on reboot & exit. This ensures our exit code is preserved, as we exit on our own terms (instead of being killed by the init system). This is important on platforms where exit codes are semantically meaningful (e.g., Kobo).
* UIManager: Speaking of reboot & exit, make sure the Screensaver shows in all circumstances (e.g., autoshutdown, re: #9542)), and that there aren't any extraneous refreshes triggered. (Additionally, fix a minor regression since #9448 about tracking this very transient state on Kobo & Cervantes).
* Kindle: ID the upcoming Scribe.
* Bump base (https://github.com/koreader/koreader-base/pull/1524)
* Kobo: Make sure checkUnexpectedWakeup won't run between scheduled
suspend calls
Because of the suspend_wait_timeout, a previously scheduled check *could* shortcircuit a suspend scheduled a tiny bit later by a real Power event.
This led to fun breakage when you plugged/unplugged a "sleeping" device, for instance.
Fix#9457
* And clear up the unexpected_wakeup_count semantics
Bits of an older design seeped through and were causing weird corner-cases...
* AutoSuspend: Use the canSuspend devcap check instead of reinventing the wheel.
* Device & UIManager: Cleanup canSuspend devcap check related stuff to avoid boilerplate code.
(It also now defaults to no, and is explicitly set by device implementations where supported).
* AutoSuspend: Re-engage suspend/shutdown timers when fully charged.
This restores the existing behavior pre #9036
(c.f., https://github.com/koreader/koreader/pull/9258#issuecomment-1167672356)
* SDL: Unbreak the fake suspend behavior so that it actually works.
Tweak the default screensaver message to remind users that Power is bound to F2.
(Fix#9262)
* AutoSuspend: Re-engage suspend/shutdown timers on unplug.
This matters on Kobo, because the unexpected wakeup guard might have stopped the suspend timer.
Commonize fullscreen code across different devices.
Add fullscreen toggle on SDL desktop targets.
Expose the toggle to the dispatcher and map it to F11.
Hide touchmenu when resizing.