The current process could be waited both by run_file_handler() and
file_handler_stop().
To avoid the race condition, wait the process without closing, then
close with mutex locked.
There were two versions: process_wait() and process_wait_noclose().
Expose a single version with a flag (it was already implemented that way
internally).
The function process_wait() returned a bool (true if the process
terminated successfully) and provided the exit code via an output
parameter exit_code.
But the returned value was always equivalent to exit_code == 0, so just
return the exit code instead.
On Linux, waitpid() both waits for the process to terminate and reaps it
(closes its handle). On Windows, these actions are separated into
WaitForSingleObject() and CloseHandle().
Expose these actions separately, so that it is possible to send a signal
to a process while waiting for its termination without race condition.
This allows to wait for server termination normally, but kill the
process without race condition if it is not terminated after some delay.
The header scrcpy.h is intended to be the "public" API. It should not
depend on other internal headers.
Therefore, declare all required structs in this header and adapt
internal code.
The verbosity was set either to info (in release mode) or debug (in
debug mode).
Add a command-line argument to change it, so that users can enable debug
logs using the release:
scrcpy -Vdebug
The platform-specific code for net.c was implemented in sys/*/net.c.
But the differences are quite limited, so use ifdef-blocks in the single
net.c instead.