Bug #1460 - Handling of flags in cogl_material_set_color
Cogl automatically enables/disables blending based on whether the source color
has an alhpa < 1.0, or if any textures with an alpha component are in use, but
it wasn't doing it quite right.
At the same time I removed some of the dirty flags which on second thought
are nothing more than micro-optimsations that only helped clutter the code.
thanks to Owen Taylor for reporting the bug
Since the CoglMatrix type was added for supporting texture matrices recently
it made sense to be consistent accross the Cogl API and use the Cogl type
over the GL style GLfloat m[16] arrays.
cogl_wrap_glActiveTexture needs to call the GL version of
glActiveTexture otherwise the subsequent calls to glBindTexture will
all be using texture unit 0. This fixes test-cogl-multitexture.
Previously the texture unit settings were stored in growable GArrays
and every time a new texture unit was encountered it would expand the
arrays. However the array wasn't copied when stored in a
CoglGles2WrapperSettings struct so all settings had the same
array. This meant that it wouldn't detect that a different program is
needed if a texture unit is disabled or enabled.
The texture unit settings arrays are all now a fixed size and the
enabledness of each unit is stored in a bit mask. Therefore the
settings can just be copied around by assignment as before.
This puts a limit on the number of texture units accessible by Cogl
but I think it is worth it to make the code simpler and more
efficient. The material API already poses a limit on the number of
texture units it can use.
COGL types should be registered inside the GType system, for
bindings and type checking inside properties and signals.
CoglHandle is a boxed type with a ref+unref semantics; slightly evil
from a bindings perspective (we cannot associate custom data to it),
but better than nothing.
The rest of the exposed types are enumerations or bitmasks.
The COGL_DEFINE_HANDLE macro generates a cogl_is_<type> function
as well, to check whether a CoglHandle opaque pointer is of type
<type>.
The handle for CoglMaterial does not export cogl_is_material() in
its installed header.
cogl_paint_init was a bit too miscellaneous; it mainly cleared the color, depth
and stencil buffers but arbitrarily it also disabled fogging and lighting.
It no longer disables lighting, since we know Cogl never enables lighting and
disabling of fog is now handled with a seperate function.
Since I noticed cogl_set_fog was taking a density argument documented as
"Ignored" I've also added a mode argument to cogl_set_fog which exposes the
exponential fog modes which can make use of the density.
All GL functions that are defined in a version later than 1.1 need to
be called through cogl_get_proc_address because the Windows GL DLL
does not export them to directly link against.
The main COGL header file is generated at configure time. If something
changes in the template, though, the file will not be regenerated.
Adding cogl.h to the BUILT_SOURCES list will allow the regeneration to
happen.
This hides a number of internal structs and enums from the docs, and moves
some functions to more appropriate sections as well as misc description
updates (mostly for the vertex buffer api)
Fixes some blending issues when using color arrays since we were
conflicting with the cogl_enable state + fixes a texture layer
validation bug.
Adds a basic textured triangle to test-vertex-buffer-contiguous.
When the quad log contains multiple textures (such as when a sliced
texture is drawn) it dispatches the log with multiple calls to
flush_quad_batch and walks a pointer along the list of vertices.
However this pointer was being incremented by only one vertex so the
next quad would be drawn with three of the vertices from the last
quad.
The quad drawing code keeps track of the number of texture units that
have the tex coord array enabled so that in the next call it can
disabled any that are no longer enabled. However it was using 'i+1' as
the count but 'i' is already set to 'n_layers' from the previous for
loop.
Therefore it was disabling an extra texture unit. This doesn't
normally matter but it was causing GLES 2 to pointlessly realize an
extra unit.
- In cogl-material.h it directly sets the values of the
CoglMaterialLayerCombineFunc to some GL_* constants. However these
aren't defined in GLES 2 beacuse it has no fixed function texture
combining. Instead the CGL_* versions are now used. cogl-defines.h
now sets these to either the GL_* version if it is available,
otherwise it directly uses the number.
- Under GLES 2 cogl-material.c needs to access the CoglTexture struct
so it needs to include cogl-texture-private.h
- There are now #define's in cogl-gles2-wrapper.h to remap the GL
function names to the wrapper names. These are disabled in
cogl-gles2-wrapper.c by defining COGL_GLES2_WRAPPER_NO_REMAP.
- Added missing wrappers for glLoadMatrixf and glMaterialfv.
- Renamed the TexEnvf wrapper to TexEnvi because the latter is used
instead from the material API.
Cogl previously tried to cache the currently bound texture when
drawing through the material API to avoid excessive GL calls. However,
a few other places in Cogl and Clutter rebind the texture as well so
this can cause problems.
This was causing shaped windows to fail in Mutter because
ClutterGLXTexturePixmap was binding a different texture to update it
while the second texture unit was still active which meant the mask
texture would not be selected when the shaped window was drawn
subsequent times.
