There's really no need to allocate 56 MB of image *and* texture data
just to verify the constructor is called. This makes the Emscripten test
OOM and there's really no need for that.
Was postponed in 8168a06bab because the
needed DebugTools::textureSubImage() was not there yet. Now I have (a
simplified version of) it done, so use it.
Same approach as done e.g. in the Ui library -- taking advantage of the
base class already allocating an internal state struct, deriving from it
and putting the state there instead of either having it as a class
member (at the cost of extra header dependency) or as a separate state
struct (at the cost of extra allocation). The only downside is a virtual
destructor in the state struct, but compared to the alternatives that's
completely fine.
So far the Renderer doesn't work with that, and neither the builtin
Vector shaders are be able use it, but gotta start somewhere.
I wanted to have the texture contents tested on ES, but it turns out
that implementing DebugTools::textureSubImage() for arrays is blocked on
another feature I badly need to finish first. Sigh.
Compared to Corrade, the improvement in compile time is about a minute
cumulative across all cores, or about 8 seconds on an 8-core system (~2
minutes before, ~1:52 after). Not bad at all. And this is with a
deprecated build, the non-deprecated build is 1:48 -> 1:41.
So the users don't accidentally create an instance with the processed
format / size being different only to get greeted by a nasty bounds or
format assertion inside flushImage() / doSetImage().
Now it's only allowed to be done by a subclass (such as
DistanceFieldGlyphCacheGL, or, ahem, MagnumFont), and doSetImage()
additionally has an assert to notify the implementer that a subclass
needs to provide its own override.
This also feels kind of messy, honestly. It's as if the
DistanceFieldGlyphCache should never have been a subclass, maybe?
They don't have anything specific to DistanceFieldGlyphCacheGL and on
the other hand contain special-casing for Luminance vs Red on ES2 that's
specific to GlyphCacheGL internals.
Additionally, in DistanceFieldGlyphCacheGL the code could assume that
the pixel format is either R8 with EXT_texture_rg present or RGBA8
without, here it has to check for EXT_texture_rg presence as
GlyphCacheGL can use R8 even without EXT_texture_rg.
Like with TextureTools::DistanceField, to make room for non-GL
implementations. Old names are deprecated aliases, same for headers. The
only remaining bit in the Text library is the Renderer class, but for
that one I first need to invent a non-shitty API so I can just deprecate
the old thing as a whole and create something reasonable from scratch in
RendererGL.
The internal GL texture format (especially the R8 vs Luminance mess on
ES2) is now considered an implementation detail and shouldn't affect
common use in any way.
The format is now required always, in order to prepare for use cases
where colored glyphs are a thing as well. Additionally, to match the
recent change in AbstractGlyphCache, the processed format is specified
separately, allowing the input and processed formats to be decoupled.
Which ultimately fixes the regression on ES2 and WebGL 1 where it was no
longer possible to call font.fillyGlyphCache() on a
DistanceFieldGlyphCache.
Also, as there's now a generic format on input, another ES2-specific
issue is now fixed as well, in particular a case where a GL error
would be emitted on drivers with EXT_texture_storage because an unsized
format is passed to setStorage(). This was a problem since a long time
ago, but I ignored it because it didn't affect WebGL 1 and all drivers
that exposed EXT_texture_storage exposed EXT_texture_rg, effectively
circumventing this issue. Or so I think, at least.
The constructors taking either a GL::TextureFormat or no format at all
are now deprecated aliases to the new functionality.
And thus the DistanceFieldGlyphCache subclass as well. The
deinlined destructor wasn't really needed as the GL::Texture has its
destructor deinlined as well, so it wouldn't cause too much extra work
for the compiler to have it implicit.
Also, I suspect the destructor was just a leftover from when there was
no AbstractGlyphCache base.
The class now supports incremental filling, multiple fonts, texture
arrays, removes all reliance on STL containers and is finally properly
documented.
To avoid complete breakage of every use, as much as possible was kept as
deprecated APIs -- in particular the reserve() with the nasty
std::vectors, the insert() that assumes a 2D cache and a single font
and textureSize() that returns a 2D vector. Those behave the same as
before, but will assert if the cache is an array or contains more than
one font.
