I'd like to get mouse movements in high resolution and high framerate on OSX.
"High framerate" = 60 fps or higher (preferably > 120)
"High resolution" = Subpixel values
Problem
I've got an opengl view running at about the monitor refresh rate, so it's ~60 fps. I use the mouse to look around, so I've hidden the mouse cursor and I'm relying on mouse delta values.
The problem is the mouse events come in at much too low framerate, and values are snapped to integer (whole pixels). This causes a "choppy" viewing experience. Here's a visualization of mouse delta values over time:
mouse delta X
^ xx
2 | x x x x xx
| x x x x xx x x x
0 |x-x-x--xx-x-x-xx--x-x----x-xx-x-----> frame
|
-2 |
v
This is a typical (shortened) curve created from the user moving the mouse a little bit to the right. Each x represent the deltaX value for each frame, and since deltaX values are rounded to whole numbers, this graph is actually quite accurate. As we can see, the deltaX value will be 0.000 one frame, and then 1.000 the next, but then it will be 0.000 again, and then 2.000, and then 0.000 again, then 3.000, 0.000, and so on.
This means that the view will rotate 2.000 units one frame, and then rotate 0.000 units the next, and then rotate 3.000 units. This happens while the mouse is being dragged with more or less constant speed. Nedless to say, this looks like crap.
So, how can I 1) increased the event framerate of the mouse? and 2) get subpixel values?
So far
I've tried the following:
- (void)mouseMoved:(NSEvent *)theEvent {
CGFloat dx, dy;
dx = [theEvent deltaX];
dy = [theEvent deltaY];
// ...
actOnMouse(dx,dy);
}
Well, this one was obvious. dx
here is float, but values are always rounded (0.000, 1.000 etc.). This creates the graph above.
So the next step was to try and tap the mouse events before they enter the WindowServer, I thought. So I've created a CGEventTrap:
eventMask = (1 << kCGEventMouseMoved);
eventTap = CGEventTapCreate(kCGHIDEventTap, kCGHeadInsertEventTap,
0, eventMask, myCGEventCallback, NULL);
//...
myCGEventCallback(...){
double dx = CGEventGetDoubleValueField(event, kCGMouseEventDeltaX);
double dy = CGEventGetDoubleValueField(event, kCGMouseEventDeltaY);
}
Still values are n.000
, although I believe the rate of event firing is a little higher. But it it's still not at 60 fps. I still get the chart above.
I've also tried setting the mouse sensitivity really high, and then scale the values down on my side. But it seems OSX adds some sort of acceleration or something—the values get really "unstable" and consequently unusable, and the rate of fire is still too low.
With no luck, I've been starting to follow the mouse events down the rabbit hole, and I've arrived at IOKit. This is scary for me. It's the mad hatter. The Apple documentation gets weird and seems to say "if you're this deep down, all you really need is header files".
So I have been reading header files. And I've found some interesting tidbits.
In <IOKit/hidsystem/IOLLEvent.h>
on line 377 there's this struct:
struct { /* For mouse-down and mouse-up events */
UInt8 subx; /* sub-pixel position for x */
UInt8 suby; /* sub-pixel position for y */
// ...
} mouse;
See, it says sub-pixel position! Ok. Then on line 73 in <IOKit/hidsystem/IOLLParameter.h>
#define kIOHIDPointerResolutionKey "HIDPointerResolution"
Hmm.
All in all, I get the feeling OSX knows about sub-pixel mouse coordinates deep down, and there just has to be a way to read raw mouse movements every frame, but I've just no idea how to get those values.
Questions
Erh, so, what am I asking for?
- Is there a way of getting high framerate mouse events in OSX? (Example code?)
- Is there a way of getting sub-pixel mouse coordinates in OSX? (Example code?)
- Is there a way of reading "raw" mouse deltas every frame? (Ie not rely on an event.)
- Or, how do I get NXEvents or set HIDParameters? Example code? (So I can dig deeper into this on my own...)
(Sorry for long post)