mutter/cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c

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/*
* Cogl
*
This re-licenses Cogl 1.18 under the MIT license Since the Cogl 1.18 branch is actively maintained in parallel with the master branch; this is a counter part to commit 1b83ef938fc16b which re-licensed the master branch to use the MIT license. This re-licensing is a follow up to the proposal that was sent to the Cogl mailing list: http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/cogl/2013-December/001465.html Note: there was a copyright assignment policy in place for Clutter (and therefore Cogl which was part of Clutter at the time) until the 11th of June 2010 and so we only checked the details after that point (commit 0bbf50f905) For each file, authors were identified via this Git command: $ git blame -p -C -C -C20 -M -M10 0bbf50f905..HEAD We received blanket approvals for re-licensing all Red Hat and Collabora contributions which reduced how many people needed to be contacted individually: - http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/cogl/2013-December/001470.html - http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/cogl/2014-January/001536.html Individual approval requests were sent to all the other identified authors who all confirmed the re-license on the Cogl mailinglist: http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/cogl/2014-January As well as updating the copyright header in all sources files, the COPYING file has been updated to reflect the license change and also document the other licenses used in Cogl such as the SGI Free Software License B, version 2.0 and the 3-clause BSD license. This patch was not simply cherry-picked from master; but the same methodology was used to check the source files.
2014-02-21 20:28:54 -05:00
* A Low Level GPU Graphics and Utilities API
*
* Copyright (C) 2008,2009,2010,2013 Intel Corporation.
*
This re-licenses Cogl 1.18 under the MIT license Since the Cogl 1.18 branch is actively maintained in parallel with the master branch; this is a counter part to commit 1b83ef938fc16b which re-licensed the master branch to use the MIT license. This re-licensing is a follow up to the proposal that was sent to the Cogl mailing list: http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/cogl/2013-December/001465.html Note: there was a copyright assignment policy in place for Clutter (and therefore Cogl which was part of Clutter at the time) until the 11th of June 2010 and so we only checked the details after that point (commit 0bbf50f905) For each file, authors were identified via this Git command: $ git blame -p -C -C -C20 -M -M10 0bbf50f905..HEAD We received blanket approvals for re-licensing all Red Hat and Collabora contributions which reduced how many people needed to be contacted individually: - http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/cogl/2013-December/001470.html - http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/cogl/2014-January/001536.html Individual approval requests were sent to all the other identified authors who all confirmed the re-license on the Cogl mailinglist: http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/cogl/2014-January As well as updating the copyright header in all sources files, the COPYING file has been updated to reflect the license change and also document the other licenses used in Cogl such as the SGI Free Software License B, version 2.0 and the 3-clause BSD license. This patch was not simply cherry-picked from master; but the same methodology was used to check the source files.
2014-02-21 20:28:54 -05:00
* Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person
* obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation
* files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without
* restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy,
* modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies
* of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
* furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
*
This re-licenses Cogl 1.18 under the MIT license Since the Cogl 1.18 branch is actively maintained in parallel with the master branch; this is a counter part to commit 1b83ef938fc16b which re-licensed the master branch to use the MIT license. This re-licensing is a follow up to the proposal that was sent to the Cogl mailing list: http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/cogl/2013-December/001465.html Note: there was a copyright assignment policy in place for Clutter (and therefore Cogl which was part of Clutter at the time) until the 11th of June 2010 and so we only checked the details after that point (commit 0bbf50f905) For each file, authors were identified via this Git command: $ git blame -p -C -C -C20 -M -M10 0bbf50f905..HEAD We received blanket approvals for re-licensing all Red Hat and Collabora contributions which reduced how many people needed to be contacted individually: - http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/cogl/2013-December/001470.html - http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/cogl/2014-January/001536.html Individual approval requests were sent to all the other identified authors who all confirmed the re-license on the Cogl mailinglist: http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/cogl/2014-January As well as updating the copyright header in all sources files, the COPYING file has been updated to reflect the license change and also document the other licenses used in Cogl such as the SGI Free Software License B, version 2.0 and the 3-clause BSD license. This patch was not simply cherry-picked from master; but the same methodology was used to check the source files.
2014-02-21 20:28:54 -05:00
* The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
* included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
*
This re-licenses Cogl 1.18 under the MIT license Since the Cogl 1.18 branch is actively maintained in parallel with the master branch; this is a counter part to commit 1b83ef938fc16b which re-licensed the master branch to use the MIT license. This re-licensing is a follow up to the proposal that was sent to the Cogl mailing list: http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/cogl/2013-December/001465.html Note: there was a copyright assignment policy in place for Clutter (and therefore Cogl which was part of Clutter at the time) until the 11th of June 2010 and so we only checked the details after that point (commit 0bbf50f905) For each file, authors were identified via this Git command: $ git blame -p -C -C -C20 -M -M10 0bbf50f905..HEAD We received blanket approvals for re-licensing all Red Hat and Collabora contributions which reduced how many people needed to be contacted individually: - http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/cogl/2013-December/001470.html - http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/cogl/2014-January/001536.html Individual approval requests were sent to all the other identified authors who all confirmed the re-license on the Cogl mailinglist: http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/cogl/2014-January As well as updating the copyright header in all sources files, the COPYING file has been updated to reflect the license change and also document the other licenses used in Cogl such as the SGI Free Software License B, version 2.0 and the 3-clause BSD license. This patch was not simply cherry-picked from master; but the same methodology was used to check the source files.
2014-02-21 20:28:54 -05:00
* THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
* EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
* MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
* NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS
* BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN
* ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN
* CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE
* SOFTWARE.
*
*
*
* Authors:
* Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
* Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>
*/
#ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H
#include "config.h"
#endif
#include <string.h>
#include "cogl-context-private.h"
#include "cogl-util-gl-private.h"
cogl: rename CoglMaterial -> CoglPipeline This applies an API naming change that's been deliberated over for a while now which is to rename CoglMaterial to CoglPipeline. For now the new pipeline API is marked as experimental and public headers continue to talk about materials not pipelines. The CoglMaterial API is now maintained in terms of the cogl_pipeline API internally. Currently this API is targeting Cogl 2.0 so we will have time to integrate it properly with other upcoming Cogl 2.0 work. The basic reasons for the rename are: - That the term "material" implies to many people that they are constrained to fragment processing; perhaps as some kind of high-level texture abstraction. - In Clutter they get exposed by ClutterTexture actors which may be re-inforcing this misconception. - When comparing how other frameworks use the term material, a material sometimes describes a multi-pass fragment processing technique which isn't the case in Cogl. - In code, "CoglPipeline" will hopefully be a much more self documenting summary of what these objects represent; a full GPU pipeline configuration including, for example, vertex processing, fragment processing and blending. - When considering the API documentation story, at some point we need a document introducing developers to how the "GPU pipeline" works so it should become intuitive that CoglPipeline maps back to that description of the GPU pipeline. - This is consistent in terminology and concept to OpenGL 4's new pipeline object which is a container for program objects. Note: The cogl-material.[ch] files have been renamed to cogl-material-compat.[ch] because otherwise git doesn't seem to treat the change as a moving the old cogl-material.c->cogl-pipeline.c and so we loose all our git-blame history.
2010-10-27 13:54:57 -04:00
#include "cogl-pipeline-private.h"
#include "cogl-pipeline-layer-private.h"
#include "cogl-blend-string.h"
#include "cogl-snippet-private.h"
Use the Wayland embedded linked list implementation instead of BSD's This removes cogl-queue.h and adds a copy of Wayland's embedded list implementation. The advantage of the Wayland model is that it is much simpler and so it is easier to follow. It also doesn't require defining a typedef for every list type. The downside is that there is only one list type which is a doubly-linked list where the head has a pointer to both the beginning and the end. The BSD implementation has many more combinations some of which we were taking advantage of to reduce the size of critical structs where we didn't need a pointer to the end of the list. The corresponding changes to uses of cogl-queue.h are: • COGL_STAILQ_* was used for onscreen the list of events and dirty notifications. This makes the size of the CoglContext grow by one pointer. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for fences. • COGL_LIST_* for CoglClosures. In this case the list head now has an extra pointer which means CoglOnscreen will grow by the size of three pointers, but this doesn't seem like a particularly important struct to optimise for size anyway. • COGL_LIST_* was used for the list of foreign GLES2 offscreens. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for the list of sub stacks in a CoglMemoryStack. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the list of layers that haven't had code generated yet while generating a fragment shader for a pipeline. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the pipeline hierarchy in CoglNode. The last part is a bit more controversial because it increases the size of CoglPipeline and CoglPipelineLayer by one pointer in order to have the redundant tail pointer for the list head. Normally we try to be very careful about the size of the CoglPipeline struct. Because CoglPipeline is slice-allocated, this effectively ends up adding two pointers to the size because GSlice rounds up to the size of two pointers. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit 13abf613b15f571ba1fcf6d2eb831ffc6fa31324) Conflicts: cogl/cogl-context-private.h cogl/cogl-context.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c doc/reference/cogl-2.0-experimental/Makefile.am
2013-06-08 18:03:25 -04:00
#include "cogl-list.h"
#ifdef COGL_PIPELINE_FRAGEND_GLSL
#include "cogl-context-private.h"
#include "cogl-object-private.h"
#include "cogl-shader-private.h"
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
#include "cogl-program-private.h"
#include "cogl-pipeline-cache.h"
Add -Wmissing-declarations to maintainer flags and fix problems This option to GCC makes it give a warning whenever a global function is defined without a declaration. This should catch cases were we've defined a function but forgot to put it in a header. In that case it is either only used within one file so we should make it static or we should declare it in a header. The following changes where made to fix problems: • Some functions were made static • cogl-path.h (the one containing the 1.0 API) was split into two files, one defining the functions and one defining the enums so that cogl-path.c can include the enum and function declarations from the 2.0 API as well as the function declarations from the 1.0 API. • cogl2-clip-state has been removed. This only had one experimental function called cogl_clip_push_from_path but as this is unstable we might as well remove it favour of the equivalent cogl_framebuffer_* API. • The GLX, SDL and WGL winsys's now have a private header to define their get_vtable function instead of directly declaring in the C file where it is called. • All places that were calling COGL_OBJECT_DEFINE need to have the cogl_is_whatever function declared so these have been added either as a public function or in a private header. • Some files that were not including the header containing their function declarations have been fixed to do so. • Any unused error quark functions have been removed. If we later want them we should add them back one by one and add a declaration for them in a header. • _cogl_is_framebuffer has been renamed to cogl_is_framebuffer and made a public function with a declaration in cogl-framebuffer.h • Similarly for CoglOnscreen. • cogl_vdraw_indexed_attributes is called cogl_framebuffer_vdraw_indexed_attributes in the header. The definition has been changed to match the header. • cogl_index_buffer_allocate has been removed. This had no declaration and I'm not sure what it's supposed to do. • CoglJournal has been changed to use the internal CoglObject macro so that it won't define an exported cogl_is_journal symbol. • The _cogl_blah_pointer_from_handle functions have been removed. CoglHandle isn't used much anymore anyway and in the few places where it is used I think it's safe to just use the implicit cast from void* to the right type. • The test-utils.h header for the conformance tests explicitly disables the -Wmissing-declaration option using a pragma because all of the tests declare their main function without a header. Any mistakes relating to missing declarations aren't really important for the tests. • cogl_quaternion_init_from_quaternion and init_from_matrix have been given declarations in cogl-quaternion.h Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
2012-03-06 13:21:28 -05:00
#include "cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl-private.h"
#include "cogl-glsl-shader-private.h"
#include <glib.h>
/*
cogl: rename CoglMaterial -> CoglPipeline This applies an API naming change that's been deliberated over for a while now which is to rename CoglMaterial to CoglPipeline. For now the new pipeline API is marked as experimental and public headers continue to talk about materials not pipelines. The CoglMaterial API is now maintained in terms of the cogl_pipeline API internally. Currently this API is targeting Cogl 2.0 so we will have time to integrate it properly with other upcoming Cogl 2.0 work. The basic reasons for the rename are: - That the term "material" implies to many people that they are constrained to fragment processing; perhaps as some kind of high-level texture abstraction. - In Clutter they get exposed by ClutterTexture actors which may be re-inforcing this misconception. - When comparing how other frameworks use the term material, a material sometimes describes a multi-pass fragment processing technique which isn't the case in Cogl. - In code, "CoglPipeline" will hopefully be a much more self documenting summary of what these objects represent; a full GPU pipeline configuration including, for example, vertex processing, fragment processing and blending. - When considering the API documentation story, at some point we need a document introducing developers to how the "GPU pipeline" works so it should become intuitive that CoglPipeline maps back to that description of the GPU pipeline. - This is consistent in terminology and concept to OpenGL 4's new pipeline object which is a container for program objects. Note: The cogl-material.[ch] files have been renamed to cogl-material-compat.[ch] because otherwise git doesn't seem to treat the change as a moving the old cogl-material.c->cogl-pipeline.c and so we loose all our git-blame history.