Ideally we would fix this by providing a wrapper around glBindTexture
which would affect the cached value. The cache would also have to be
cleared if a selected texture was deleted.
This tries to make a number of files more comparable with the intention of
moving some code into cogl/common/
Files normalized:
cogl.c
cogl-context.c
cogl-context.h
cogl-texture.c
Someone not sure which cogl_color_set_from_* version is "best" may use
set_from_4d because taking doubles implies higher precision. Currently
it doesn't have any advantage.
This makes it consistent with cogl_rectangle_with_{multi,}texture_coords.
Notably the reason cogl_rectangle_with_{multi,}texture_coords wasn't changed
instead is that the former approach lets you describe back facing rectangles.
(though technically you could pass negative width/height values to achieve
this; it doesn't seem as neat.)
The code is #if 0 guarded, but when uncommented it outlines all drawn
rectangles with an un-blended red, green or blue border. This may e.g. help
with debugging texture slicing issues or blending issues, plus it looks quite
cool.
Bug 1349 - Using the anchor point to set the scale center is messy
The branch adds an extra center point for scaling which can be used
for example to set a scale about the center without affecting the
position of the actor.
The scale center can be specified as a unit offset from the origin or
as a gravity. If specified as a gravity it will be stored as a
fraction of the actor's size so that the position will track when the
actor changes size.
The anchor point and rotation centers have been modified so they can
be set with a gravity in the same way. However, only the Z rotation
exposes a property to set using a gravity because the other two
require a Z coordinate which doesn't make sense to interpret as a
fraction of the actor's width or height.
Conflicts:
clutter/clutter-actor.c
When drawing a texture with waste in _cogl_multitexture_unsliced_quad
it scales the texture coordinates so that the waste is not
included. However the formula was the wrong way around so it was
calculating as if the texture coordinates are ordered x1,x2,y1,y2 but
it is actually x1,y1,x2,y2.
When the texture is sliced it drops back to a fallback function and
passes it the texture coordinates from the rectangle. However if no
tex coords are given it would crash. Now it passes the default
0.0->1.0 tex coords instead.
If no texture coordinates are given then texture_unsliced_quad tries
to generate its own coordinates. However it also tries to read the
texture coordinates to check if they are in [0.0,1.0] range so it will
crash before it reaches that.
* generic-actor-clone:
Remove CloneTexture from the API
[tests] Clean up the Clone interactive test
Rename ActorClone to Clone/2
Rename ActorClone to Clone/1
Improves the unit test to verify more awkward scaling and some corresponding fixes
Implements a generic ClutterActorClone that doesn't need fbos.
Conflicts:
clutter/cogl/gl/cogl-texture.c
clutter/cogl/gles/cogl-primitives.c
* cogl-material:
clutter-{clone-,}texture weren't updating their material opacity.
Updates GLES1 support for CoglMaterial
Normalizes gl vs gles code in preperation for synching material changes
Removes cogl_blend_func and cogl_alpha_func
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl
[cogl-material] Restore the GL_TEXTURE_ENV_MODE after material_rectangle
[cogl-material] Make the user_tex_coords parameter of _rectangle const
[test-cogl-material] Remove return value from material_rectangle_paint
Add cogl-material.h and cogl-matrix.h to libclutterinclude_HEADERS
[cogl-material] improvements for cogl_material_rectangle
[cogl-material] Adds a cogl_material_set_color function
[cogl-material] Some improvements for how we sync CoglMaterial state with OpenGL
[cogl-material] Converts clutter-texture/clutter-clone-texture to the material API
[doc] Hooks up cogl-material reference documentation
Updates previous GLES multi-texturing code to use CoglMaterial
Adds a CoglMaterial abstraction, which includes support for multi-texturing
[doc] Hooks up cogl-matrix reference documentation
Adds CoglMatrix utility code
[tests] Adds an interactive unit test for multi-texturing
[multi-texturing] This adds a new cogl_multi_texture API for GL,GLES1 + GLES2
This updates cogl/gles in line with the integration of CoglMaterial throughout
Cogl that has been done for cogl/gl.
Note: This is still buggy, but at least it builds again and test-actors works.
Some GLES2 specific changes were made, but these haven't been tested yet.
This changes all GLES code to use the OpenGL function names instead of
the cogl_wrap_* names. For GLES2 we now define the OpenGL name to point
to the wrapper, as opposed to defining the wrapper to point to the
OpenGL name for GLES1.
I've also done a quick pass through gl/cogl.c and gles/cogl.c to make
them more easily comparable. (most of the code is now identical)
The GL blend function and alpha function are now controlled by the material
code, and even internally Cogl should now be using the material API when
it needs control of these.