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obs-studio/libobs/obs-nix.c

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/******************************************************************************
Copyright (C) 2013 by Hugh Bailey <obs.jim@gmail.com>
Copyright (C) 2014 by Zachary Lund <admin@computerquip.com>
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation, either version 2 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
******************************************************************************/
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#if defined(__FreeBSD__)
#include <sys/sysctl.h>
#endif
#include <sys/sysinfo.h>
#include <sys/utsname.h>
#include <inttypes.h>
#include "util/dstr.h"
(API Change) Refactor module handling Changed API: - char *obs_find_plugin_file(const char *sub_path); Changed to: char *obs_module_file(const char *file); Cahnge it so you no longer need to specify a sub-path such as: obs_find_plugin_file("module_name/file.ext") Instead, now automatically handle the module data path so all you need to do is: obs_module_file("file.ext") - int obs_load_module(const char *name); Changed to: int obs_open_module(obs_module_t *module, const char *path, const char *data_path); bool obs_init_module(obs_module_t module); Change the module loading API so that if the front-end chooses, it can load modules directly from a specified path, and associate a data directory with it on the spot. The module will not be initialized immediately; obs_init_module must be called on the module pointer in order to fully initialize the module. This is done so a module can be disabled by the front-end if the it so chooses. New API: - void obs_add_module_path(const char *bin, const char *data); These functions allow you to specify new module search paths to add, and allow you to search through them, or optionally just load all modules from them. If the string %module% is included, it will replace it with the module's name when that string is used as a lookup. Data paths are now directly added to the module's internal storage structure, and when obs_find_module_file is used, it will look up the pointer to the obs_module structure and get its data directory that way. Example: obs_add_module_path("/opt/obs/my-modules/%module%/bin", "/opt/obs/my-modules/%module%/data"); This would cause it to additionally look for the binary of a hypthetical module named "foo" at /opt/obs/my-modules/foo/bin/foo.so (or libfoo.so), and then look for the data in /opt/obs/my-modules/foo/data. This gives the front-end more flexibility for handling third-party plugin modules, or handling all plugin modules in a custom way. - void obs_find_modules(obs_find_module_callback_t callback, void *param); This searches the existing paths for modules and calls the callback function when any are found. Useful for plugin management and custom handling of the paths by the front-end if desired. - void obs_load_all_modules(void); Search through the paths and both loads and initializes all modules automatically without custom handling. - void obs_enum_modules(obs_enum_module_callback_t callback, void *param); Enumerates currently opened modules.
2014-07-27 21:00:11 +02:00
#include "obs-internal.h"
const char *get_module_extension(void)
{
return ".so";
}
(API Change) Refactor module handling Changed API: - char *obs_find_plugin_file(const char *sub_path); Changed to: char *obs_module_file(const char *file); Cahnge it so you no longer need to specify a sub-path such as: obs_find_plugin_file("module_name/file.ext") Instead, now automatically handle the module data path so all you need to do is: obs_module_file("file.ext") - int obs_load_module(const char *name); Changed to: int obs_open_module(obs_module_t *module, const char *path, const char *data_path); bool obs_init_module(obs_module_t module); Change the module loading API so that if the front-end chooses, it can load modules directly from a specified path, and associate a data directory with it on the spot. The module will not be initialized immediately; obs_init_module must be called on the module pointer in order to fully initialize the module. This is done so a module can be disabled by the front-end if the it so chooses. New API: - void obs_add_module_path(const char *bin, const char *data); These functions allow you to specify new module search paths to add, and allow you to search through them, or optionally just load all modules from them. If the string %module% is included, it will replace it with the module's name when that string is used as a lookup. Data paths are now directly added to the module's internal storage structure, and when obs_find_module_file is used, it will look up the pointer to the obs_module structure and get its data directory that way. Example: obs_add_module_path("/opt/obs/my-modules/%module%/bin", "/opt/obs/my-modules/%module%/data"); This would cause it to additionally look for the binary of a hypthetical module named "foo" at /opt/obs/my-modules/foo/bin/foo.so (or libfoo.so), and then look for the data in /opt/obs/my-modules/foo/data. This gives the front-end more flexibility for handling third-party plugin modules, or handling all plugin modules in a custom way. - void obs_find_modules(obs_find_module_callback_t callback, void *param); This searches the existing paths for modules and calls the callback function when any are found. Useful for plugin management and custom handling of the paths by the front-end if desired. - void obs_load_all_modules(void); Search through the paths and both loads and initializes all modules automatically without custom handling. - void obs_enum_modules(obs_enum_module_callback_t callback, void *param); Enumerates currently opened modules.
