Deprecated for 2018.04, it's been almost a year since. Whoever is using
Magnum regularly updated already, and who not can always upgrade
gradually (2018.02, 2018.04, 2018.10, 2019.01 etc.).
Due to that, all the tests got skipped on the CI and moreover when ABI
was broken, tests were failing hard due to ABI mismatches with system
installed plugins. No good.
Some variants still need to access the system plugin dir (such as checks
for compressed data), but those are minimal. Sanitized them nevertheless
so a broken system-installed plugin doesn't break the test.
I spent some time trying ForceRenderer3D to produce the same image as
ForceRenderer2D but it *does not want* to show the arrowhead to me, so I
gave up.
At the moment just the GL library itself w/o the tests, and without
backwards compatibility aliases. The following types were left in the
root namespace, despite being in the GL/ directory, as they will get
moved back soon:
* Image, CompressedImage and their dimensional typedefs
* ImageView, CompressedImageView and their dimensional typedefs
* PixelStorage
Not PixelFormat etc., that one will stay in the GL namespace and a
completely new PixelFormat enum will be provided in the root namespace.
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.
Currently just does per-pixel comparison and calculates absolute delta,
failing the comparison if max/mean delta threshold is above specified
values. Useful enough for the case I have right now, might fail in other
case -- but still better than whatever else I was using before :)