2010-10-27 13:54:57 -04:00
* GL/GLES compatability defines for pipeline thingies:
*/
/* This might not be defined on GLES */
#ifndef GL_TEXTURE_3D
#define GL_TEXTURE_3D 0x806F
#endif
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
const CoglPipelineFragend _cogl_pipeline_glsl_backend;
typedef struct _UnitState
{
unsigned int sampled:1;
unsigned int combine_constant_used:1;
} UnitState;
Use the Wayland embedded linked list implementation instead of BSD's This removes cogl-queue.h and adds a copy of Wayland's embedded list implementation. The advantage of the Wayland model is that it is much simpler and so it is easier to follow. It also doesn't require defining a typedef for every list type. The downside is that there is only one list type which is a doubly-linked list where the head has a pointer to both the beginning and the end. The BSD implementation has many more combinations some of which we were taking advantage of to reduce the size of critical structs where we didn't need a pointer to the end of the list. The corresponding changes to uses of cogl-queue.h are: • COGL_STAILQ_* was used for onscreen the list of events and dirty notifications. This makes the size of the CoglContext grow by one pointer. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for fences. • COGL_LIST_* for CoglClosures. In this case the list head now has an extra pointer which means CoglOnscreen will grow by the size of three pointers, but this doesn't seem like a particularly important struct to optimise for size anyway. • COGL_LIST_* was used for the list of foreign GLES2 offscreens. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for the list of sub stacks in a CoglMemoryStack. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the list of layers that haven't had code generated yet while generating a fragment shader for a pipeline. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the pipeline hierarchy in CoglNode. The last part is a bit more controversial because it increases the size of CoglPipeline and CoglPipelineLayer by one pointer in order to have the redundant tail pointer for the list head. Normally we try to be very careful about the size of the CoglPipeline struct. Because CoglPipeline is slice-allocated, this effectively ends up adding two pointers to the size because GSlice rounds up to the size of two pointers. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit 13abf613b15f571ba1fcf6d2eb831ffc6fa31324) Conflicts: cogl/cogl-context-private.h cogl/cogl-context.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c doc/reference/cogl-2.0-experimental/Makefile.am
2013-06-08 18:03:25 -04:00
typedef struct _LayerData
{
Use the Wayland embedded linked list implementation instead of BSD's This removes cogl-queue.h and adds a copy of Wayland's embedded list implementation. The advantage of the Wayland model is that it is much simpler and so it is easier to follow. It also doesn't require defining a typedef for every list type. The downside is that there is only one list type which is a doubly-linked list where the head has a pointer to both the beginning and the end. The BSD implementation has many more combinations some of which we were taking advantage of to reduce the size of critical structs where we didn't need a pointer to the end of the list. The corresponding changes to uses of cogl-queue.h are: • COGL_STAILQ_* was used for onscreen the list of events and dirty notifications. This makes the size of the CoglContext grow by one pointer. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for fences. • COGL_LIST_* for CoglClosures. In this case the list head now has an extra pointer which means CoglOnscreen will grow by the size of three pointers, but this doesn't seem like a particularly important struct to optimise for size anyway. • COGL_LIST_* was used for the list of foreign GLES2 offscreens. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for the list of sub stacks in a CoglMemoryStack. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the list of layers that haven't had code generated yet while generating a fragment shader for a pipeline. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the pipeline hierarchy in CoglNode. The last part is a bit more controversial because it increases the size of CoglPipeline and CoglPipelineLayer by one pointer in order to have the redundant tail pointer for the list head. Normally we try to be very careful about the size of the CoglPipeline struct. Because CoglPipeline is slice-allocated, this effectively ends up adding two pointers to the size because GSlice rounds up to the size of two pointers. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit 13abf613b15f571ba1fcf6d2eb831ffc6fa31324) Conflicts: cogl/cogl-context-private.h cogl/cogl-context.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c doc/reference/cogl-2.0-experimental/Makefile.am
2013-06-08 18:03:25 -04:00
CoglList link;
/* Layer index for the for the previous layer. This isn't
necessarily the same as this layer's index - 1 because the
indices can have gaps. If this is the first layer then it will be
-1 */
int previous_layer_index;
CoglPipelineLayer *layer;
Use the Wayland embedded linked list implementation instead of BSD's This removes cogl-queue.h and adds a copy of Wayland's embedded list implementation. The advantage of the Wayland model is that it is much simpler and so it is easier to follow. It also doesn't require defining a typedef for every list type. The downside is that there is only one list type which is a doubly-linked list where the head has a pointer to both the beginning and the end. The BSD implementation has many more combinations some of which we were taking advantage of to reduce the size of critical structs where we didn't need a pointer to the end of the list. The corresponding changes to uses of cogl-queue.h are: • COGL_STAILQ_* was used for onscreen the list of events and dirty notifications. This makes the size of the CoglContext grow by one pointer. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for fences. • COGL_LIST_* for CoglClosures. In this case the list head now has an extra pointer which means CoglOnscreen will grow by the size of three pointers, but this doesn't seem like a particularly important struct to optimise for size anyway. • COGL_LIST_* was used for the list of foreign GLES2 offscreens. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for the list of sub stacks in a CoglMemoryStack. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the list of layers that haven't had code generated yet while generating a fragment shader for a pipeline. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the pipeline hierarchy in CoglNode. The last part is a bit more controversial because it increases the size of CoglPipeline and CoglPipelineLayer by one pointer in order to have the redundant tail pointer for the list head. Normally we try to be very careful about the size of the CoglPipeline struct. Because CoglPipeline is slice-allocated, this effectively ends up adding two pointers to the size because GSlice rounds up to the size of two pointers. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit 13abf613b15f571ba1fcf6d2eb831ffc6fa31324) Conflicts: cogl/cogl-context-private.h cogl/cogl-context.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c doc/reference/cogl-2.0-experimental/Makefile.am
2013-06-08 18:03:25 -04:00
} LayerData;
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
typedef struct
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
{
int ref_count;
GLuint gl_shader;
GString *header, *source;
UnitState *unit_state;
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
/* List of layers that we haven't generated code for yet. These are
in reverse order. As soon as we're about to generate code for
layer we'll remove it from the list so we don't generate it
again */
Use the Wayland embedded linked list implementation instead of BSD's This removes cogl-queue.h and adds a copy of Wayland's embedded list implementation. The advantage of the Wayland model is that it is much simpler and so it is easier to follow. It also doesn't require defining a typedef for every list type. The downside is that there is only one list type which is a doubly-linked list where the head has a pointer to both the beginning and the end. The BSD implementation has many more combinations some of which we were taking advantage of to reduce the size of critical structs where we didn't need a pointer to the end of the list. The corresponding changes to uses of cogl-queue.h are: • COGL_STAILQ_* was used for onscreen the list of events and dirty notifications. This makes the size of the CoglContext grow by one pointer. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for fences. • COGL_LIST_* for CoglClosures. In this case the list head now has an extra pointer which means CoglOnscreen will grow by the size of three pointers, but this doesn't seem like a particularly important struct to optimise for size anyway. • COGL_LIST_* was used for the list of foreign GLES2 offscreens. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for the list of sub stacks in a CoglMemoryStack. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the list of layers that haven't had code generated yet while generating a fragment shader for a pipeline. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the pipeline hierarchy in CoglNode. The last part is a bit more controversial because it increases the size of CoglPipeline and CoglPipelineLayer by one pointer in order to have the redundant tail pointer for the list head. Normally we try to be very careful about the size of the CoglPipeline struct. Because CoglPipeline is slice-allocated, this effectively ends up adding two pointers to the size because GSlice rounds up to the size of two pointers. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit 13abf613b15f571ba1fcf6d2eb831ffc6fa31324) Conflicts: cogl/cogl-context-private.h cogl/cogl-context.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c doc/reference/cogl-2.0-experimental/Makefile.am
2013-06-08 18:03:25 -04:00
CoglList layers;
pipeline-cache: Prune old unused pipelines when the cache gets too big Previously when a pipeline is added to the cache it would never be removed. If the application is generating a lot of unique pipelines this can end up effectively leaking a large number of resources including the GL program objects. Arguably this isn't really a problem because if the application is generating that many unique pipelines then it is doing something wrong anyway. It also implies that it will be recompiling shaders very often so the cache leaking will likely be the least of the problems. This patch makes it keep track of which pipelines in the cache are in use. The cache now returns a struct representing the entry instead of directly returning the pipeline. This entry contains a usage counter which the pipeline backends can use to mark when there is a pipeline alive that is using the cache entry. When the hash table decides that it's a good time to prune some entries, it will make a list of all of the pipelines that are not in use and then remove the least recently used half of the pipelines. That way it is less likely to remove pipelines that the application is actually regenerating often even if they aren't in use all of the time. When the cache is pruned the hash table makes a note of how small the cache could be if it removed all of the unused pipelines. The hash table starts pruning when there are more entries than twice this minimum expected size. The idea is that if that case it hit then the hash table is more than half full of useless pipelines so the application is generating lots of redundant pipelines and it is a good time to remove them. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit c21aac22992bb7fef5a8d0913130b8245e67f2eb) Conflicts: cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-progend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-vertend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-arbfp.c
2013-12-18 10:18:39 -05:00
CoglPipelineCacheEntry *cache_entry;
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
} CoglPipelineShaderState;
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
static CoglUserDataKey shader_state_key;
static void
ensure_layer_generated (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
int layer_num);
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
static CoglPipelineShaderState *
pipeline-cache: Prune old unused pipelines when the cache gets too big Previously when a pipeline is added to the cache it would never be removed. If the application is generating a lot of unique pipelines this can end up effectively leaking a large number of resources including the GL program objects. Arguably this isn't really a problem because if the application is generating that many unique pipelines then it is doing something wrong anyway. It also implies that it will be recompiling shaders very often so the cache leaking will likely be the least of the problems. This patch makes it keep track of which pipelines in the cache are in use. The cache now returns a struct representing the entry instead of directly returning the pipeline. This entry contains a usage counter which the pipeline backends can use to mark when there is a pipeline alive that is using the cache entry. When the hash table decides that it's a good time to prune some entries, it will make a list of all of the pipelines that are not in use and then remove the least recently used half of the pipelines. That way it is less likely to remove pipelines that the application is actually regenerating often even if they aren't in use all of the time. When the cache is pruned the hash table makes a note of how small the cache could be if it removed all of the unused pipelines. The hash table starts pruning when there are more entries than twice this minimum expected size. The idea is that if that case it hit then the hash table is more than half full of useless pipelines so the application is generating lots of redundant pipelines and it is a good time to remove them. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit c21aac22992bb7fef5a8d0913130b8245e67f2eb) Conflicts: cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-progend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-vertend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-arbfp.c
2013-12-18 10:18:39 -05:00
shader_state_new (int n_layers,
CoglPipelineCacheEntry *cache_entry)
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
{
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
CoglPipelineShaderState *shader_state;
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
shader_state = g_slice_new0 (CoglPipelineShaderState);
shader_state->ref_count = 1;
shader_state->unit_state = g_new0 (UnitState, n_layers);
pipeline-cache: Prune old unused pipelines when the cache gets too big Previously when a pipeline is added to the cache it would never be removed. If the application is generating a lot of unique pipelines this can end up effectively leaking a large number of resources including the GL program objects. Arguably this isn't really a problem because if the application is generating that many unique pipelines then it is doing something wrong anyway. It also implies that it will be recompiling shaders very often so the cache leaking will likely be the least of the problems. This patch makes it keep track of which pipelines in the cache are in use. The cache now returns a struct representing the entry instead of directly returning the pipeline. This entry contains a usage counter which the pipeline backends can use to mark when there is a pipeline alive that is using the cache entry. When the hash table decides that it's a good time to prune some entries, it will make a list of all of the pipelines that are not in use and then remove the least recently used half of the pipelines. That way it is less likely to remove pipelines that the application is actually regenerating often even if they aren't in use all of the time. When the cache is pruned the hash table makes a note of how small the cache could be if it removed all of the unused pipelines. The hash table starts pruning when there are more entries than twice this minimum expected size. The idea is that if that case it hit then the hash table is more than half full of useless pipelines so the application is generating lots of redundant pipelines and it is a good time to remove them. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit c21aac22992bb7fef5a8d0913130b8245e67f2eb) Conflicts: cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-progend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-vertend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-arbfp.c
2013-12-18 10:18:39 -05:00
shader_state->cache_entry = cache_entry;
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
return shader_state;
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
}
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
static CoglPipelineShaderState *
get_shader_state (CoglPipeline *pipeline)
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
{
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
return cogl_object_get_user_data (COGL_OBJECT (pipeline), &shader_state_key);
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
}
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
static void
pipeline-cache: Prune old unused pipelines when the cache gets too big Previously when a pipeline is added to the cache it would never be removed. If the application is generating a lot of unique pipelines this can end up effectively leaking a large number of resources including the GL program objects. Arguably this isn't really a problem because if the application is generating that many unique pipelines then it is doing something wrong anyway. It also implies that it will be recompiling shaders very often so the cache leaking will likely be the least of the problems. This patch makes it keep track of which pipelines in the cache are in use. The cache now returns a struct representing the entry instead of directly returning the pipeline. This entry contains a usage counter which the pipeline backends can use to mark when there is a pipeline alive that is using the cache entry. When the hash table decides that it's a good time to prune some entries, it will make a list of all of the pipelines that are not in use and then remove the least recently used half of the pipelines. That way it is less likely to remove pipelines that the application is actually regenerating often even if they aren't in use all of the time. When the cache is pruned the hash table makes a note of how small the cache could be if it removed all of the unused pipelines. The hash table starts pruning when there are more entries than twice this minimum expected size. The idea is that if that case it hit then the hash table is more than half full of useless pipelines so the application is generating lots of redundant pipelines and it is a good time to remove them. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit c21aac22992bb7fef5a8d0913130b8245e67f2eb) Conflicts: cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-progend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-vertend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-arbfp.c
2013-12-18 10:18:39 -05:00
destroy_shader_state (void *user_data,
void *instance)
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
{
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
CoglPipelineShaderState *shader_state = user_data;
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
_COGL_GET_CONTEXT (ctx, NO_RETVAL);
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
