Minor updates to the resource_manager example.

This commit is contained in:
David Reid
2020-07-23 17:01:04 +10:00
parent 83178a1dfc
commit 24a1108834
2 changed files with 9 additions and 5 deletions
+8 -4
View File
@@ -16,7 +16,7 @@ In this example we show how you can create a data source, mix them with other da
threads to manage internally and how to implement your own custom job thread.
*/
#define MA_NO_ENGINE /* We're intentionally not using the ma_engine API here. */
#define MA_IMPLEMENTATION
#define MINIAUDIO_IMPLEMENTATION
#include "../../miniaudio.h"
#include "../ma_engine.h"
@@ -149,7 +149,11 @@ int main(int argc, char** argv)
return -1;
}
/* Now that we have a resource manager we can set up our custom job thread. */
/*
Now that we have a resource manager we can set up our custom job thread. This is optional. Normally when doing self-managed job threads
you would set the internal job thread count to zero. We're doing both internal and self-managed job threads in this example just for
demonstration purposes.
*/
ma_thread_create(&jobThread, ma_thread_priority_default, 0, custom_job_thread, &resourceManager);
/* Create each data source from the resource manager. Note that the caller is the owner. */
@@ -180,7 +184,7 @@ int main(int argc, char** argv)
ma_resource_manager_post_job_quit(&resourceManager);
ma_thread_wait(&jobThread); /* Wait for the custom job thread to finish before uninitializing the resource manager. */
/* Out data sources need to be explicitly uninitialized. ma_resource_manager_uninit() will not do it for us. */
/* Our data sources need to be explicitly uninitialized. ma_resource_manager_uninit() will not do it for us. */
for (iFile = 0; (size_t)iFile < g_dataSourceCount; iFile += 1) {
ma_resource_manager_data_source_uninit(&resourceManager, &g_dataSources[iFile]);
}
@@ -188,7 +192,7 @@ int main(int argc, char** argv)
/* Uninitialize the resource manager after each data source. */
ma_resource_manager_uninit(&resourceManager);
/* We're uninitializing the mixer last, but it doesn't really when it's done, so long as it's after the device has been stopped/uninitialized. */
/* We're uninitializing the mixer last, but it doesn't really matter when it's done, so long as it's after the device has been stopped/uninitialized. */
ma_mixer_uninit(&g_mixer);
return 0;