This makes it possible to know whether the window is focused
at a given time, without having to track the focus state manually
using `NOTIFICATION_WM_FOCUS_IN` and `NOTIFICATION_WM_FOCUS_OUT`.
This partially addresses #33928.
This allows setting the `read_chunk_size` of the internal HTTPClient.
This is important to reduce the allocation overhead and number of file
writes when downloading large files, allowing for better download speed.
Third-party platforms (e.g. console ports) need to be able to
disable JIT support in the regex module too, so it can't be
hardcoded in the module SCsub. This is cleaner this way anyway.
Fixes#19316.
Upstream Emscripten changed this in 1.39.1+, so IDBFS is no longer
included by default and has to be linked manually.
The explicit linking doesn't seem to be problematic on earlier
versions (tested `1.38.47-upstream`).
Fixes#33724.
A change in upstream Emscripten 1.39.1+ made our buildsystem error
out where it was previously only issuing a warning:
```
[ 5%] Linking Static Library ==> main/libmain.javascript.opt.bc
shared:WARNING: Assuming object file output in the absence of `-c`, based on output filename. Please add with `-c` or `-r` to avoid this warning
Ranlib Library ==> main/libmain.javascript.opt.bc
/opt/emsdk/upstream/bin/llvm-ranlib: error: unable to load 'main/libmain.javascript.opt.bc': file too small to be an archive
```
As advised on emscripten-core/emscripten#9806, we should be using
`emar` here to create the static library and not `emcc`.
This was apparently done to workaround Emscripten issues in the past,
but evidently this is no longer necessary.
The rest of the `env` redefinitions should probably be re-assessed
against the current state of Emscripten.
Fixes#33374.
Since most browsers no longer allow making async requests from a page
loaded from `file://`, we now need a proper HTTP server to load the
exported HTML5 game.
This should also allow us to get the debugger to work over a WebSocket
connection.
The description appears when hovering over the one-click-deploy button (top-right). This information helps the user distinguish between their devices if multiple are connected or if the same device is connected by both usb and tcpip (two entries in the list for the same device).
Avoid using adb reverse if deploying with adb tcpip.
This still can fail if the user is attempting to debug over usb and has connected their device over BOTH usb and tcpip. I'm not sure how we would detect that problem in advance though.
- Add or remove the necessary subdirectorires to the includes to remove
dependency on the editor directory being in the build's include path.
- Ensure includes in modified files conform to style guideline.
- Remove editor from the build include path.
A better fix would be to make Godot's export code properly parse the
tag over multiple lines (and maybe even use XMLParser instead of doing
it ad-hoc?).
As for the APK names, we could alternatively pick the first .apk found
in the `debug` and `release` folders without expecting a specific name.
Fixes#32414.
Example: To generate for the `release` build target and for the `armv7`, `arm64v8` and `x86` architectures, run the commands:
```
cd godot
scons -j4 platform=android target=release android_arch=armv7
scons -j4 platform=android target=release android_arch=arm64v8
scons -j4 platform=android target=release android_arch=x86
cd platform/android/java
./gradlew generateGodotTemplates
```
Notes:
- The generated build templates will be located in the `godot/bin` directory (i.e: `android_debug.apk`, `android_release.apk`, `android_source.zip`).
- The gradle command will only generate templates for the target(s) with available native shared libraries. For example, running the commands above will only generate the `android_release.apk` and `android_source.zip` files.
To delete the generated artifacts, the following commands can be used:
```
cd platform/android/java
./gradlew cleanGodotTemplates
```
Fixes#32168.
Previously we were returning all key up and key down messages as unhandled to the OS. This was resulting in crashes on certain keypresses (left cursor), for undetermined reason.
This PR defaults all key up and keydown messages to be returned as handled by Godot, except those explicitly coded as exceptions (currently volume keys only).
This fades out messages originating from the editor to make messages
printed by the project stand out more.
This also tweaks wording in some editor messages for consistency.
The application module `app` serves double duties of providing the prebuilt Godot binaries ('android_debug.apk', 'android_release.apk') and the Godot custom build template ('android_source.zip').
The language didn't make it clear that it's installing a *source* template
to the project folder, for later use when compiling custom APKs.
Fixes#28736.
It does check its permission every `vibrate_handheld()` calls.
Vibrate permission is added by checking it on export settings.
And there are some changes for deprecated method.
It had been synced with style changes (spaces -> tabs), not sure why
I accepted to merge it this way back then...
Synced with eb57657f66,
same as before.
Custom-changes will be reapplied in the next commit, if relevant.
So far we left most temporary files lying around, so this attempts to
fix that.
I added a helper method to DirAccess to factor out the boilerplate of
creating a DirAccess, checking if the file exists, remove it or print
an error on failure.
WM_MOUSEWHEEL and WM_MOUSEHWHEEL report mouse coordinates relative to
the screen (see lParam in [1]), rather than to the window like the rest
of the mouse events.
The current code already makes adjustments to take that into account.
However, it only makes the adjustments if the mouse is not captured, and
the coordinates are always relative to the screen regardless of whether
the mouse is captured or not, so let's fix the code to always
consistently apply the adjustments.
This fixes#29559.
[1] - https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/inputdev/wm-mousewheel
As of 3.1 and later, we have too many thirdparty C++ dependencies
and some internal uses of `new` and `delete` too for it to make
sense to build without the STL on Android.
The option has been broken since 3.0, and the "System STL" that we
relied on for basic support of `new` and `delete` is likely to be
dropped from the NDK:
https://android.googlesource.com/platform/ndk/+/ndk-release-r20/docs/BuildSystemMaintainers.md#System-STL
Also added support for SCons project-absolute paths (starting with #) and
warning about duplicates in add_source_files(), and fixed
default_controller_mappings.gen.cpp being included twice after first build
due to *.cpp globbing.
Part of #30270.
It is not supported in Emscripten's `latest-upstream` LLVM backend,
and doesn't seem necessary in the `latest` backend either.
It was initially added in #22857 to solve a compilation error with the latter.
Part of #30270.
Emscripten is apparently changing the variables in its config file,
causing potential breakage of our build system.
Binaries of the latest/latest-upstream releases are located in a
subfolder of BINARYEN_ROOT called emscripten.
Binaries of the other releases (e.g. sdk-1.38.31-64bit) are instead
placed under the EMSCRIPTEN_ROOT folder.
This PR checks if BINARYEN_ROOT has a subfolder called emscripten, if
that does not exists, it falls back to checking the EMSCRIPTEN_ROOT.
This way we give precedence to the new releases, given that activating
multiple releases sequentially might result in having mismatching
BINARYEN_ROOT and EMSCRIPTEN_ROOT.
For clarity, assign-to-release idiom for PoolVector::Read/Write
replaced with a function call.
Existing uses replaced (or removed if already handled by scope)
Currently, the console appears when running OS.execute in an exported project,
but not in the editor. This change prevents it from appearing in either.
Only affects console applications.
The basic point is as in 2.1 (appending the PCK into the executable), but this implementation also patches a dedicated section in the ELF/PE executable so that it matches the appended data perfectly.
The usage of integer types is simplified in existing code; namely, using plain `int` for small quantities.
It's the recommended way to set those, and is more portable
(automatically prepends -D for GCC/Clang and /D for MSVC).
We still use CPPFLAGS for some pre-processor flags which are not
defines.