pipeline-cache: Prune old unused pipelines when the cache gets too big Previously when a pipeline is added to the cache it would never be removed. If the application is generating a lot of unique pipelines this can end up effectively leaking a large number of resources including the GL program objects. Arguably this isn't really a problem because if the application is generating that many unique pipelines then it is doing something wrong anyway. It also implies that it will be recompiling shaders very often so the cache leaking will likely be the least of the problems. This patch makes it keep track of which pipelines in the cache are in use. The cache now returns a struct representing the entry instead of directly returning the pipeline. This entry contains a usage counter which the pipeline backends can use to mark when there is a pipeline alive that is using the cache entry. When the hash table decides that it's a good time to prune some entries, it will make a list of all of the pipelines that are not in use and then remove the least recently used half of the pipelines. That way it is less likely to remove pipelines that the application is actually regenerating often even if they aren't in use all of the time. When the cache is pruned the hash table makes a note of how small the cache could be if it removed all of the unused pipelines. The hash table starts pruning when there are more entries than twice this minimum expected size. The idea is that if that case it hit then the hash table is more than half full of useless pipelines so the application is generating lots of redundant pipelines and it is a good time to remove them. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit c21aac22992bb7fef5a8d0913130b8245e67f2eb) Conflicts: cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-progend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-vertend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-arbfp.c
2013-12-18 10:18:39 -05:00
if (shader_state->cache_entry &&
shader_state->cache_entry->pipeline != instance)
shader_state->cache_entry->usage_count--;
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
if (--shader_state->ref_count == 0)
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
{
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
if (shader_state->gl_shader)
GE( ctx, glDeleteShader (shader_state->gl_shader) );
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
g_free (shader_state->unit_state);
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
g_slice_free (CoglPipelineShaderState, shader_state);
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
}
}
static void
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
set_shader_state (CoglPipeline *pipeline, CoglPipelineShaderState *shader_state)
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
{
pipeline-cache: Prune old unused pipelines when the cache gets too big Previously when a pipeline is added to the cache it would never be removed. If the application is generating a lot of unique pipelines this can end up effectively leaking a large number of resources including the GL program objects. Arguably this isn't really a problem because if the application is generating that many unique pipelines then it is doing something wrong anyway. It also implies that it will be recompiling shaders very often so the cache leaking will likely be the least of the problems. This patch makes it keep track of which pipelines in the cache are in use. The cache now returns a struct representing the entry instead of directly returning the pipeline. This entry contains a usage counter which the pipeline backends can use to mark when there is a pipeline alive that is using the cache entry. When the hash table decides that it's a good time to prune some entries, it will make a list of all of the pipelines that are not in use and then remove the least recently used half of the pipelines. That way it is less likely to remove pipelines that the application is actually regenerating often even if they aren't in use all of the time. When the cache is pruned the hash table makes a note of how small the cache could be if it removed all of the unused pipelines. The hash table starts pruning when there are more entries than twice this minimum expected size. The idea is that if that case it hit then the hash table is more than half full of useless pipelines so the application is generating lots of redundant pipelines and it is a good time to remove them. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit c21aac22992bb7fef5a8d0913130b8245e67f2eb) Conflicts: cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-progend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-vertend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-arbfp.c
2013-12-18 10:18:39 -05:00
if (shader_state)
{
shader_state->ref_count++;
/* If we're not setting the state on the template pipeline then
* mark it as a usage of the pipeline cache entry */
if (shader_state->cache_entry &&
shader_state->cache_entry->pipeline != pipeline)
shader_state->cache_entry->usage_count++;
}
_cogl_object_set_user_data (COGL_OBJECT (pipeline),
&shader_state_key,
shader_state,
destroy_shader_state);
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
}
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
static void
dirty_shader_state (CoglPipeline *pipeline)
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
{
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
cogl_object_set_user_data (COGL_OBJECT (pipeline),
&shader_state_key,
NULL,
NULL);
}
GLuint
_cogl_pipeline_fragend_glsl_get_shader (CoglPipeline *pipeline)
{
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
CoglPipelineShaderState *shader_state = get_shader_state (pipeline);
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
if (shader_state)
return shader_state->gl_shader;
else
return 0;
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
}
cogl-pipeline: Add two hook points for adding shader snippets This adds two new public experimental functions for attaching CoglSnippets to two hook points on a CoglPipeline: void cogl_pipeline_add_vertex_hook (CoglPipeline *, CoglSnippet *) void cogl_pipeline_add_fragment_hook (CoglPipeline *, CoglSnippet *) The hooks are intended to be around the entire vertex or fragment processing. That means the pre string in the snippet will be inserted at the very top of the main function and the post function will be inserted at the very end. The declarations get inserted in the global scope. The snippets are stored in two separate linked lists with a structure containing an enum representing the hook point and a pointer to the snippet. The lists are meant to be for hooks that affect the vertex shader and fragment shader respectively. Although there are currently only two hooks and the names match these two lists, the intention is *not* that each new hook will be in a separate list. The separation of the lists is just to make it easier to determine which shader needs to be regenerated when a new snippet is added. When a pipeline becomes the authority for either the vertex or fragment snipper state, it simply copies the entire list from the previous authority (although of course the shader snippet objects are referenced instead of copied so it doesn't duplicate the source strings). Each string is inserted into its own block in the shader. This means that each string has its own scope so it doesn't need to worry about name collisions with variables in other snippets. However it does mean that the pre and post strings can't share variables. It could be possible to wrap both parts in one block and then wrap the actual inner hook code in another block, however this would mean that any further snippets within the outer snippet would be able to see those variables. Perhaps something to consider would be to put each snippet into its own function which calls another function between the pre and post strings to do further processing. The pipeline cache for generated programs was previously shared with the fragment shader cache because the state that affects vertex shaders was a subset of the state that affects fragment shaders. This is no longer the case because there is a separate state mask for vertex snippets so the program cache now has its own hash table. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
2011-11-17 11:52:21 -05:00
static CoglPipelineSnippetList *
get_fragment_snippets (CoglPipeline *pipeline)
{
pipeline =
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline,
COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_FRAGMENT_SNIPPETS);
return &pipeline->big_state->fragment_snippets;
}
static CoglPipelineSnippetList *
get_layer_fragment_snippets (CoglPipelineLayer *layer)
{
unsigned long state = COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_FRAGMENT_SNIPPETS;
layer = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer, state);
return &layer->big_state->fragment_snippets;
}
static CoglBool
has_replace_hook (CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
CoglSnippetHook hook)
{
GList *l;
for (l = get_layer_fragment_snippets (layer)->entries; l; l = l->next)
{
CoglSnippet *snippet = l->data;
if (snippet->hook == hook && snippet->replace)
return TRUE;
}
return FALSE;
}
static CoglBool
add_layer_declaration_cb (CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
void *user_data)
{
CoglPipelineShaderState *shader_state = user_data;
CoglTextureType texture_type =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_texture_type (layer);
const char *target_string;
_cogl_gl_util_get_texture_target_string (texture_type, &target_string, NULL);
g_string_append_printf (shader_state->header,
"uniform sampler%s cogl_sampler%i;\n",
target_string,
layer->index);
return TRUE;
}
static void
add_layer_declarations (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipelineShaderState *shader_state)
{
/* We always emit sampler uniforms in case there will be custom
* layer snippets that want to sample arbitrary layers. */
_cogl_pipeline_foreach_layer_internal (pipeline,
add_layer_declaration_cb,
shader_state);
}
static void
add_global_declarations (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipelineShaderState *shader_state)
{
CoglSnippetHook hook = COGL_SNIPPET_HOOK_FRAGMENT_GLOBALS;
CoglPipelineSnippetList *snippets = get_fragment_snippets (pipeline);
/* Add the global data hooks. All of the code in these snippets is
* always added and only the declarations data is used */
_cogl_pipeline_snippet_generate_declarations (shader_state->header,
hook,
snippets);
}
Clearly define 3 progends that own the frag+vertends This adds a new "fixed-arbfp" progend so we now have 3 distinct ways of setting up the state of a pipeline: » fixed; where the vertex and fragment processing are implemented using fixed function opengl apis. » fixed-arbfp; where vertex processing is implemented using fixed function opengl apis but fragment processing is implemented using the ARB Fragment Processing language. » glsl; there vertex and fragment processing are both implemented using glsl. This means we avoid unusual, combinations such as glsl for vertex processing and arbfp for fragment processing, and also avoid pairing fixed-function vertex processing with glsl fragment processing which we happen to know hits some awkward code paths in Mesa that lead to poor performance. As part of this change, the progend now implies specific vertend and fragend choices so instead of associating a vertend and fragend with a pipeline we now just associate a progend choice. When flushing a pipeline and choosing what progend to use, we now call a progend->start() method that is able to determine if the vertend and fragend together will be able to handle the given pipeline so the vertend and fragend ->start() methods no longer need to return a boolean status. Since we now don't need to support glsl used in conjunction with fixed function this will allow us to avoid ever using OpenGL builtin attribute names, though this patch doesn't change that yet. Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit cec381f50c7a2f2186bd4a8c5f38fecd5f099075)
2012-09-25 16:08:10 -04:00
static void
_cogl_pipeline_fragend_glsl_start (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
int n_layers,
unsigned long pipelines_difference)
{
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
CoglPipelineShaderState *shader_state;
cogl: rename CoglMaterial -> CoglPipeline This applies an API naming change that's been deliberated over for a while now which is to rename CoglMaterial to CoglPipeline. For now the new pipeline API is marked as experimental and public headers continue to talk about materials not pipelines. The CoglMaterial API is now maintained in terms of the cogl_pipeline API internally. Currently this API is targeting Cogl 2.0 so we will have time to integrate it properly with other upcoming Cogl 2.0 work. The basic reasons for the rename are: - That the term "material" implies to many people that they are constrained to fragment processing; perhaps as some kind of high-level texture abstraction. - In Clutter they get exposed by ClutterTexture actors which may be re-inforcing this misconception. - When comparing how other frameworks use the term material, a material sometimes describes a multi-pass fragment processing technique which isn't the case in Cogl. - In code, "CoglPipeline" will hopefully be a much more self documenting summary of what these objects represent; a full GPU pipeline configuration including, for example, vertex processing, fragment processing and blending. - When considering the API documentation story, at some point we need a document introducing developers to how the "GPU pipeline" works so it should become intuitive that CoglPipeline maps back to that description of the GPU pipeline. - This is consistent in terminology and concept to OpenGL 4's new pipeline object which is a container for program objects. Note: The cogl-material.[ch] files have been renamed to cogl-material-compat.[ch] because otherwise git doesn't seem to treat the change as a moving the old cogl-material.c->cogl-pipeline.c and so we loose all our git-blame history.
2010-10-27 13:54:57 -04:00
CoglPipeline *authority;
pipeline-cache: Prune old unused pipelines when the cache gets too big Previously when a pipeline is added to the cache it would never be removed. If the application is generating a lot of unique pipelines this can end up effectively leaking a large number of resources including the GL program objects. Arguably this isn't really a problem because if the application is generating that many unique pipelines then it is doing something wrong anyway. It also implies that it will be recompiling shaders very often so the cache leaking will likely be the least of the problems. This patch makes it keep track of which pipelines in the cache are in use. The cache now returns a struct representing the entry instead of directly returning the pipeline. This entry contains a usage counter which the pipeline backends can use to mark when there is a pipeline alive that is using the cache entry. When the hash table decides that it's a good time to prune some entries, it will make a list of all of the pipelines that are not in use and then remove the least recently used half of the pipelines. That way it is less likely to remove pipelines that the application is actually regenerating often even if they aren't in use all of the time. When the cache is pruned the hash table makes a note of how small the cache could be if it removed all of the unused pipelines. The hash table starts pruning when there are more entries than twice this minimum expected size. The idea is that if that case it hit then the hash table is more than half full of useless pipelines so the application is generating lots of redundant pipelines and it is a good time to remove them. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit c21aac22992bb7fef5a8d0913130b8245e67f2eb) Conflicts: cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-progend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-vertend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-arbfp.c
2013-12-18 10:18:39 -05:00
CoglPipelineCacheEntry *cache_entry = NULL;
Clearly define 3 progends that own the frag+vertends This adds a new "fixed-arbfp" progend so we now have 3 distinct ways of setting up the state of a pipeline: » fixed; where the vertex and fragment processing are implemented using fixed function opengl apis. » fixed-arbfp; where vertex processing is implemented using fixed function opengl apis but fragment processing is implemented using the ARB Fragment Processing language. » glsl; there vertex and fragment processing are both implemented using glsl. This means we avoid unusual, combinations such as glsl for vertex processing and arbfp for fragment processing, and also avoid pairing fixed-function vertex processing with glsl fragment processing which we happen to know hits some awkward code paths in Mesa that lead to poor performance. As part of this change, the progend now implies specific vertend and fragend choices so instead of associating a vertend and fragend with a pipeline we now just associate a progend choice. When flushing a pipeline and choosing what progend to use, we now call a progend->start() method that is able to determine if the vertend and fragend together will be able to handle the given pipeline so the vertend and fragend ->start() methods no longer need to return a boolean status. Since we now don't need to support glsl used in conjunction with fixed function this will allow us to avoid ever using OpenGL builtin attribute names, though this patch doesn't change that yet. Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit cec381f50c7a2f2186bd4a8c5f38fecd5f099075)
2012-09-25 16:08:10 -04:00
CoglProgram *user_program = cogl_pipeline_get_user_program (pipeline);
int i;
Clearly define 3 progends that own the frag+vertends This adds a new "fixed-arbfp" progend so we now have 3 distinct ways of setting up the state of a pipeline: » fixed; where the vertex and fragment processing are implemented using fixed function opengl apis. » fixed-arbfp; where vertex processing is implemented using fixed function opengl apis but fragment processing is implemented using the ARB Fragment Processing language. » glsl; there vertex and fragment processing are both implemented using glsl. This means we avoid unusual, combinations such as glsl for vertex processing and arbfp for fragment processing, and also avoid pairing fixed-function vertex processing with glsl fragment processing which we happen to know hits some awkward code paths in Mesa that lead to poor performance. As part of this change, the progend now implies specific vertend and fragend choices so instead of associating a vertend and fragend with a pipeline we now just associate a progend choice. When flushing a pipeline and choosing what progend to use, we now call a progend->start() method that is able to determine if the vertend and fragend together will be able to handle the given pipeline so the vertend and fragend ->start() methods no longer need to return a boolean status. Since we now don't need to support glsl used in conjunction with fixed function this will allow us to avoid ever using OpenGL builtin attribute names, though this patch doesn't change that yet. Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit cec381f50c7a2f2186bd4a8c5f38fecd5f099075)
2012-09-25 16:08:10 -04:00
_COGL_GET_CONTEXT (ctx, NO_RETVAL);
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
/* Now lookup our glsl backend private state */
shader_state = get_shader_state (pipeline);
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
if (shader_state == NULL)
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
{
/* If we don't have an associated glsl shader yet then find the
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
* glsl-authority (the oldest ancestor whose state will result in
* the same shader being generated as for this pipeline).