2014-07-27 21:00:11 +02:00
#ifdef __LP64__
#define BIT_STRING "64bit"
#else
#define BIT_STRING "32bit"
#endif
2014-07-12 16:18:58 +02:00
(API Change) Refactor module handling Changed API: - char *obs_find_plugin_file(const char *sub_path); Changed to: char *obs_module_file(const char *file); Cahnge it so you no longer need to specify a sub-path such as: obs_find_plugin_file("module_name/file.ext") Instead, now automatically handle the module data path so all you need to do is: obs_module_file("file.ext") - int obs_load_module(const char *name); Changed to: int obs_open_module(obs_module_t *module, const char *path, const char *data_path); bool obs_init_module(obs_module_t module); Change the module loading API so that if the front-end chooses, it can load modules directly from a specified path, and associate a data directory with it on the spot. The module will not be initialized immediately; obs_init_module must be called on the module pointer in order to fully initialize the module. This is done so a module can be disabled by the front-end if the it so chooses. New API: - void obs_add_module_path(const char *bin, const char *data); These functions allow you to specify new module search paths to add, and allow you to search through them, or optionally just load all modules from them. If the string %module% is included, it will replace it with the module's name when that string is used as a lookup. Data paths are now directly added to the module's internal storage structure, and when obs_find_module_file is used, it will look up the pointer to the obs_module structure and get its data directory that way. Example: obs_add_module_path("/opt/obs/my-modules/%module%/bin", "/opt/obs/my-modules/%module%/data"); This would cause it to additionally look for the binary of a hypthetical module named "foo" at /opt/obs/my-modules/foo/bin/foo.so (or libfoo.so), and then look for the data in /opt/obs/my-modules/foo/data. This gives the front-end more flexibility for handling third-party plugin modules, or handling all plugin modules in a custom way. - void obs_find_modules(obs_find_module_callback_t callback, void *param); This searches the existing paths for modules and calls the callback function when any are found. Useful for plugin management and custom handling of the paths by the front-end if desired. - void obs_load_all_modules(void); Search through the paths and both loads and initializes all modules automatically without custom handling. - void obs_enum_modules(obs_enum_module_callback_t callback, void *param); Enumerates currently opened modules.
2014-07-27 21:00:11 +02:00
static const char *module_bin[] = {
"../../obs-plugins/" BIT_STRING,
OBS_INSTALL_PREFIX "/" OBS_PLUGIN_DESTINATION
(API Change) Refactor module handling Changed API: - char *obs_find_plugin_file(const char *sub_path); Changed to: char *obs_module_file(const char *file); Cahnge it so you no longer need to specify a sub-path such as: obs_find_plugin_file("module_name/file.ext") Instead, now automatically handle the module data path so all you need to do is: obs_module_file("file.ext") - int obs_load_module(const char *name); Changed to: int obs_open_module(obs_module_t *module, const char *path, const char *data_path); bool obs_init_module(obs_module_t module); Change the module loading API so that if the front-end chooses, it can load modules directly from a specified path, and associate a data directory with it on the spot. The module will not be initialized immediately; obs_init_module must be called on the module pointer in order to fully initialize the module. This is done so a module can be disabled by the front-end if the it so chooses. New API: - void obs_add_module_path(const char *bin, const char *data); These functions allow you to specify new module search paths to add, and allow you to search through them, or optionally just load all modules from them. If the string %module% is included, it will replace it with the module's name when that string is used as a lookup. Data paths are now directly added to the module's internal storage structure, and when obs_find_module_file is used, it will look up the pointer to the obs_module structure and get its data directory that way. Example: obs_add_module_path("/opt/obs/my-modules/%module%/bin", "/opt/obs/my-modules/%module%/data"); This would cause it to additionally look for the binary of a hypthetical module named "foo" at /opt/obs/my-modules/foo/bin/foo.so (or libfoo.so), and then look for the data in /opt/obs/my-modules/foo/data. This gives the front-end more flexibility for handling third-party plugin modules, or handling all plugin modules in a custom way. - void obs_find_modules(obs_find_module_callback_t callback, void *param); This searches the existing paths for modules and calls the callback function when any are found. Useful for plugin management and custom handling of the paths by the front-end if desired. - void obs_load_all_modules(void); Search through the paths and both loads and initializes all modules automatically without custom handling. - void obs_enum_modules(obs_enum_module_callback_t callback, void *param); Enumerates currently opened modules.
