These examples have not been ported. In addition, they are also not very
useful these days, as the demo application offers a much nicer view to
view images from a sensor.
When drivers signal that an action is completed, they might be still in the
middle of a SSM and so its callback might not be called properly as part of
the completion.
This could make impossible to chain operations like open->enroll/list with
some drivers (hey, synaptics, I'm looking at you!) when the next operation
is called from the GAsyncReadyCallback of the previous call.
To avoid this to happen, ensure that when a driver completes an operation,
we handle the notification to the caller in a next idle iteration, not to
end up in a possible broken state.
Abstract this by using a function that handles the task return for each
used task type to avoid duplicating similar functions doing all the same
thing
The tests cannot work without the introspection bindings. So put them
into a corresponding if branch and also add the correct dependency on
libfprint_typelib for them to be run.
We are actually using the cancel idle source in case the device supports
cancellation, so only connect to the cancellable in such case, and use an
utility function to do it and disconnect and reset the state everywhere.
fpi_do_movement_estimation is always called with num_stripes set to the
length of the list. Rather than using the passed value, assume we should
consume all stripes from the list.
Closes: #132
As the driver is not a normal image device, we need to add a custom
script to test it. Note that the ioctl dump must also be manually
modified unfortunately as the state is tracked incorrectly for the
device by umockdev-record.
This changes the cancellation logic a bit to ensure we always deactivate
the device (equivalent to the AWAIT_OFF state in the driver). All
commands except for the deactivation command should be cancelled when an
operation is stopped, this is to ensure that the LED is turned off at
the end of an operation.
This allows us to properly extract metadata for prints that are stored
on the device. We could for example delete the oldest prints first with
this information.
Heavily modified by Benjamin Berg <bberg@redhat.com> to port it to the
new libfprint API and adjust the coding style to follow more closely
other drivers.
When the device is deactivated while it is still active then the exit SM
needs to be executed from the SM that was active at the time. This is
signalled by is_active being set to FALSE while the active SM completes.
Call m_exit_start in those cases to ensure proper device deactivation.
This driver has a rather odd state machine and also used to mess iwth
the internal state of the image device. This code has been removed, but
is untested unfortunately due to a lack of hardware.
Most likely, this driver is not quite functional currently.
With this script it is possible to test libfprint/fprintd without any
hardware device. The image needs to be provides as a PNG with the alpha
channel storing the print data.
See the comment in the file on how the script can be used.
This is a rewrite of the core based on GObject and Gio. This commit
breaks the build in a lot of ways, but basic functionality will start
working again with the next commits.