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
*
* We always make sure to associate new shader with the
cogl: rename CoglMaterial -> CoglPipeline This applies an API naming change that's been deliberated over for a while now which is to rename CoglMaterial to CoglPipeline. For now the new pipeline API is marked as experimental and public headers continue to talk about materials not pipelines. The CoglMaterial API is now maintained in terms of the cogl_pipeline API internally. Currently this API is targeting Cogl 2.0 so we will have time to integrate it properly with other upcoming Cogl 2.0 work. The basic reasons for the rename are: - That the term "material" implies to many people that they are constrained to fragment processing; perhaps as some kind of high-level texture abstraction. - In Clutter they get exposed by ClutterTexture actors which may be re-inforcing this misconception. - When comparing how other frameworks use the term material, a material sometimes describes a multi-pass fragment processing technique which isn't the case in Cogl. - In code, "CoglPipeline" will hopefully be a much more self documenting summary of what these objects represent; a full GPU pipeline configuration including, for example, vertex processing, fragment processing and blending. - When considering the API documentation story, at some point we need a document introducing developers to how the "GPU pipeline" works so it should become intuitive that CoglPipeline maps back to that description of the GPU pipeline. - This is consistent in terminology and concept to OpenGL 4's new pipeline object which is a container for program objects. Note: The cogl-material.[ch] files have been renamed to cogl-material-compat.[ch] because otherwise git doesn't seem to treat the change as a moving the old cogl-material.c->cogl-pipeline.c and so we loose all our git-blame history.
2010-10-27 13:54:57 -04:00
* glsl-authority to maximize the chance that other pipelines can
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
* share it.
*/
authority = _cogl_pipeline_find_equivalent_parent
(pipeline,
Dynamically load the GL or GLES library The GL or GLES library is now dynamically loaded by the CoglRenderer so that it can choose between GL, GLES1 and GLES2 at runtime. The library is loaded by the renderer because it needs to be done before calling eglInitialize. There is a new environment variable called COGL_DRIVER to choose between gl, gles1 or gles2. The #ifdefs for HAVE_COGL_GL, HAVE_COGL_GLES and HAVE_COGL_GLES2 have been changed so that they don't assume the ifdefs are mutually exclusive. They haven't been removed entirely so that it's possible to compile the GLES backends without the the enums from the GL headers. When using GLX the winsys additionally dynamically loads libGL because that also contains the GLX API. It can't be linked in directly because that would probably conflict with the GLES API if the EGL is selected. When compiling with EGL support the library links directly to libEGL because it doesn't contain any GL API so it shouldn't have any conflicts. When building for WGL or OSX Cogl still directly links against the GL API so there is a #define in config.h so that Cogl won't try to dlopen the library. Cogl-pango previously had a #ifdef to detect when the GL backend is used so that it can sneakily pass GL_QUADS to cogl_vertex_buffer_draw. This is now changed so that it queries the CoglContext for the backend. However to get this to work Cogl now needs to export the _cogl_context_get_default symbol and cogl-pango needs some extra -I flags to so that it can include cogl-context-private.h
2011-07-07 15:44:56 -04:00
_cogl_pipeline_get_state_for_fragment_codegen (ctx) &
~COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS,
Dynamically load the GL or GLES library The GL or GLES library is now dynamically loaded by the CoglRenderer so that it can choose between GL, GLES1 and GLES2 at runtime. The library is loaded by the renderer because it needs to be done before calling eglInitialize. There is a new environment variable called COGL_DRIVER to choose between gl, gles1 or gles2. The #ifdefs for HAVE_COGL_GL, HAVE_COGL_GLES and HAVE_COGL_GLES2 have been changed so that they don't assume the ifdefs are mutually exclusive. They haven't been removed entirely so that it's possible to compile the GLES backends without the the enums from the GL headers. When using GLX the winsys additionally dynamically loads libGL because that also contains the GLX API. It can't be linked in directly because that would probably conflict with the GLES API if the EGL is selected. When compiling with EGL support the library links directly to libEGL because it doesn't contain any GL API so it shouldn't have any conflicts. When building for WGL or OSX Cogl still directly links against the GL API so there is a #define in config.h so that Cogl won't try to dlopen the library. Cogl-pango previously had a #ifdef to detect when the GL backend is used so that it can sneakily pass GL_QUADS to cogl_vertex_buffer_draw. This is now changed so that it queries the CoglContext for the backend. However to get this to work Cogl now needs to export the _cogl_context_get_default symbol and cogl-pango needs some extra -I flags to so that it can include cogl-context-private.h
2011-07-07 15:44:56 -04:00
_cogl_pipeline_get_layer_state_for_fragment_codegen (ctx));
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
shader_state = get_shader_state (authority);
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
/* If we don't have an existing program associated with the
* glsl-authority then start generating code for a new shader...
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
*/
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
if (shader_state == NULL)
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
{
/* Check if there is already a similar cached pipeline whose
shader state we can share */
if (G_LIKELY (!(COGL_DEBUG_ENABLED
(COGL_DEBUG_DISABLE_PROGRAM_CACHES))))
{
pipeline-cache: Prune old unused pipelines when the cache gets too big Previously when a pipeline is added to the cache it would never be removed. If the application is generating a lot of unique pipelines this can end up effectively leaking a large number of resources including the GL program objects. Arguably this isn't really a problem because if the application is generating that many unique pipelines then it is doing something wrong anyway. It also implies that it will be recompiling shaders very often so the cache leaking will likely be the least of the problems. This patch makes it keep track of which pipelines in the cache are in use. The cache now returns a struct representing the entry instead of directly returning the pipeline. This entry contains a usage counter which the pipeline backends can use to mark when there is a pipeline alive that is using the cache entry. When the hash table decides that it's a good time to prune some entries, it will make a list of all of the pipelines that are not in use and then remove the least recently used half of the pipelines. That way it is less likely to remove pipelines that the application is actually regenerating often even if they aren't in use all of the time. When the cache is pruned the hash table makes a note of how small the cache could be if it removed all of the unused pipelines. The hash table starts pruning when there are more entries than twice this minimum expected size. The idea is that if that case it hit then the hash table is more than half full of useless pipelines so the application is generating lots of redundant pipelines and it is a good time to remove them. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit c21aac22992bb7fef5a8d0913130b8245e67f2eb) Conflicts: cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-progend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-vertend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-arbfp.c
2013-12-18 10:18:39 -05:00
cache_entry =
_cogl_pipeline_cache_get_fragment_template (ctx->pipeline_cache,
authority);
pipeline-cache: Prune old unused pipelines when the cache gets too big Previously when a pipeline is added to the cache it would never be removed. If the application is generating a lot of unique pipelines this can end up effectively leaking a large number of resources including the GL program objects. Arguably this isn't really a problem because if the application is generating that many unique pipelines then it is doing something wrong anyway. It also implies that it will be recompiling shaders very often so the cache leaking will likely be the least of the problems. This patch makes it keep track of which pipelines in the cache are in use. The cache now returns a struct representing the entry instead of directly returning the pipeline. This entry contains a usage counter which the pipeline backends can use to mark when there is a pipeline alive that is using the cache entry. When the hash table decides that it's a good time to prune some entries, it will make a list of all of the pipelines that are not in use and then remove the least recently used half of the pipelines. That way it is less likely to remove pipelines that the application is actually regenerating often even if they aren't in use all of the time. When the cache is pruned the hash table makes a note of how small the cache could be if it removed all of the unused pipelines. The hash table starts pruning when there are more entries than twice this minimum expected size. The idea is that if that case it hit then the hash table is more than half full of useless pipelines so the application is generating lots of redundant pipelines and it is a good time to remove them. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit c21aac22992bb7fef5a8d0913130b8245e67f2eb) Conflicts: cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-progend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-vertend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-arbfp.c
2013-12-18 10:18:39 -05:00
shader_state = get_shader_state (cache_entry->pipeline);
}
if (shader_state)
shader_state->ref_count++;
else
pipeline-cache: Prune old unused pipelines when the cache gets too big Previously when a pipeline is added to the cache it would never be removed. If the application is generating a lot of unique pipelines this can end up effectively leaking a large number of resources including the GL program objects. Arguably this isn't really a problem because if the application is generating that many unique pipelines then it is doing something wrong anyway. It also implies that it will be recompiling shaders very often so the cache leaking will likely be the least of the problems. This patch makes it keep track of which pipelines in the cache are in use. The cache now returns a struct representing the entry instead of directly returning the pipeline. This entry contains a usage counter which the pipeline backends can use to mark when there is a pipeline alive that is using the cache entry. When the hash table decides that it's a good time to prune some entries, it will make a list of all of the pipelines that are not in use and then remove the least recently used half of the pipelines. That way it is less likely to remove pipelines that the application is actually regenerating often even if they aren't in use all of the time. When the cache is pruned the hash table makes a note of how small the cache could be if it removed all of the unused pipelines. The hash table starts pruning when there are more entries than twice this minimum expected size. The idea is that if that case it hit then the hash table is more than half full of useless pipelines so the application is generating lots of redundant pipelines and it is a good time to remove them. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit c21aac22992bb7fef5a8d0913130b8245e67f2eb) Conflicts: cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-progend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-vertend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-arbfp.c
2013-12-18 10:18:39 -05:00
shader_state = shader_state_new (n_layers, cache_entry);
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
set_shader_state (authority, shader_state);
pipeline-cache: Prune old unused pipelines when the cache gets too big Previously when a pipeline is added to the cache it would never be removed. If the application is generating a lot of unique pipelines this can end up effectively leaking a large number of resources including the GL program objects. Arguably this isn't really a problem because if the application is generating that many unique pipelines then it is doing something wrong anyway. It also implies that it will be recompiling shaders very often so the cache leaking will likely be the least of the problems. This patch makes it keep track of which pipelines in the cache are in use. The cache now returns a struct representing the entry instead of directly returning the pipeline. This entry contains a usage counter which the pipeline backends can use to mark when there is a pipeline alive that is using the cache entry. When the hash table decides that it's a good time to prune some entries, it will make a list of all of the pipelines that are not in use and then remove the least recently used half of the pipelines. That way it is less likely to remove pipelines that the application is actually regenerating often even if they aren't in use all of the time. When the cache is pruned the hash table makes a note of how small the cache could be if it removed all of the unused pipelines. The hash table starts pruning when there are more entries than twice this minimum expected size. The idea is that if that case it hit then the hash table is more than half full of useless pipelines so the application is generating lots of redundant pipelines and it is a good time to remove them. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit c21aac22992bb7fef5a8d0913130b8245e67f2eb) Conflicts: cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-progend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-vertend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-arbfp.c
2013-12-18 10:18:39 -05:00
shader_state->ref_count--;
if (cache_entry)
set_shader_state (cache_entry->pipeline, shader_state);
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
}
/* If the pipeline isn't actually its own glsl-authority