2014-07-27 21:00:11 +02:00
};
2014-07-12 16:18:58 +02:00
(API Change) Refactor module handling Changed API: - char *obs_find_plugin_file(const char *sub_path); Changed to: char *obs_module_file(const char *file); Cahnge it so you no longer need to specify a sub-path such as: obs_find_plugin_file("module_name/file.ext") Instead, now automatically handle the module data path so all you need to do is: obs_module_file("file.ext") - int obs_load_module(const char *name); Changed to: int obs_open_module(obs_module_t *module, const char *path, const char *data_path); bool obs_init_module(obs_module_t module); Change the module loading API so that if the front-end chooses, it can load modules directly from a specified path, and associate a data directory with it on the spot. The module will not be initialized immediately; obs_init_module must be called on the module pointer in order to fully initialize the module. This is done so a module can be disabled by the front-end if the it so chooses. New API: - void obs_add_module_path(const char *bin, const char *data); These functions allow you to specify new module search paths to add, and allow you to search through them, or optionally just load all modules from them. If the string %module% is included, it will replace it with the module's name when that string is used as a lookup. Data paths are now directly added to the module's internal storage structure, and when obs_find_module_file is used, it will look up the pointer to the obs_module structure and get its data directory that way. Example: obs_add_module_path("/opt/obs/my-modules/%module%/bin", "/opt/obs/my-modules/%module%/data"); This would cause it to additionally look for the binary of a hypthetical module named "foo" at /opt/obs/my-modules/foo/bin/foo.so (or libfoo.so), and then look for the data in /opt/obs/my-modules/foo/data. This gives the front-end more flexibility for handling third-party plugin modules, or handling all plugin modules in a custom way. - void obs_find_modules(obs_find_module_callback_t callback, void *param); This searches the existing paths for modules and calls the callback function when any are found. Useful for plugin management and custom handling of the paths by the front-end if desired. - void obs_load_all_modules(void); Search through the paths and both loads and initializes all modules automatically without custom handling. - void obs_enum_modules(obs_enum_module_callback_t callback, void *param); Enumerates currently opened modules.
2014-07-27 21:00:11 +02:00
static const char *module_data[] = {
OBS_DATA_PATH "/obs-plugins/%module%",
OBS_INSTALL_DATA_PATH "/obs-plugins/%module%",
};
2014-07-12 16:18:58 +02:00
(API Change) Refactor module handling Changed API: - char *obs_find_plugin_file(const char *sub_path); Changed to: char *obs_module_file(const char *file); Cahnge it so you no longer need to specify a sub-path such as: obs_find_plugin_file("module_name/file.ext") Instead, now automatically handle the module data path so all you need to do is: obs_module_file("file.ext") - int obs_load_module(const char *name); Changed to: int obs_open_module(obs_module_t *module, const char *path, const char *data_path); bool obs_init_module(obs_module_t module); Change the module loading API so that if the front-end chooses, it can load modules directly from a specified path, and associate a data directory with it on the spot. The module will not be initialized immediately; obs_init_module must be called on the module pointer in order to fully initialize the module. This is done so a module can be disabled by the front-end if the it so chooses. New API: - void obs_add_module_path(const char *bin, const char *data); These functions allow you to specify new module search paths to add, and allow you to search through them, or optionally just load all modules from them. If the string %module% is included, it will replace it with the module's name when that string is used as a lookup. Data paths are now directly added to the module's internal storage structure, and when obs_find_module_file is used, it will look up the pointer to the obs_module structure and get its data directory that way. Example: obs_add_module_path("/opt/obs/my-modules/%module%/bin", "/opt/obs/my-modules/%module%/data"); This would cause it to additionally look for the binary of a hypthetical module named "foo" at /opt/obs/my-modules/foo/bin/foo.so (or libfoo.so), and then look for the data in /opt/obs/my-modules/foo/data. This gives the front-end more flexibility for handling third-party plugin modules, or handling all plugin modules in a custom way. - void obs_find_modules(obs_find_module_callback_t callback, void *param); This searches the existing paths for modules and calls the callback function when any are found. Useful for plugin management and custom handling of the paths by the front-end if desired. - void obs_load_all_modules(void); Search through the paths and both loads and initializes all modules automatically without custom handling. - void obs_enum_modules(obs_enum_module_callback_t callback, void *param); Enumerates currently opened modules.
