Commit Graph

4 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Robert Bragg
af7398788a remove internal_format and redundant error arguments
Texture allocation is now consistently handled lazily such that the
internal format can now be controlled using
cogl_texture_set_components() and cogl_texture_set_premultiplied()
before allocating the texture with cogl_texture_allocate(). This means
that the internal_format arguments to texture constructors are now
redundant and since most of the texture constructors now can't ever fail
the error arguments are also redundant. This now means we no longer
use CoglPixelFormat in the public api for describing the internal format
of textures which had been bad solution originally due to how specific
CoglPixelFormat is which is missleading when we don't support such
explicit control over the internal format.

Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
(cherry picked from commit 99a53c82e9ab0a1e5ee35941bf83dc334b1fbe87)

Note: there are numerous API changes for functions currently marked
as 'unstable' which we don't think are in use by anyone depending on
a stable 1.x api. Compared to the original patch though this avoids
changing the cogl_texture_rectangle_new_with_size() api which we know
is used by Mutter.
2014-01-09 15:49:47 +00:00
Robert Bragg
6436cd073d Declare interface types as void and remove cast macros
This declares the interface types CoglFramebuffer, CoglBuffer,
CoglTexture, CoglMetaTexture and CoglPrimitiveTexture as void when
including the public cogl.h header so that users don't have to use lots
of C type casts between instance types and interface types.

This also removes all of the COGL_XYZ() type cast macros since they do
nothing more than compile time type casting but it's less readable if
you haven't seen that coding pattern before.

Unlike with gobject based apis that use per-type macros for casting and
performing runtime type checking we instead prefer to do our runtime
type checking internally within the front-end public apis when objects
are passed into Cogl. This greatly reduces the verbosity for users of
the api and may help reduce the chance of excessive runtime type
checking that can sometimes be a problem.

(cherry picked from commit 248a76f5eac7e5ae4fb45208577f9a55360812a7)

Since we can't break the 1.x api this version of the patch actually
defines compatible NOP macros within deprecated/cogl-type-casts.h
2013-11-27 19:33:44 +00:00
Neil Roberts
fc86d0e12e win32: Minor build fixes for building for win32
This fixes some minor errors and warnings that were preventing Cogl
building with mingw32:

• cogl-framebuffer-gl.c was not including cogl-texture-private.h.
  Presumably something else ends up including that when building for
  GLX.

• The WGL winsys was not including cogl-error-private.h

• A call to strsplit in the WGL winsys was wrong.

• For some reason the test-wrap-rectangle-textures test was trying to
  include the GDKPixbuf header.

Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>

(cherry picked from commit 5380343399f834d9f96ca3b137d49c9c2193900a)
2013-02-21 15:20:55 +00:00
Neil Roberts
1e6ec66330 Add a conformance test for some wrap modes on a rectangle texture
This adds a conformance test which renders a rectangle texture using
the two wrap modes clamp-to-edge and repeat. It then verifies that the
correct region of the texture is drawn for the texture coordinates
that are > 1.0.

The test currently always fails. The cogl_framebuffer_draw_rectangle
function is documented to always take normalized texture coordinates
regardless of the coordinate system of the texture. This works
correctly if all of the texture coordinates are in the range [0.0,1.0]
because cogl-primitives uses a different code path in that case.
However if the multiple-quad code path is taken then the coordinates
actually need to un-normalized for it to work.

There is a comment in cogl_meta_texture_foreach_in_region() which
implies that the incoming coordinates should always be normalized.
The documentation for the callback says that the resulting sub-texture
coordinates will always be in the coordinate system of the low-level
texture. However it doesn't work out like this because the meta
texture function uses the span iterating function which always returns
normalized coordinates. It looks like there needs to be some more
conversions going on somewhere.

Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>

(cherry picked from commit d2059bb32b8015060e10f41dbbb68d4230b47ddb)
2013-01-22 17:48:18 +00:00