* then take a reference to the program state associated
* with the glsl-authority... */
if (authority != pipeline)
pipeline-cache: Prune old unused pipelines when the cache gets too big Previously when a pipeline is added to the cache it would never be removed. If the application is generating a lot of unique pipelines this can end up effectively leaking a large number of resources including the GL program objects. Arguably this isn't really a problem because if the application is generating that many unique pipelines then it is doing something wrong anyway. It also implies that it will be recompiling shaders very often so the cache leaking will likely be the least of the problems. This patch makes it keep track of which pipelines in the cache are in use. The cache now returns a struct representing the entry instead of directly returning the pipeline. This entry contains a usage counter which the pipeline backends can use to mark when there is a pipeline alive that is using the cache entry. When the hash table decides that it's a good time to prune some entries, it will make a list of all of the pipelines that are not in use and then remove the least recently used half of the pipelines. That way it is less likely to remove pipelines that the application is actually regenerating often even if they aren't in use all of the time. When the cache is pruned the hash table makes a note of how small the cache could be if it removed all of the unused pipelines. The hash table starts pruning when there are more entries than twice this minimum expected size. The idea is that if that case it hit then the hash table is more than half full of useless pipelines so the application is generating lots of redundant pipelines and it is a good time to remove them. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit c21aac22992bb7fef5a8d0913130b8245e67f2eb) Conflicts: cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-progend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-vertend-glsl.c cogl/driver/gl/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-arbfp.c
2013-12-18 10:18:39 -05:00
set_shader_state (pipeline, shader_state);
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
}
if (user_program)
{
/* If the user program contains a fragment shader then we don't need
to generate one */
if (_cogl_program_has_fragment_shader (user_program))
{
if (shader_state->gl_shader)
{
GE( ctx, glDeleteShader (shader_state->gl_shader) );
shader_state->gl_shader = 0;
}
return;
}
}
if (shader_state->gl_shader)
return;
/* If we make it here then we have a glsl_shader_state struct
without a gl_shader either because this is the first time we've
encountered it or because the user program has changed */
/* We reuse two grow-only GStrings for code-gen. One string
contains the uniform and attribute declarations while the
other contains the main function. We need two strings
because we need to dynamically declare attributes as the
add_layer callback is invoked */
g_string_set_size (ctx->codegen_header_buffer, 0);
g_string_set_size (ctx->codegen_source_buffer, 0);
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
shader_state->header = ctx->codegen_header_buffer;
shader_state->source = ctx->codegen_source_buffer;
Use the Wayland embedded linked list implementation instead of BSD's This removes cogl-queue.h and adds a copy of Wayland's embedded list implementation. The advantage of the Wayland model is that it is much simpler and so it is easier to follow. It also doesn't require defining a typedef for every list type. The downside is that there is only one list type which is a doubly-linked list where the head has a pointer to both the beginning and the end. The BSD implementation has many more combinations some of which we were taking advantage of to reduce the size of critical structs where we didn't need a pointer to the end of the list. The corresponding changes to uses of cogl-queue.h are: • COGL_STAILQ_* was used for onscreen the list of events and dirty notifications. This makes the size of the CoglContext grow by one pointer. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for fences. • COGL_LIST_* for CoglClosures. In this case the list head now has an extra pointer which means CoglOnscreen will grow by the size of three pointers, but this doesn't seem like a particularly important struct to optimise for size anyway. • COGL_LIST_* was used for the list of foreign GLES2 offscreens. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for the list of sub stacks in a CoglMemoryStack. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the list of layers that haven't had code generated yet while generating a fragment shader for a pipeline. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the pipeline hierarchy in CoglNode. The last part is a bit more controversial because it increases the size of CoglPipeline and CoglPipelineLayer by one pointer in order to have the redundant tail pointer for the list head. Normally we try to be very careful about the size of the CoglPipeline struct. Because CoglPipeline is slice-allocated, this effectively ends up adding two pointers to the size because GSlice rounds up to the size of two pointers. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit 13abf613b15f571ba1fcf6d2eb831ffc6fa31324) Conflicts: cogl/cogl-context-private.h cogl/cogl-context.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c doc/reference/cogl-2.0-experimental/Makefile.am
2013-06-08 18:03:25 -04:00
_cogl_list_init (&shader_state->layers);
add_layer_declarations (pipeline, shader_state);
add_global_declarations (pipeline, shader_state);
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
g_string_append (shader_state->source,
"void\n"
"cogl_generated_source ()\n"
"{\n");
for (i = 0; i < n_layers; i++)
cogl-shader: Prepend boilerplate for portable shaders We now prepend a set of defines to any given GLSL shader so that we can define builtin uniforms/attributes within the "cogl" namespace that we can use to provide compatibility across a range of the earlier versions of GLSL. This updates test-cogl-shader-glsl.c and test-shader.c so they no longer needs to special case GLES vs GL when splicing together its shaders as well as the blur, colorize and desaturate effects. To get a feel for the new, portable uniform/attribute names here are the defines for OpenGL vertex shaders: #define cogl_position_in gl_Vertex #define cogl_color_in gl_Color #define cogl_tex_coord_in gl_MultiTexCoord0 #define cogl_tex_coord0_in gl_MultiTexCoord0 #define cogl_tex_coord1_in gl_MultiTexCoord1 #define cogl_tex_coord2_in gl_MultiTexCoord2 #define cogl_tex_coord3_in gl_MultiTexCoord3 #define cogl_tex_coord4_in gl_MultiTexCoord4 #define cogl_tex_coord5_in gl_MultiTexCoord5 #define cogl_tex_coord6_in gl_MultiTexCoord6 #define cogl_tex_coord7_in gl_MultiTexCoord7 #define cogl_normal_in gl_Normal #define cogl_position_out gl_Position #define cogl_point_size_out gl_PointSize #define cogl_color_out gl_FrontColor #define cogl_tex_coord_out gl_TexCoord #define cogl_modelview_matrix gl_ModelViewMatrix #define cogl_modelview_projection_matrix gl_ModelViewProjectionMatrix #define cogl_projection_matrix gl_ProjectionMatrix #define cogl_texture_matrix gl_TextureMatrix And for fragment shaders we have: #define cogl_color_in gl_Color #define cogl_tex_coord_in gl_TexCoord #define cogl_color_out gl_FragColor #define cogl_depth_out gl_FragDepth #define cogl_front_facing gl_FrontFacing
2010-07-23 12:46:41 -04:00
{
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
shader_state->unit_state[i].sampled = FALSE;
shader_state->unit_state[i].combine_constant_used = FALSE;
cogl-shader: Prepend boilerplate for portable shaders We now prepend a set of defines to any given GLSL shader so that we can define builtin uniforms/attributes within the "cogl" namespace that we can use to provide compatibility across a range of the earlier versions of GLSL. This updates test-cogl-shader-glsl.c and test-shader.c so they no longer needs to special case GLES vs GL when splicing together its shaders as well as the blur, colorize and desaturate effects. To get a feel for the new, portable uniform/attribute names here are the defines for OpenGL vertex shaders: #define cogl_position_in gl_Vertex #define cogl_color_in gl_Color #define cogl_tex_coord_in gl_MultiTexCoord0 #define cogl_tex_coord0_in gl_MultiTexCoord0 #define cogl_tex_coord1_in gl_MultiTexCoord1 #define cogl_tex_coord2_in gl_MultiTexCoord2 #define cogl_tex_coord3_in gl_MultiTexCoord3 #define cogl_tex_coord4_in gl_MultiTexCoord4 #define cogl_tex_coord5_in gl_MultiTexCoord5 #define cogl_tex_coord6_in gl_MultiTexCoord6 #define cogl_tex_coord7_in gl_MultiTexCoord7 #define cogl_normal_in gl_Normal #define cogl_position_out gl_Position #define cogl_point_size_out gl_PointSize #define cogl_color_out gl_FrontColor #define cogl_tex_coord_out gl_TexCoord #define cogl_modelview_matrix gl_ModelViewMatrix #define cogl_modelview_projection_matrix gl_ModelViewProjectionMatrix #define cogl_projection_matrix gl_ProjectionMatrix #define cogl_texture_matrix gl_TextureMatrix And for fragment shaders we have: #define cogl_color_in gl_Color #define cogl_tex_coord_in gl_TexCoord #define cogl_color_out gl_FragColor #define cogl_depth_out gl_FragDepth #define cogl_front_facing gl_FrontFacing
2010-07-23 12:46:41 -04:00
}
}
static void
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
add_constant_lookup (CoglPipelineShaderState *shader_state,
CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
const char *swizzle)
{
g_string_append_printf (shader_state->header,
"_cogl_layer_constant_%i.%s",
layer->index, swizzle);
}
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
static void
ensure_texture_lookup_generated (CoglPipelineShaderState *shader_state,
CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipelineLayer *layer)
{
int unit_index = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_unit_index (layer);
CoglPipelineSnippetData snippet_data;
CoglTextureType texture_type;
const char *target_string, *tex_coord_swizzle;
Dynamically load the GL or GLES library The GL or GLES library is now dynamically loaded by the CoglRenderer so that it can choose between GL, GLES1 and GLES2 at runtime. The library is loaded by the renderer because it needs to be done before calling eglInitialize. There is a new environment variable called COGL_DRIVER to choose between gl, gles1 or gles2. The #ifdefs for HAVE_COGL_GL, HAVE_COGL_GLES and HAVE_COGL_GLES2 have been changed so that they don't assume the ifdefs are mutually exclusive. They haven't been removed entirely so that it's possible to compile the GLES backends without the the enums from the GL headers. When using GLX the winsys additionally dynamically loads libGL because that also contains the GLX API. It can't be linked in directly because that would probably conflict with the GLES API if the EGL is selected. When compiling with EGL support the library links directly to libEGL because it doesn't contain any GL API so it shouldn't have any conflicts. When building for WGL or OSX Cogl still directly links against the GL API so there is a #define in config.h so that Cogl won't try to dlopen the library. Cogl-pango previously had a #ifdef to detect when the GL backend is used so that it can sneakily pass GL_QUADS to cogl_vertex_buffer_draw. This is now changed so that it queries the CoglContext for the backend. However to get this to work Cogl now needs to export the _cogl_context_get_default symbol and cogl-pango needs some extra -I flags to so that it can include cogl-context-private.h
2011-07-07 15:44:56 -04:00
_COGL_GET_CONTEXT (ctx, NO_RETVAL);
if (shader_state->unit_state[unit_index].sampled)
return;
texture_type =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_texture_type (layer);
_cogl_gl_util_get_texture_target_string (texture_type,
&target_string,
&tex_coord_swizzle);
shader_state->unit_state[unit_index].sampled = TRUE;
g_string_append_printf (shader_state->header,
"vec4 cogl_texel%i;\n",
layer->index);
g_string_append_printf (shader_state->source,
" cogl_texel%i = cogl_texture_lookup%i ("
"cogl_sampler%i, ",
layer->index,
layer->index,
layer->index);
if (cogl_pipeline_get_layer_point_sprite_coords_enabled (pipeline,
layer->index))
g_string_append_printf (shader_state->source,
"vec4 (cogl_point_coord, 0.0, 1.0)");
else
g_string_append_printf (shader_state->source,
"cogl_tex_coord%i_in",
layer->index);
g_string_append (shader_state->source, ");\n");
/* There's no need to generate the real texture lookup if it's going
to be replaced */
if (!has_replace_hook (layer, COGL_SNIPPET_HOOK_TEXTURE_LOOKUP))
{
g_string_append_printf (shader_state->header,
"vec4\n"
"cogl_real_texture_lookup%i (sampler%s tex,\n"
" vec4 coords)\n"
"{\n"
" return ",
layer->index,
target_string);
if (G_UNLIKELY (COGL_DEBUG_ENABLED (COGL_DEBUG_DISABLE_TEXTURING)))
g_string_append (shader_state->header,
"vec4 (1.0, 1.0, 1.0, 1.0);\n");
else
g_string_append_printf (shader_state->header,
"texture%s (tex, coords.%s);\n",
target_string, tex_coord_swizzle);
g_string_append (shader_state->header, "}\n");
}
/* Wrap the texture lookup in any snippets that have been hooked */
memset (&snippet_data, 0, sizeof (snippet_data));
snippet_data.snippets = get_layer_fragment_snippets (layer);
snippet_data.hook = COGL_SNIPPET_HOOK_TEXTURE_LOOKUP;
snippet_data.chain_function = g_strdup_printf ("cogl_real_texture_lookup%i",
layer->index);
snippet_data.final_name = g_strdup_printf ("cogl_texture_lookup%i",
layer->index);
snippet_data.function_prefix = g_strdup_printf ("cogl_texture_lookup_hook%i",
layer->index);
snippet_data.return_type = "vec4";
snippet_data.return_variable = "cogl_texel";
snippet_data.arguments = "cogl_sampler, cogl_tex_coord";
snippet_data.argument_declarations =
g_strdup_printf ("sampler%s cogl_sampler, vec4 cogl_tex_coord",
target_string);
snippet_data.source_buf = shader_state->header;
_cogl_pipeline_snippet_generate_code (&snippet_data);
g_free ((char *) snippet_data.chain_function);
g_free ((char *) snippet_data.final_name);
g_free ((char *) snippet_data.function_prefix);
g_free ((char *) snippet_data.argument_declarations);
}
static void
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
add_arg (CoglPipelineShaderState *shader_state,
CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
int previous_layer_index,
CoglPipelineCombineSource src,
CoglPipelineCombineOp operand,
const char *swizzle)
{
GString *shader_source = shader_state->header;
char alpha_swizzle[5] = "aaaa";