2014-07-27 21:00:11 +02:00
static const int module_patterns_size =
sizeof(module_bin)/sizeof(module_bin[0]);
(API Change) Refactor module handling Changed API: - char *obs_find_plugin_file(const char *sub_path); Changed to: char *obs_module_file(const char *file); Cahnge it so you no longer need to specify a sub-path such as: obs_find_plugin_file("module_name/file.ext") Instead, now automatically handle the module data path so all you need to do is: obs_module_file("file.ext") - int obs_load_module(const char *name); Changed to: int obs_open_module(obs_module_t *module, const char *path, const char *data_path); bool obs_init_module(obs_module_t module); Change the module loading API so that if the front-end chooses, it can load modules directly from a specified path, and associate a data directory with it on the spot. The module will not be initialized immediately; obs_init_module must be called on the module pointer in order to fully initialize the module. This is done so a module can be disabled by the front-end if the it so chooses. New API: - void obs_add_module_path(const char *bin, const char *data); These functions allow you to specify new module search paths to add, and allow you to search through them, or optionally just load all modules from them. If the string %module% is included, it will replace it with the module's name when that string is used as a lookup. Data paths are now directly added to the module's internal storage structure, and when obs_find_module_file is used, it will look up the pointer to the obs_module structure and get its data directory that way. Example: obs_add_module_path("/opt/obs/my-modules/%module%/bin", "/opt/obs/my-modules/%module%/data"); This would cause it to additionally look for the binary of a hypthetical module named "foo" at /opt/obs/my-modules/foo/bin/foo.so (or libfoo.so), and then look for the data in /opt/obs/my-modules/foo/data. This gives the front-end more flexibility for handling third-party plugin modules, or handling all plugin modules in a custom way. - void obs_find_modules(obs_find_module_callback_t callback, void *param); This searches the existing paths for modules and calls the callback function when any are found. Useful for plugin management and custom handling of the paths by the front-end if desired. - void obs_load_all_modules(void); Search through the paths and both loads and initializes all modules automatically without custom handling. - void obs_enum_modules(obs_enum_module_callback_t callback, void *param); Enumerates currently opened modules.
2014-07-27 21:00:11 +02:00
void add_default_module_paths(void)
2014-07-12 16:18:58 +02:00
{
(API Change) Refactor module handling Changed API: - char *obs_find_plugin_file(const char *sub_path); Changed to: char *obs_module_file(const char *file); Cahnge it so you no longer need to specify a sub-path such as: obs_find_plugin_file("module_name/file.ext") Instead, now automatically handle the module data path so all you need to do is: obs_module_file("file.ext") - int obs_load_module(const char *name); Changed to: int obs_open_module(obs_module_t *module, const char *path, const char *data_path); bool obs_init_module(obs_module_t module); Change the module loading API so that if the front-end chooses, it can load modules directly from a specified path, and associate a data directory with it on the spot. The module will not be initialized immediately; obs_init_module must be called on the module pointer in order to fully initialize the module. This is done so a module can be disabled by the front-end if the it so chooses. New API: - void obs_add_module_path(const char *bin, const char *data); These functions allow you to specify new module search paths to add, and allow you to search through them, or optionally just load all modules from them. If the string %module% is included, it will replace it with the module's name when that string is used as a lookup. Data paths are now directly added to the module's internal storage structure, and when obs_find_module_file is used, it will look up the pointer to the obs_module structure and get its data directory that way. Example: obs_add_module_path("/opt/obs/my-modules/%module%/bin", "/opt/obs/my-modules/%module%/data"); This would cause it to additionally look for the binary of a hypthetical module named "foo" at /opt/obs/my-modules/foo/bin/foo.so (or libfoo.so), and then look for the data in /opt/obs/my-modules/foo/data. This gives the front-end more flexibility for handling third-party plugin modules, or handling all plugin modules in a custom way. - void obs_find_modules(obs_find_module_callback_t callback, void *param); This searches the existing paths for modules and calls the callback function when any are found. Useful for plugin management and custom handling of the paths by the front-end if desired. - void obs_load_all_modules(void); Search through the paths and both loads and initializes all modules automatically without custom handling. - void obs_enum_modules(obs_enum_module_callback_t callback, void *param); Enumerates currently opened modules.
