Mercurial > pidgin.yaz
view src/mediastreamer/g711common.h @ 12116:e75ef7aa913e
[gaim-migrate @ 14416]
" This patch implements a replacement for the queuing
system from 1.x. It also obsoletes a previous patch
[#1338873] I submitted to prioritize the unseen states
in gtk conversations.
The attached envelope.png is ripped from the
msgunread.png already included in gaim. It should be
dropped in the pixmaps directory (Makefile.am is
updated accordingly in this patch).
The two separate queuing preferences from 1.x, queuing
messages while away and queuing all new messages (from
docklet), are replaced with a single 3-way preference
for conversations. The new preference is "Hide new IM
conversations". This preference can be set to never,
away and always.
When a gtk conversation is created, it may be placed in
a hidden conversation window instead of being placed
normally. This decision is based upon the preference
and possibly the away state of the account the
conversation is being created for. This *will* effect
conversations the user explicitly requests to be
created, so in these cases the caller must be sure to
present the conversation to the user, using
gaim_gtkconv_present_conversation(). This is done
already in gtkdialogs.c which handles creating
conversations requested by the user from gaim proper
(menus, double-clicking on budy in blist, etc.).
The main advantage to not queuing messages is that the
conversations exist, the message is written to the
conversation (and logged if appropriate) and the unseen
state is set on the conversation. This means no
additional features are needed to track whether there
are queued messages or not, just use the unseen state
on conversations.
Since conversations may not be visible (messages
"queued"), gaim proper needs some notification that
there are messages waiting. I opted for a menutray icon
that shows up when an im conversation has an unseen
message. Clicking this icon will focus (and show if
hidden) the first conversation with an unseen message.
This is essentially the same behavior of the docklet in
cvs right now, except that the icon is only visible
when there is a conversation with an unread message.
The api that is added is flexible enough to allow
either the docklet or the new blist menutray icon to be
visible for conversations of any/all types and for
unseen messages >= any state. Currently they are set to
only IM conversations and only unseen states >= TEXT
(system messages and no log messages will not trigger
blinking the docklet or showing the blist tray icon),
but these could be made preferences relatively easily
in the future. Other plugins could probably benefit as
well: gaim_gtk_conversations_get_first_unseen().
There is probably some limit to comment size, so I'll
stop rambling now. If anyone has more
questions/comments, catch me in #gaim, here or on
gaim-devel."
committer: Tailor Script <tailor@pidgin.im>
author | Luke Schierer <lschiere@pidgin.im> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 16 Nov 2005 18:17:01 +0000 |
parents | e67993da8a22 |
children |
line wrap: on
line source
/* * PCM - A-Law conversion * Copyright (c) 2000 by Abramo Bagnara <abramo@alsa-project.org> * * Wrapper for linphone Codec class by Simon Morlat <simon.morlat@free.fr> */ static inline int val_seg(int val) { int r = 0; val >>= 7; if (val & 0xf0) { val >>= 4; r += 4; } if (val & 0x0c) { val >>= 2; r += 2; } if (val & 0x02) r += 1; return r; } /* * s16_to_alaw() - Convert a 16-bit linear PCM value to 8-bit A-law * * s16_to_alaw() accepts an 16-bit integer and encodes it as A-law data. * * Linear Input Code Compressed Code * ------------------------ --------------- * 0000000wxyza 000wxyz * 0000001wxyza 001wxyz * 000001wxyzab 010wxyz * 00001wxyzabc 011wxyz * 0001wxyzabcd 100wxyz * 001wxyzabcde 101wxyz * 01wxyzabcdef 110wxyz * 1wxyzabcdefg 111wxyz * * For further information see John C. Bellamy's Digital Telephony, 1982, * John Wiley & Sons, pps 98-111 and 472-476. */ static inline unsigned char s16_to_alaw(int pcm_val) { int mask; int seg; unsigned char aval; if (pcm_val >= 0) { mask = 0xD5; } else { mask = 0x55; pcm_val = -pcm_val; if (pcm_val > 0x7fff) pcm_val = 0x7fff; } if (pcm_val < 256) aval = pcm_val >> 4; else { /* Convert the scaled magnitude to segment number. */ seg = val_seg(pcm_val); aval = (seg << 4) | ((pcm_val >> (seg + 3)) & 0x0f); } return aval ^ mask; } /* * alaw_to_s16() - Convert an A-law value to 16-bit linear PCM * */ static inline int alaw_to_s16(unsigned char a_val) { int t; int seg; a_val ^= 0x55; t = a_val & 0x7f; if (t < 16) t = (t << 4) + 8; else { seg = (t >> 4) & 0x07; t = ((t & 0x0f) << 4) + 0x108; t <<= seg -1; } return ((a_val & 0x80) ? t : -t); } /* * s16_to_ulaw() - Convert a linear PCM value to u-law * * In order to simplify the encoding process, the original linear magnitude * is biased by adding 33 which shifts the encoding range from (0 - 8158) to * (33 - 8191). The result can be seen in the following encoding table: * * Biased Linear Input Code Compressed Code * ------------------------ --------------- * 00000001wxyza 000wxyz * 0000001wxyzab 001wxyz * 000001wxyzabc 010wxyz * 00001wxyzabcd 011wxyz * 0001wxyzabcde 100wxyz * 001wxyzabcdef 101wxyz * 01wxyzabcdefg 110wxyz * 1wxyzabcdefgh 111wxyz * * Each biased linear code has a leading 1 which identifies the segment * number. The value of the segment number is equal to 7 minus the number * of leading 0's. The quantization interval is directly available as the * four bits wxyz. * The trailing bits (a - h) are ignored. * * Ordinarily the complement of the resulting code word is used for * transmission, and so the code word is complemented before it is returned. * * For further information see John C. Bellamy's Digital Telephony, 1982, * John Wiley & Sons, pps 98-111 and 472-476. */ static inline unsigned char s16_to_ulaw(int pcm_val) /* 2's complement (16-bit range) */ { int mask; int seg; unsigned char uval; if (pcm_val < 0) { pcm_val = 0x84 - pcm_val; mask = 0x7f; } else { pcm_val += 0x84; mask = 0xff; } if (pcm_val > 0x7fff) pcm_val = 0x7fff; /* Convert the scaled magnitude to segment number. */ seg = val_seg(pcm_val); /* * Combine the sign, segment, quantization bits; * and complement the code word. */ uval = (seg << 4) | ((pcm_val >> (seg + 3)) & 0x0f); return uval ^ mask; } /* * ulaw_to_s16() - Convert a u-law value to 16-bit linear PCM * * First, a biased linear code is derived from the code word. An unbiased * output can then be obtained by subtracting 33 from the biased code. * * Note that this function expects to be passed the complement of the * original code word. This is in keeping with ISDN conventions. */ static inline int ulaw_to_s16(unsigned char u_val) { int t; /* Complement to obtain normal u-law value. */ u_val = ~u_val; /* * Extract and bias the quantization bits. Then * shift up by the segment number and subtract out the bias. */ t = ((u_val & 0x0f) << 3) + 0x84; t <<= (u_val & 0x70) >> 4; return ((u_val & 0x80) ? (0x84 - t) : (t - 0x84)); }