g_string_append_c (shader_source, '(');
if (operand == COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_OP_ONE_MINUS_SRC_COLOR ||
operand == COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_OP_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA)
g_string_append_printf (shader_source,
"vec4(1.0, 1.0, 1.0, 1.0).%s - ",
swizzle);
/* If the operand is reading from the alpha then replace the swizzle
with the same number of copies of the alpha */
if (operand == COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_OP_SRC_ALPHA ||
operand == COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_OP_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA)
{
alpha_swizzle[strlen (swizzle)] = '\0';
swizzle = alpha_swizzle;
}
switch (src)
{
case COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_SOURCE_TEXTURE:
g_string_append_printf (shader_source,
"cogl_texel%i.%s",
layer->index,
swizzle);
break;
case COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_SOURCE_CONSTANT:
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
add_constant_lookup (shader_state,
pipeline,
layer,
swizzle);
break;
case COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_SOURCE_PREVIOUS:
if (previous_layer_index >= 0)
{
g_string_append_printf (shader_source,
"cogl_layer%i.%s",
previous_layer_index,
swizzle);
break;
}
/* flow through */
case COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_SOURCE_PRIMARY_COLOR:
g_string_append_printf (shader_source, "cogl_color_in.%s", swizzle);
break;
default:
{
int layer_num = src - COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_SOURCE_TEXTURE0;
CoglPipelineGetLayerFlags flags = COGL_PIPELINE_GET_LAYER_NO_CREATE;
CoglPipelineLayer *other_layer =
_cogl_pipeline_get_layer_with_flags (pipeline, layer_num, flags);
if (other_layer == NULL)
{
static CoglBool warning_seen = FALSE;
if (!warning_seen)
{
g_warning ("The application is trying to use a texture "
"combine with a layer number that does not exist");
warning_seen = TRUE;
}
g_string_append_printf (shader_source,
"vec4 (1.0, 1.0, 1.0, 1.0).%s",
swizzle);
}
else
g_string_append_printf (shader_source,
"cogl_texel%i.%s",
other_layer->index,
swizzle);
}
break;
}
g_string_append_c (shader_source, ')');
}
static void
ensure_arg_generated (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
int previous_layer_index,
CoglPipelineCombineSource src)
{
CoglPipelineShaderState *shader_state = get_shader_state (pipeline);
switch (src)
{
case COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_SOURCE_PRIMARY_COLOR:
/* This doesn't involve any other layers */
break;
case COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_SOURCE_CONSTANT:
{
int unit_index = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_unit_index (layer);
/* Create a sampler uniform for this layer if we haven't already */
if (!shader_state->unit_state[unit_index].combine_constant_used)
{
g_string_append_printf (shader_state->header,
"uniform vec4 _cogl_layer_constant_%i;\n",
layer->index);
shader_state->unit_state[unit_index].combine_constant_used = TRUE;
}
}
break;
case COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_SOURCE_PREVIOUS:
if (previous_layer_index >= 0)
ensure_layer_generated (pipeline, previous_layer_index);
break;
case COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_SOURCE_TEXTURE:
ensure_texture_lookup_generated (shader_state,
pipeline,
layer);
break;
default:
if (src >= COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_SOURCE_TEXTURE0)
{
int layer_num = src - COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_SOURCE_TEXTURE0;
CoglPipelineGetLayerFlags flags = COGL_PIPELINE_GET_LAYER_NO_CREATE;
CoglPipelineLayer *other_layer =
_cogl_pipeline_get_layer_with_flags (pipeline, layer_num, flags);
if (other_layer)
ensure_texture_lookup_generated (shader_state,
pipeline,
other_layer);
}
break;
}
}
static void
ensure_args_for_func (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
int previous_layer_index,
CoglPipelineCombineFunc function,
CoglPipelineCombineSource *src)
{
int n_args = _cogl_get_n_args_for_combine_func (function);
int i;
for (i = 0; i < n_args; i++)
ensure_arg_generated (pipeline, layer, previous_layer_index, src[i]);
}
static void
append_masked_combine (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
int previous_layer_index,
const char *swizzle,
CoglPipelineCombineFunc function,
CoglPipelineCombineSource *src,
CoglPipelineCombineOp *op)
{
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
CoglPipelineShaderState *shader_state = get_shader_state (pipeline);
GString *shader_source = shader_state->header;
g_string_append_printf (shader_state->header,
" cogl_layer.%s = ",
swizzle);
switch (function)
{
case COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_FUNC_REPLACE:
add_arg (shader_state, pipeline, layer, previous_layer_index,
src[0], op[0], swizzle);
break;
case COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_FUNC_MODULATE:
add_arg (shader_state, pipeline, layer, previous_layer_index,
src[0], op[0], swizzle);
g_string_append (shader_source, " * ");
add_arg (shader_state, pipeline, layer, previous_layer_index,
src[1], op[1], swizzle);
break;
case COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_FUNC_ADD:
add_arg (shader_state, pipeline, layer, previous_layer_index,
src[0], op[0], swizzle);
g_string_append (shader_source, " + ");
add_arg (shader_state, pipeline, layer, previous_layer_index,
src[1], op[1], swizzle);
break;
case COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_FUNC_ADD_SIGNED:
add_arg (shader_state, pipeline, layer, previous_layer_index,
src[0], op[0], swizzle);
g_string_append (shader_source, " + ");
add_arg (shader_state, pipeline, layer, previous_layer_index,
src[1], op[1], swizzle);
g_string_append_printf (shader_source,
" - vec4(0.5, 0.5, 0.5, 0.5).%s",
swizzle);
break;
case COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_FUNC_SUBTRACT:
add_arg (shader_state, pipeline, layer, previous_layer_index,
src[0], op[0], swizzle);
g_string_append (shader_source, " - ");
add_arg (shader_state, pipeline, layer, previous_layer_index,
src[1], op[1], swizzle);
break;
case COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_FUNC_INTERPOLATE:
add_arg (shader_state, pipeline, layer, previous_layer_index,
src[0], op[0], swizzle);
g_string_append (shader_source, " * ");
add_arg (shader_state, pipeline, layer, previous_layer_index,
src[2], op[2], swizzle);
g_string_append (shader_source, " + ");
add_arg (shader_state, pipeline, layer, previous_layer_index,
src[1], op[1], swizzle);
g_string_append_printf (shader_source,
" * (vec4(1.0, 1.0, 1.0, 1.0).%s - ",
swizzle);
add_arg (shader_state, pipeline, layer, previous_layer_index,
src[2], op[2], swizzle);
g_string_append_c (shader_source, ')');
break;
case COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_FUNC_DOT3_RGB:
case COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_FUNC_DOT3_RGBA:
g_string_append (shader_source, "vec4(4.0 * ((");
add_arg (shader_state, pipeline, layer, previous_layer_index,
src[0], op[0], "r");
g_string_append (shader_source, " - 0.5) * (");
add_arg (shader_state, pipeline, layer, previous_layer_index,
src[1], op[1], "r");
g_string_append (shader_source, " - 0.5) + (");
add_arg (shader_state, pipeline, layer, previous_layer_index,
src[0], op[0], "g");
g_string_append (shader_source, " - 0.5) * (");
add_arg (shader_state, pipeline, layer, previous_layer_index,
src[1], op[1], "g");
g_string_append (shader_source, " - 0.5) + (");
add_arg (shader_state, pipeline, layer, previous_layer_index,
src[0], op[0], "b");
g_string_append (shader_source, " - 0.5) * (");
add_arg (shader_state, pipeline, layer, previous_layer_index,
src[1], op[1], "b");
g_string_append_printf (shader_source, " - 0.5))).%s", swizzle);
break;
}
g_string_append_printf (shader_source, ";\n");
}
static void
ensure_layer_generated (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
int layer_index)
{
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
CoglPipelineShaderState *shader_state = get_shader_state (pipeline);
CoglPipelineLayer *combine_authority;
CoglPipelineLayerBigState *big_state;
CoglPipelineLayer *layer;
CoglPipelineSnippetData snippet_data;
LayerData *layer_data;
/* Find the layer that corresponds to this layer_num */
Use the Wayland embedded linked list implementation instead of BSD's This removes cogl-queue.h and adds a copy of Wayland's embedded list implementation. The advantage of the Wayland model is that it is much simpler and so it is easier to follow. It also doesn't require defining a typedef for every list type. The downside is that there is only one list type which is a doubly-linked list where the head has a pointer to both the beginning and the end. The BSD implementation has many more combinations some of which we were taking advantage of to reduce the size of critical structs where we didn't need a pointer to the end of the list. The corresponding changes to uses of cogl-queue.h are: • COGL_STAILQ_* was used for onscreen the list of events and dirty notifications. This makes the size of the CoglContext grow by one pointer. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for fences. • COGL_LIST_* for CoglClosures. In this case the list head now has an extra pointer which means CoglOnscreen will grow by the size of three pointers, but this doesn't seem like a particularly important struct to optimise for size anyway. • COGL_LIST_* was used for the list of foreign GLES2 offscreens. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for the list of sub stacks in a CoglMemoryStack. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the list of layers that haven't had code generated yet while generating a fragment shader for a pipeline. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the pipeline hierarchy in CoglNode. The last part is a bit more controversial because it increases the size of CoglPipeline and CoglPipelineLayer by one pointer in order to have the redundant tail pointer for the list head. Normally we try to be very careful about the size of the CoglPipeline struct. Because CoglPipeline is slice-allocated, this effectively ends up adding two pointers to the size because GSlice rounds up to the size of two pointers. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit 13abf613b15f571ba1fcf6d2eb831ffc6fa31324) Conflicts: cogl/cogl-context-private.h cogl/cogl-context.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c doc/reference/cogl-2.0-experimental/Makefile.am
2013-06-08 18:03:25 -04:00
_cogl_list_for_each (layer_data, &shader_state->layers, link)
{
layer = layer_data->layer;
if (layer->index == layer_index)
goto found;
}
/* If we didn't find it then we can assume the layer has already
been generated */
return;
found:
/* Remove the layer from the list so we don't generate it again */
Use the Wayland embedded linked list implementation instead of BSD's This removes cogl-queue.h and adds a copy of Wayland's embedded list implementation. The advantage of the Wayland model is that it is much simpler and so it is easier to follow. It also doesn't require defining a typedef for every list type. The downside is that there is only one list type which is a doubly-linked list where the head has a pointer to both the beginning and the end. The BSD implementation has many more combinations some of which we were taking advantage of to reduce the size of critical structs where we didn't need a pointer to the end of the list. The corresponding changes to uses of cogl-queue.h are: • COGL_STAILQ_* was used for onscreen the list of events and dirty notifications. This makes the size of the CoglContext grow by one pointer. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for fences. • COGL_LIST_* for CoglClosures. In this case the list head now has an extra pointer which means CoglOnscreen will grow by the size of three pointers, but this doesn't seem like a particularly important struct to optimise for size anyway. • COGL_LIST_* was used for the list of foreign GLES2 offscreens. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for the list of sub stacks in a CoglMemoryStack. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the list of layers that haven't had code generated yet while generating a fragment shader for a pipeline. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the pipeline hierarchy in CoglNode. The last part is a bit more controversial because it increases the size of CoglPipeline and CoglPipelineLayer by one pointer in order to have the redundant tail pointer for the list head. Normally we try to be very careful about the size of the CoglPipeline struct. Because CoglPipeline is slice-allocated, this effectively ends up adding two pointers to the size because GSlice rounds up to the size of two pointers. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit 13abf613b15f571ba1fcf6d2eb831ffc6fa31324) Conflicts: cogl/cogl-context-private.h cogl/cogl-context.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c doc/reference/cogl-2.0-experimental/Makefile.am
2013-06-08 18:03:25 -04:00
_cogl_list_remove (&layer_data->link);
combine_authority =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer,
COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_COMBINE);
big_state = combine_authority->big_state;
/* Make a global variable for the result of the layer code */
g_string_append_printf (shader_state->header,
"vec4 cogl_layer%i;\n",
layer_index);
/* Skip the layer generation if there is a snippet that replaces the
default layer code. This is important because generating this
code may cause the code for other layers to be generated and
stored in the global variable. If this code isn't actually used
then the global variables would be uninitialised and they may be
used from other layers */
if (!has_replace_hook (layer, COGL_SNIPPET_HOOK_LAYER_FRAGMENT))
{
ensure_args_for_func (pipeline,
layer,
layer_data->previous_layer_index,
big_state->texture_combine_rgb_func,
big_state->texture_combine_rgb_src);
ensure_args_for_func (pipeline,
layer,
layer_data->previous_layer_index,
big_state->texture_combine_alpha_func,
big_state->texture_combine_alpha_src);
g_string_append_printf (shader_state->header,
"vec4\n"
"cogl_real_generate_layer%i ()\n"
"{\n"
" vec4 cogl_layer;\n",
layer_index);
if (!_cogl_pipeline_layer_needs_combine_separate (combine_authority) ||
/* GL_DOT3_RGBA Is a bit weird as a GL_COMBINE_RGB function
* since if you use it, it overrides your ALPHA function...