On the other hand, begin() / end() access with std::unordered_map iterators
(ew!) was removed as the internals simply aren't a hashmap anymore. The
image() that returned an Image2D is now used to fill the glyph cache
instead of querying its potentially processed contents, and returns a
MutableImageView3D. I considered keeping it and adding sourceImage()
instead, but such naming turned out to be too inconsistent. For querying
processed image data (such as with the distance field cache) there's a
new processedImage() query, guarded by new GlyphCacheFeature bits -- if
both ImageProcessing and ProcessedImageDownload is set, it can be used
to retrieve the processed image (so, similar as ImageDownload was
before), and if neither is set, the cache contents are queryable
directly through image(), without needing any special support from
the GPU API.
Existing code is updated only in the minimal way possible to ensure that
no serious breakage was introduced by reimplementing the deprecated APIs
on top of the new backend. Porting away from deprecated APIs will be
done in next commits. The GlyphCache and DistanceFieldGlyphCache have
their public API kept intact for now, as a similar rework will be needed
for them as well.
Additionally, the MagnumFont and MagnumFontConverter plugins aren't
compiling yet as they require substantial changes to deal with the new
glyph cache features. That is not the case with other plugins in the
magnum-plugins repository tho, for those the backwards compatibility
"just works". On the other hand, since layout of the AbstractGlyphChange
changed, I'm bumping the AbstractFont plugin interface version to
force-trigger a rebuild of dependent projects. Because I ran a stale
magnum-player binary, it worked without crashing or GL errors but just
didn't show ANY text whatsoever due to ABI differences, and I wasted
some precious minutes before realizing that a simple rebuild would fix
it.
About time this got done. This also has an XFAIL for the case where a
distance field image is processed with an offset, have to fix the
underlying issue in TextureTools first.
Also added a range assertion for the distance field image setter to
match what the abstract base does, together with a corresponding getter.
Allows the Font and FontConverter plugins be built without TARGET_GL
enabled. That was the last piece missing for making the magnum-plugins
repo completely GL-free.
There will be numerous additions to this one so it made sense to make it
a static library instead of a header-only library. That also allows
CMake users to just link to Magnum::OpenGLTester instead of going
through the pain of a huge branching in order to find a correct
windowless application just to run their tests. It could have been done
even without the static library using a INTERFACE target, but that
wouldn't work on CMake < 3.0 (which, unfortunately, quite a few people
are still stuck with).
Unfortunately it's already heavily used elsewhere so I had to go through
the pain of deprecating the old implementation. The old implementation
was header-only so it can't be just typedef'd to the new one as there
would be linker failures. So the old header is just kept as it was, with
only the macros reduced.
I wanted to preserve the parameter-less constructor of tests, but WINAPI
requires fairly ugly entagled set of functions, passing HWND around,
which required storing it in a global var and hoping it is properly
initialized when querying it for it to be passed to application
constructor.
When this was done, it was now fairly easy to support passing also
argv/argc to application constructor, which in the future will enable
selective disabling of extensions for even better test coverage.
This however needed slightly different main() function and thus we now
have MAGNUM_GL_TEST_MAIN() instead of CORRADE_TEST_MAIN(). Using the
latter will result in an assert inside std::optional.
The only places where they aren't absolute are:
- when header is included from corresponding source file
- when including headers which are not part of final installation (e.g.
test-specific configuration, headers from Implementation/)
Everything what was in src/ is now in src/Corrade, everything from
src/Plugins is now in src/MagnumPlugins, everything from external/ is in
src/MagnumExternal. Added new CMakeLists.txt file and updated the other
ones for the moves, no other change was made. If MAGNUM_BUILD_DEPRECATED
is set, everything compiles and installs like previously except for the
plugins, which are now in MagnumPlugins and not in Magnum/Plugins.
Encourages vectorization and generic usage even more. Some functions
were rewritten to make use of the new features, resulting in shorter and
more readable code. This also fixes the annoying naming collision with
WINAPI Rectangle() function.
The old Rectangle is now subclass of Range2D, is marked as deprecated
and will be removed in future release.
The testing is now slightly more sloppy due to inability to not pass any
Font or GlyphCache object. But it is actually better from user point of
view, as it is now impossible to do that by accident.