2014-07-27 21:00:11 +02:00
for (int i = 0; i < module_patterns_size; i++)
obs_add_module_path(module_bin[i], module_data[i]);
}
/*
* /usr/local/share/libobs
* /usr/share/libobs
*/
char *find_libobs_data_file(const char *file)
{
struct dstr output;
dstr_init(&output);
if (check_path(file, OBS_DATA_PATH "/libobs/", &output))
return output.array;
2014-02-24 06:39:33 +01:00
if (OBS_INSTALL_PREFIX [0] != 0) {
if (check_path(file, OBS_INSTALL_DATA_PATH "/libobs/",
&output))
return output.array;
}
dstr_free(&output);
return NULL;
}
static void log_processor_cores(void)
{
blog(LOG_INFO, "Processor: %lu logical cores",
sysconf(_SC_NPROCESSORS_ONLN));
}
#if defined(__linux__)
static void log_processor_info(void)
{
FILE *fp;
int physical_id = -1;
int last_physical_id = -1;
char *line = NULL;
size_t linecap = 0;
struct dstr processor;
fp = fopen("/proc/cpuinfo", "r");
if (!fp)
return;
dstr_init(&processor);
while (getline(&line, &linecap, fp) != -1) {
if (!strncmp(line, "model name", 10)) {
char *start = strchr(line, ':');
if (!start || *(++start) == '\0')
continue;
dstr_copy(&processor, start);
dstr_resize(&processor, processor.len - 1);
dstr_depad(&processor);
}
if (!strncmp(line, "physical id", 11)) {
char *start = strchr(line, ':');
if (!start || *(++start) == '\0')
continue;
physical_id = atoi(start);
}
if (*line == '\n' && physical_id != last_physical_id) {
last_physical_id = physical_id;
blog(LOG_INFO, "Processor: %s", processor.array);
}
}
fclose(fp);
dstr_free(&processor);
free(line);
}
#elif defined(__FreeBSD__)
static void log_processor_info(void)
{
int mib[2];
size_t len;
char *proc;
mib[0] = CTL_HW;
mib[1] = HW_MODEL;
sysctl(mib, 2, NULL, &len, NULL, 0);
proc = bmalloc(len);
if (!proc)
return;
sysctl(mib, 2, proc, &len, NULL, 0);
blog(LOG_INFO, "Processor: %s", proc);
bfree(proc);
}
#endif
static void log_memory_info(void)
{
struct sysinfo info;
if (sysinfo(&info) < 0)
return;
blog(LOG_INFO, "Physical Memory: %"PRIu64"MB Total",
(uint64_t)info.totalram * info.mem_unit / 1024 / 1024);
}
static void log_kernel_version(void)
{
struct utsname info;
if (uname(&info) < 0)
return;
blog(LOG_INFO, "Kernel Version: %s %s", info.sysname, info.release);
}
#if defined(__linux__)
static void log_distribution_info(void)
{
FILE *fp;
char *line = NULL;
size_t linecap = 0;
struct dstr distro;
struct dstr version;
fp = fopen("/etc/os-release", "r");
if (!fp) {
blog(LOG_INFO, "Distribution: Missing /etc/os-release !");
return;
}
dstr_init_copy(&distro, "Unknown");
dstr_init_copy(&version, "Unknown");
while (getline(&line, &linecap, fp) != -1) {
if (!strncmp(line, "NAME", 4)) {
char *start = strchr(line, '=');
if (!start || *(++start) == '\0')
continue;
dstr_copy(&distro, start);
dstr_resize(&distro, distro.len - 1);
}
if (!strncmp(line, "VERSION_ID", 10)) {
char *start = strchr(line, '=');
if (!start || *(++start) == '\0')
continue;
dstr_copy(&version, start);
dstr_resize(&version, version.len - 1);
}
}
blog(LOG_INFO, "Distribution: %s %s", distro.array, version.array);
fclose(fp);
dstr_free(&version);
dstr_free(&distro);
free(line);
}
#endif
2014-07-12 09:21:06 +02:00
void log_system_info(void)
{
log_processor_cores();
#if defined(__linux__) || defined(__FreeBSD__)
log_processor_info();
#endif
log_memory_info();
log_kernel_version();
#if defined(__linux__)
log_distribution_info();
#endif
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}
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struct obs_hotkeys_platform {
};
bool obs_hotkeys_platform_init(struct obs_core_hotkeys *hotkeys)
{
UNUSED_PARAMETER(hotkeys);
return true;
}
void obs_hotkeys_platform_free(struct obs_core_hotkeys *hotkeys)
{
UNUSED_PARAMETER(hotkeys);
}
bool obs_hotkeys_platform_is_pressed(obs_hotkeys_platform_t *context,
obs_key_t key)
{
UNUSED_PARAMETER(context);
UNUSED_PARAMETER(key);
return false;
}
void obs_key_to_str(obs_key_t key, struct dstr *str)
{
UNUSED_PARAMETER(key);
UNUSED_PARAMETER(str);
}
void obs_key_combination_to_str(obs_key_combination_t key, struct dstr *str)
{
UNUSED_PARAMETER(key);
UNUSED_PARAMETER(str);
}
obs_key_t obs_key_from_virtual_key(int code)
{
UNUSED_PARAMETER(code);
return OBS_KEY_NONE;
}
int obs_key_to_virtual_key(obs_key_t key)
{
UNUSED_PARAMETER(key);
return 0;
}