*/
big_state->texture_combine_rgb_func ==
COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_FUNC_DOT3_RGBA)
append_masked_combine (pipeline,
layer,
layer_data->previous_layer_index,
"rgba",
big_state->texture_combine_rgb_func,
big_state->texture_combine_rgb_src,
big_state->texture_combine_rgb_op);
else
{
append_masked_combine (pipeline,
layer,
layer_data->previous_layer_index,
"rgb",
big_state->texture_combine_rgb_func,
big_state->texture_combine_rgb_src,
big_state->texture_combine_rgb_op);
append_masked_combine (pipeline,
layer,
layer_data->previous_layer_index,
"a",
big_state->texture_combine_alpha_func,
big_state->texture_combine_alpha_src,
big_state->texture_combine_alpha_op);
}
g_string_append (shader_state->header,
" return cogl_layer;\n"
"}\n");
}
/* Wrap the layer code in any snippets that have been hooked */
memset (&snippet_data, 0, sizeof (snippet_data));
snippet_data.snippets = get_layer_fragment_snippets (layer);
snippet_data.hook = COGL_SNIPPET_HOOK_LAYER_FRAGMENT;
snippet_data.chain_function = g_strdup_printf ("cogl_real_generate_layer%i",
layer_index);
snippet_data.final_name = g_strdup_printf ("cogl_generate_layer%i",
layer_index);
snippet_data.function_prefix = g_strdup_printf ("cogl_generate_layer%i",
layer_index);
snippet_data.return_type = "vec4";
snippet_data.return_variable = "cogl_layer";
snippet_data.source_buf = shader_state->header;
_cogl_pipeline_snippet_generate_code (&snippet_data);
g_free ((char *) snippet_data.chain_function);
g_free ((char *) snippet_data.final_name);
g_free ((char *) snippet_data.function_prefix);
g_string_append_printf (shader_state->source,
" cogl_layer%i = cogl_generate_layer%i ();\n",
layer_index,
layer_index);
g_slice_free (LayerData, layer_data);
}
static CoglBool
_cogl_pipeline_fragend_glsl_add_layer (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
unsigned long layers_difference)
{
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
CoglPipelineShaderState *shader_state = get_shader_state (pipeline);
LayerData *layer_data;
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
if (!shader_state->source)
return TRUE;
/* Store the layers in reverse order */
layer_data = g_slice_new (LayerData);
layer_data->layer = layer;
Use the Wayland embedded linked list implementation instead of BSD's This removes cogl-queue.h and adds a copy of Wayland's embedded list implementation. The advantage of the Wayland model is that it is much simpler and so it is easier to follow. It also doesn't require defining a typedef for every list type. The downside is that there is only one list type which is a doubly-linked list where the head has a pointer to both the beginning and the end. The BSD implementation has many more combinations some of which we were taking advantage of to reduce the size of critical structs where we didn't need a pointer to the end of the list. The corresponding changes to uses of cogl-queue.h are: • COGL_STAILQ_* was used for onscreen the list of events and dirty notifications. This makes the size of the CoglContext grow by one pointer. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for fences. • COGL_LIST_* for CoglClosures. In this case the list head now has an extra pointer which means CoglOnscreen will grow by the size of three pointers, but this doesn't seem like a particularly important struct to optimise for size anyway. • COGL_LIST_* was used for the list of foreign GLES2 offscreens. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for the list of sub stacks in a CoglMemoryStack. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the list of layers that haven't had code generated yet while generating a fragment shader for a pipeline. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the pipeline hierarchy in CoglNode. The last part is a bit more controversial because it increases the size of CoglPipeline and CoglPipelineLayer by one pointer in order to have the redundant tail pointer for the list head. Normally we try to be very careful about the size of the CoglPipeline struct. Because CoglPipeline is slice-allocated, this effectively ends up adding two pointers to the size because GSlice rounds up to the size of two pointers. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit 13abf613b15f571ba1fcf6d2eb831ffc6fa31324) Conflicts: cogl/cogl-context-private.h cogl/cogl-context.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c doc/reference/cogl-2.0-experimental/Makefile.am
2013-06-08 18:03:25 -04:00
if (_cogl_list_empty (&shader_state->layers))
{
layer_data->previous_layer_index = -1;
}
else
Use the Wayland embedded linked list implementation instead of BSD's This removes cogl-queue.h and adds a copy of Wayland's embedded list implementation. The advantage of the Wayland model is that it is much simpler and so it is easier to follow. It also doesn't require defining a typedef for every list type. The downside is that there is only one list type which is a doubly-linked list where the head has a pointer to both the beginning and the end. The BSD implementation has many more combinations some of which we were taking advantage of to reduce the size of critical structs where we didn't need a pointer to the end of the list. The corresponding changes to uses of cogl-queue.h are: • COGL_STAILQ_* was used for onscreen the list of events and dirty notifications. This makes the size of the CoglContext grow by one pointer. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for fences. • COGL_LIST_* for CoglClosures. In this case the list head now has an extra pointer which means CoglOnscreen will grow by the size of three pointers, but this doesn't seem like a particularly important struct to optimise for size anyway. • COGL_LIST_* was used for the list of foreign GLES2 offscreens. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for the list of sub stacks in a CoglMemoryStack. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the list of layers that haven't had code generated yet while generating a fragment shader for a pipeline. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the pipeline hierarchy in CoglNode. The last part is a bit more controversial because it increases the size of CoglPipeline and CoglPipelineLayer by one pointer in order to have the redundant tail pointer for the list head. Normally we try to be very careful about the size of the CoglPipeline struct. Because CoglPipeline is slice-allocated, this effectively ends up adding two pointers to the size because GSlice rounds up to the size of two pointers. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit 13abf613b15f571ba1fcf6d2eb831ffc6fa31324) Conflicts: cogl/cogl-context-private.h cogl/cogl-context.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c doc/reference/cogl-2.0-experimental/Makefile.am
2013-06-08 18:03:25 -04:00
{
LayerData *first =
_cogl_container_of (shader_state->layers.next, LayerData, link);
Use the Wayland embedded linked list implementation instead of BSD's This removes cogl-queue.h and adds a copy of Wayland's embedded list implementation. The advantage of the Wayland model is that it is much simpler and so it is easier to follow. It also doesn't require defining a typedef for every list type. The downside is that there is only one list type which is a doubly-linked list where the head has a pointer to both the beginning and the end. The BSD implementation has many more combinations some of which we were taking advantage of to reduce the size of critical structs where we didn't need a pointer to the end of the list. The corresponding changes to uses of cogl-queue.h are: • COGL_STAILQ_* was used for onscreen the list of events and dirty notifications. This makes the size of the CoglContext grow by one pointer. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for fences. • COGL_LIST_* for CoglClosures. In this case the list head now has an extra pointer which means CoglOnscreen will grow by the size of three pointers, but this doesn't seem like a particularly important struct to optimise for size anyway. • COGL_LIST_* was used for the list of foreign GLES2 offscreens. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for the list of sub stacks in a CoglMemoryStack. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the list of layers that haven't had code generated yet while generating a fragment shader for a pipeline. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the pipeline hierarchy in CoglNode. The last part is a bit more controversial because it increases the size of CoglPipeline and CoglPipelineLayer by one pointer in order to have the redundant tail pointer for the list head. Normally we try to be very careful about the size of the CoglPipeline struct. Because CoglPipeline is slice-allocated, this effectively ends up adding two pointers to the size because GSlice rounds up to the size of two pointers. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit 13abf613b15f571ba1fcf6d2eb831ffc6fa31324) Conflicts: cogl/cogl-context-private.h cogl/cogl-context.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c doc/reference/cogl-2.0-experimental/Makefile.am
2013-06-08 18:03:25 -04:00
layer_data->previous_layer_index = first->layer->index;
}
Use the Wayland embedded linked list implementation instead of BSD's This removes cogl-queue.h and adds a copy of Wayland's embedded list implementation. The advantage of the Wayland model is that it is much simpler and so it is easier to follow. It also doesn't require defining a typedef for every list type. The downside is that there is only one list type which is a doubly-linked list where the head has a pointer to both the beginning and the end. The BSD implementation has many more combinations some of which we were taking advantage of to reduce the size of critical structs where we didn't need a pointer to the end of the list. The corresponding changes to uses of cogl-queue.h are: • COGL_STAILQ_* was used for onscreen the list of events and dirty notifications. This makes the size of the CoglContext grow by one pointer. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for fences. • COGL_LIST_* for CoglClosures. In this case the list head now has an extra pointer which means CoglOnscreen will grow by the size of three pointers, but this doesn't seem like a particularly important struct to optimise for size anyway. • COGL_LIST_* was used for the list of foreign GLES2 offscreens. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for the list of sub stacks in a CoglMemoryStack. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the list of layers that haven't had code generated yet while generating a fragment shader for a pipeline. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the pipeline hierarchy in CoglNode. The last part is a bit more controversial because it increases the size of CoglPipeline and CoglPipelineLayer by one pointer in order to have the redundant tail pointer for the list head. Normally we try to be very careful about the size of the CoglPipeline struct. Because CoglPipeline is slice-allocated, this effectively ends up adding two pointers to the size because GSlice rounds up to the size of two pointers. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit 13abf613b15f571ba1fcf6d2eb831ffc6fa31324) Conflicts: cogl/cogl-context-private.h cogl/cogl-context.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c doc/reference/cogl-2.0-experimental/Makefile.am
2013-06-08 18:03:25 -04:00
_cogl_list_insert (&shader_state->layers, &layer_data->link);
return TRUE;
}
Add a GL 3 driver This adds a new CoglDriver for GL 3 called COGL_DRIVER_GL3. When requested, the GLX, EGL and SDL2 winsyss will set the necessary attributes to request a forward-compatible core profile 3.1 context. That means it will have no deprecated features. To simplify the explosion of checks for specific combinations of context->driver, many of these conditionals have now been replaced with private feature flags that are checked instead. The GL and GLES drivers now initialise these private feature flags depending on which driver is used. The fixed function backends now explicitly check whether the fixed function private feature is available which means the GL3 driver will fall back to always using the GLSL progend. Since Rob's latest patches the GLSL progend no longer uses any fixed function API anyway so it should just work. The driver is currently lower priority than COGL_DRIVER_GL so it will not be used unless it is specificly requested. We may want to change this priority at some point because apparently Mesa can make some memory savings if a core profile context is used. In GL 3, getting the combined extensions string with glGetString is deprecated so this patch changes it to use glGetStringi to build up an array of extensions instead. _cogl_context_get_gl_extensions now returns this array instead of trying to return a const string. The caller is expected to free the array. Some issues with this patch: • GL 3 does not support GL_ALPHA format textures. We should probably make this a feature flag or something. Cogl uses this to render text which currently just throws a GL error and breaks so it's pretty important to do something about this before considering the GL3 driver to be stable. • GL 3 doesn't support client side vertex buffers. This probably doesn't matter because CoglBuffer won't normally use malloc'd buffers if VBOs are available, but it might but worth making malloc'd buffers a private feature and forcing it not to use them. • GL 3 doesn't support the default vertex array object. This patch just makes it create and bind a single non-default vertex array object which gets used just like the normal default object. Ideally it would be good to use vertex array objects properly and attach them to a CoglPrimitive to cache the state. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit 66c9db993595b3a22e63f4c201ea468bc9b88cb6)
2012-09-26 15:32:36 -04:00
/* GLES2 and GL3 don't have alpha testing so we need to implement it
in the shader */
Add a GL 3 driver This adds a new CoglDriver for GL 3 called COGL_DRIVER_GL3. When requested, the GLX, EGL and SDL2 winsyss will set the necessary attributes to request a forward-compatible core profile 3.1 context. That means it will have no deprecated features. To simplify the explosion of checks for specific combinations of context->driver, many of these conditionals have now been replaced with private feature flags that are checked instead. The GL and GLES drivers now initialise these private feature flags depending on which driver is used. The fixed function backends now explicitly check whether the fixed function private feature is available which means the GL3 driver will fall back to always using the GLSL progend. Since Rob's latest patches the GLSL progend no longer uses any fixed function API anyway so it should just work. The driver is currently lower priority than COGL_DRIVER_GL so it will not be used unless it is specificly requested. We may want to change this priority at some point because apparently Mesa can make some memory savings if a core profile context is used. In GL 3, getting the combined extensions string with glGetString is deprecated so this patch changes it to use glGetStringi to build up an array of extensions instead. _cogl_context_get_gl_extensions now returns this array instead of trying to return a const string. The caller is expected to free the array. Some issues with this patch: • GL 3 does not support GL_ALPHA format textures. We should probably make this a feature flag or something. Cogl uses this to render text which currently just throws a GL error and breaks so it's pretty important to do something about this before considering the GL3 driver to be stable. • GL 3 doesn't support client side vertex buffers. This probably doesn't matter because CoglBuffer won't normally use malloc'd buffers if VBOs are available, but it might but worth making malloc'd buffers a private feature and forcing it not to use them. • GL 3 doesn't support the default vertex array object. This patch just makes it create and bind a single non-default vertex array object which gets used just like the normal default object. Ideally it would be good to use vertex array objects properly and attach them to a CoglPrimitive to cache the state. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit 66c9db993595b3a22e63f4c201ea468bc9b88cb6)
2012-09-26 15:32:36 -04:00
#if defined(HAVE_COGL_GLES2) || defined(HAVE_COGL_GL)
static void
add_alpha_test_snippet (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
CoglPipelineShaderState *shader_state)
{
CoglPipelineAlphaFunc alpha_func;
alpha_func = cogl_pipeline_get_alpha_test_function (pipeline);
if (alpha_func == COGL_PIPELINE_ALPHA_FUNC_ALWAYS)
/* Do nothing */
return;
if (alpha_func == COGL_PIPELINE_ALPHA_FUNC_NEVER)
{
/* Always discard the fragment */
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
g_string_append (shader_state->source,
" discard;\n");
return;
}
/* For all of the other alpha functions we need a uniform for the
reference */
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
g_string_append (shader_state->header,
"uniform float _cogl_alpha_test_ref;\n");
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
g_string_append (shader_state->source,
" if (cogl_color_out.a ");
switch (alpha_func)
{
case COGL_PIPELINE_ALPHA_FUNC_LESS:
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
g_string_append (shader_state->source, ">=");
break;
case COGL_PIPELINE_ALPHA_FUNC_EQUAL:
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
g_string_append (shader_state->source, "!=");
break;
case COGL_PIPELINE_ALPHA_FUNC_LEQUAL:
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
g_string_append (shader_state->source, ">");
break;
case COGL_PIPELINE_ALPHA_FUNC_GREATER:
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
g_string_append (shader_state->source, "<=");
break;
case COGL_PIPELINE_ALPHA_FUNC_NOTEQUAL:
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
g_string_append (shader_state->source, "==");
break;
case COGL_PIPELINE_ALPHA_FUNC_GEQUAL:
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
g_string_append (shader_state->source, "< ");
break;
case COGL_PIPELINE_ALPHA_FUNC_ALWAYS:
case COGL_PIPELINE_ALPHA_FUNC_NEVER:
g_assert_not_reached ();
break;
}
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
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g_string_append (shader_state->source,
" _cogl_alpha_test_ref)\n discard;\n");
}
#endif /* HAVE_COGL_GLES2 */
static CoglBool
_cogl_pipeline_fragend_glsl_end (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
cogl: rename CoglMaterial -> CoglPipeline This applies an API naming change that's been deliberated over for a while now which is to rename CoglMaterial to CoglPipeline. For now the new pipeline API is marked as experimental and public headers continue to talk about materials not pipelines. The CoglMaterial API is now maintained in terms of the cogl_pipeline API internally. Currently this API is targeting Cogl 2.0 so we will have time to integrate it properly with other upcoming Cogl 2.0 work. The basic reasons for the rename are: - That the term "material" implies to many people that they are constrained to fragment processing; perhaps as some kind of high-level texture abstraction. - In Clutter they get exposed by ClutterTexture actors which may be re-inforcing this misconception. - When comparing how other frameworks use the term material, a material sometimes describes a multi-pass fragment processing technique which isn't the case in Cogl. - In code, "CoglPipeline" will hopefully be a much more self documenting summary of what these objects represent; a full GPU pipeline configuration including, for example, vertex processing, fragment processing and blending. - When considering the API documentation story, at some point we need a document introducing developers to how the "GPU pipeline" works so it should become intuitive that CoglPipeline maps back to that description of the GPU pipeline. - This is consistent in terminology and concept to OpenGL 4's new pipeline object which is a container for program objects. Note: The cogl-material.[ch] files have been renamed to cogl-material-compat.[ch] because otherwise git doesn't seem to treat the change as a moving the old cogl-material.c->cogl-pipeline.c and so we loose all our git-blame history.
2010-10-27 13:54:57 -04:00
unsigned long pipelines_difference)
{
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
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CoglPipelineShaderState *shader_state = get_shader_state (pipeline);
_COGL_GET_CONTEXT (ctx, FALSE);
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
if (shader_state->source)
{
const char *source_strings[2];
GLint lengths[2];
GLint compile_status;
GLuint shader;
CoglPipelineSnippetData snippet_data;
COGL_STATIC_COUNTER (fragend_glsl_compile_counter,
"glsl fragment compile counter",
"Increments each time a new GLSL "
"fragment shader is compiled",
0 /* no application private data */);
COGL_COUNTER_INC (_cogl_uprof_context, fragend_glsl_compile_counter);
/* We only need to generate code to calculate the fragment value
for the last layer. If the value of this layer depends on any
previous layers then it will recursively generate the code
for those layers */
Use the Wayland embedded linked list implementation instead of BSD's This removes cogl-queue.h and adds a copy of Wayland's embedded list implementation. The advantage of the Wayland model is that it is much simpler and so it is easier to follow. It also doesn't require defining a typedef for every list type. The downside is that there is only one list type which is a doubly-linked list where the head has a pointer to both the beginning and the end. The BSD implementation has many more combinations some of which we were taking advantage of to reduce the size of critical structs where we didn't need a pointer to the end of the list. The corresponding changes to uses of cogl-queue.h are: • COGL_STAILQ_* was used for onscreen the list of events and dirty notifications. This makes the size of the CoglContext grow by one pointer. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for fences. • COGL_LIST_* for CoglClosures. In this case the list head now has an extra pointer which means CoglOnscreen will grow by the size of three pointers, but this doesn't seem like a particularly important struct to optimise for size anyway. • COGL_LIST_* was used for the list of foreign GLES2 offscreens. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for the list of sub stacks in a CoglMemoryStack. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the list of layers that haven't had code generated yet while generating a fragment shader for a pipeline. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the pipeline hierarchy in CoglNode. The last part is a bit more controversial because it increases the size of CoglPipeline and CoglPipelineLayer by one pointer in order to have the redundant tail pointer for the list head. Normally we try to be very careful about the size of the CoglPipeline struct. Because CoglPipeline is slice-allocated, this effectively ends up adding two pointers to the size because GSlice rounds up to the size of two pointers. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit 13abf613b15f571ba1fcf6d2eb831ffc6fa31324) Conflicts: cogl/cogl-context-private.h cogl/cogl-context.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c doc/reference/cogl-2.0-experimental/Makefile.am
2013-06-08 18:03:25 -04:00
if (!_cogl_list_empty (&shader_state->layers))
{
CoglPipelineLayer *last_layer;
LayerData *layer_data, *tmp;
Use the Wayland embedded linked list implementation instead of BSD's This removes cogl-queue.h and adds a copy of Wayland's embedded list implementation. The advantage of the Wayland model is that it is much simpler and so it is easier to follow. It also doesn't require defining a typedef for every list type. The downside is that there is only one list type which is a doubly-linked list where the head has a pointer to both the beginning and the end. The BSD implementation has many more combinations some of which we were taking advantage of to reduce the size of critical structs where we didn't need a pointer to the end of the list. The corresponding changes to uses of cogl-queue.h are: • COGL_STAILQ_* was used for onscreen the list of events and dirty notifications. This makes the size of the CoglContext grow by one pointer. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for fences. • COGL_LIST_* for CoglClosures. In this case the list head now has an extra pointer which means CoglOnscreen will grow by the size of three pointers, but this doesn't seem like a particularly important struct to optimise for size anyway. • COGL_LIST_* was used for the list of foreign GLES2 offscreens. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for the list of sub stacks in a CoglMemoryStack. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the list of layers that haven't had code generated yet while generating a fragment shader for a pipeline. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the pipeline hierarchy in CoglNode. The last part is a bit more controversial because it increases the size of CoglPipeline and CoglPipelineLayer by one pointer in order to have the redundant tail pointer for the list head. Normally we try to be very careful about the size of the CoglPipeline struct. Because CoglPipeline is slice-allocated, this effectively ends up adding two pointers to the size because GSlice rounds up to the size of two pointers. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit 13abf613b15f571ba1fcf6d2eb831ffc6fa31324) Conflicts: cogl/cogl-context-private.h cogl/cogl-context.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c doc/reference/cogl-2.0-experimental/Makefile.am
2013-06-08 18:03:25 -04:00
layer_data = _cogl_container_of (shader_state->layers.next,
LayerData,
Use the Wayland embedded linked list implementation instead of BSD's This removes cogl-queue.h and adds a copy of Wayland's embedded list implementation. The advantage of the Wayland model is that it is much simpler and so it is easier to follow. It also doesn't require defining a typedef for every list type. The downside is that there is only one list type which is a doubly-linked list where the head has a pointer to both the beginning and the end. The BSD implementation has many more combinations some of which we were taking advantage of to reduce the size of critical structs where we didn't need a pointer to the end of the list. The corresponding changes to uses of cogl-queue.h are: • COGL_STAILQ_* was used for onscreen the list of events and dirty notifications. This makes the size of the CoglContext grow by one pointer. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for fences. • COGL_LIST_* for CoglClosures. In this case the list head now has an extra pointer which means CoglOnscreen will grow by the size of three pointers, but this doesn't seem like a particularly important struct to optimise for size anyway. • COGL_LIST_* was used for the list of foreign GLES2 offscreens. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for the list of sub stacks in a CoglMemoryStack. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the list of layers that haven't had code generated yet while generating a fragment shader for a pipeline. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the pipeline hierarchy in CoglNode. The last part is a bit more controversial because it increases the size of CoglPipeline and CoglPipelineLayer by one pointer in order to have the redundant tail pointer for the list head. Normally we try to be very careful about the size of the CoglPipeline struct. Because CoglPipeline is slice-allocated, this effectively ends up adding two pointers to the size because GSlice rounds up to the size of two pointers. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit 13abf613b15f571ba1fcf6d2eb831ffc6fa31324) Conflicts: cogl/cogl-context-private.h cogl/cogl-context.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c doc/reference/cogl-2.0-experimental/Makefile.am
2013-06-08 18:03:25 -04:00
link);
last_layer = layer_data->layer;
ensure_layer_generated (pipeline, last_layer->index);
g_string_append_printf (shader_state->source,
" cogl_color_out = cogl_layer%i;\n",
last_layer->index);
Use the Wayland embedded linked list implementation instead of BSD's This removes cogl-queue.h and adds a copy of Wayland's embedded list implementation. The advantage of the Wayland model is that it is much simpler and so it is easier to follow. It also doesn't require defining a typedef for every list type. The downside is that there is only one list type which is a doubly-linked list where the head has a pointer to both the beginning and the end. The BSD implementation has many more combinations some of which we were taking advantage of to reduce the size of critical structs where we didn't need a pointer to the end of the list. The corresponding changes to uses of cogl-queue.h are: • COGL_STAILQ_* was used for onscreen the list of events and dirty notifications. This makes the size of the CoglContext grow by one pointer. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for fences. • COGL_LIST_* for CoglClosures. In this case the list head now has an extra pointer which means CoglOnscreen will grow by the size of three pointers, but this doesn't seem like a particularly important struct to optimise for size anyway. • COGL_LIST_* was used for the list of foreign GLES2 offscreens. • COGL_TAILQ_* was used for the list of sub stacks in a CoglMemoryStack. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the list of layers that haven't had code generated yet while generating a fragment shader for a pipeline. • COGL_LIST_* was used to track the pipeline hierarchy in CoglNode. The last part is a bit more controversial because it increases the size of CoglPipeline and CoglPipelineLayer by one pointer in order to have the redundant tail pointer for the list head. Normally we try to be very careful about the size of the CoglPipeline struct. Because CoglPipeline is slice-allocated, this effectively ends up adding two pointers to the size because GSlice rounds up to the size of two pointers. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit 13abf613b15f571ba1fcf6d2eb831ffc6fa31324) Conflicts: cogl/cogl-context-private.h cogl/cogl-context.c cogl/driver/gl/cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl.c doc/reference/cogl-2.0-experimental/Makefile.am
2013-06-08 18:03:25 -04:00
_cogl_list_for_each_safe (layer_data,
tmp,
&shader_state->layers,
link)
g_slice_free (LayerData, layer_data);
}
else
g_string_append (shader_state->source,
" cogl_color_out = cogl_color_in;\n");
Add a GL 3 driver This adds a new CoglDriver for GL 3 called COGL_DRIVER_GL3. When requested, the GLX, EGL and SDL2 winsyss will set the necessary attributes to request a forward-compatible core profile 3.1 context. That means it will have no deprecated features. To simplify the explosion of checks for specific combinations of context->driver, many of these conditionals have now been replaced with private feature flags that are checked instead. The GL and GLES drivers now initialise these private feature flags depending on which driver is used. The fixed function backends now explicitly check whether the fixed function private feature is available which means the GL3 driver will fall back to always using the GLSL progend. Since Rob's latest patches the GLSL progend no longer uses any fixed function API anyway so it should just work. The driver is currently lower priority than COGL_DRIVER_GL so it will not be used unless it is specificly requested. We may want to change this priority at some point because apparently Mesa can make some memory savings if a core profile context is used. In GL 3, getting the combined extensions string with glGetString is deprecated so this patch changes it to use glGetStringi to build up an array of extensions instead. _cogl_context_get_gl_extensions now returns this array instead of trying to return a const string. The caller is expected to free the array. Some issues with this patch: • GL 3 does not support GL_ALPHA format textures. We should probably make this a feature flag or something. Cogl uses this to render text which currently just throws a GL error and breaks so it's pretty important to do something about this before considering the GL3 driver to be stable. • GL 3 doesn't support client side vertex buffers. This probably doesn't matter because CoglBuffer won't normally use malloc'd buffers if VBOs are available, but it might but worth making malloc'd buffers a private feature and forcing it not to use them. • GL 3 doesn't support the default vertex array object. This patch just makes it create and bind a single non-default vertex array object which gets used just like the normal default object. Ideally it would be good to use vertex array objects properly and attach them to a CoglPrimitive to cache the state. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com> (cherry picked from commit 66c9db993595b3a22e63f4c201ea468bc9b88cb6)
2012-09-26 15:32:36 -04:00
#if defined(HAVE_COGL_GLES2) || defined (HAVE_COGL_GL)
if (!_cogl_has_private_feature (ctx, COGL_PRIVATE_FEATURE_ALPHA_TEST))
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
add_alpha_test_snippet (pipeline, shader_state);
#endif
/* Close the function surrounding the generated fragment processing */
g_string_append (shader_state->source, "}\n");
cogl-pipeline: Add two hook points for adding shader snippets This adds two new public experimental functions for attaching CoglSnippets to two hook points on a CoglPipeline: void cogl_pipeline_add_vertex_hook (CoglPipeline *, CoglSnippet *) void cogl_pipeline_add_fragment_hook (CoglPipeline *, CoglSnippet *) The hooks are intended to be around the entire vertex or fragment processing. That means the pre string in the snippet will be inserted at the very top of the main function and the post function will be inserted at the very end. The declarations get inserted in the global scope. The snippets are stored in two separate linked lists with a structure containing an enum representing the hook point and a pointer to the snippet. The lists are meant to be for hooks that affect the vertex shader and fragment shader respectively. Although there are currently only two hooks and the names match these two lists, the intention is *not* that each new hook will be in a separate list. The separation of the lists is just to make it easier to determine which shader needs to be regenerated when a new snippet is added. When a pipeline becomes the authority for either the vertex or fragment snipper state, it simply copies the entire list from the previous authority (although of course the shader snippet objects are referenced instead of copied so it doesn't duplicate the source strings). Each string is inserted into its own block in the shader. This means that each string has its own scope so it doesn't need to worry about name collisions with variables in other snippets. However it does mean that the pre and post strings can't share variables. It could be possible to wrap both parts in one block and then wrap the actual inner hook code in another block, however this would mean that any further snippets within the outer snippet would be able to see those variables. Perhaps something to consider would be to put each snippet into its own function which calls another function between the pre and post strings to do further processing. The pipeline cache for generated programs was previously shared with the fragment shader cache because the state that affects vertex shaders was a subset of the state that affects fragment shaders. This is no longer the case because there is a separate state mask for vertex snippets so the program cache now has its own hash table. Reviewed-by: Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
2011-11-17 11:52:21 -05:00
/* Add all of the hooks for fragment processing */
memset (&snippet_data, 0, sizeof (snippet_data));
snippet_data.snippets = get_fragment_snippets (pipeline);
snippet_data.hook = COGL_SNIPPET_HOOK_FRAGMENT;
snippet_data.chain_function = "cogl_generated_source";
snippet_data.final_name = "main";
snippet_data.function_prefix = "cogl_fragment_hook";
snippet_data.source_buf = shader_state->source;
_cogl_pipeline_snippet_generate_code (&snippet_data);
GE_RET( shader, ctx, glCreateShader (GL_FRAGMENT_SHADER) );
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
lengths[0] = shader_state->header->len;
source_strings[0] = shader_state->header->str;
lengths[1] = shader_state->source->len;
source_strings[1] = shader_state->source->str;
_cogl_glsl_shader_set_source_with_boilerplate (ctx,
shader, GL_FRAGMENT_SHADER,
pipeline,
2, /* count */
source_strings, lengths);
GE( ctx, glCompileShader (shader) );
GE( ctx, glGetShaderiv (shader, GL_COMPILE_STATUS, &compile_status) );
if (!compile_status)
{
GLint len = 0;
char *shader_log;
GE( ctx, glGetShaderiv (shader, GL_INFO_LOG_LENGTH, &len) );
shader_log = g_alloca (len);
GE( ctx, glGetShaderInfoLog (shader, len, &len, shader_log) );
g_warning ("Shader compilation failed:\n%s", shader_log);
}
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
shader_state->header = NULL;
shader_state->source = NULL;
shader_state->gl_shader = shader;
}
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
return TRUE;
}
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
static void
_cogl_pipeline_fragend_glsl_pre_change_notify (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
cogl: rename CoglMaterial -> CoglPipeline This applies an API naming change that's been deliberated over for a while now which is to rename CoglMaterial to CoglPipeline. For now the new pipeline API is marked as experimental and public headers continue to talk about materials not pipelines. The CoglMaterial API is now maintained in terms of the cogl_pipeline API internally. Currently this API is targeting Cogl 2.0 so we will have time to integrate it properly with other upcoming Cogl 2.0 work. The basic reasons for the rename are: - That the term "material" implies to many people that they are constrained to fragment processing; perhaps as some kind of high-level texture abstraction. - In Clutter they get exposed by ClutterTexture actors which may be re-inforcing this misconception. - When comparing how other frameworks use the term material, a material sometimes describes a multi-pass fragment processing technique which isn't the case in Cogl. - In code, "CoglPipeline" will hopefully be a much more self documenting summary of what these objects represent; a full GPU pipeline configuration including, for example, vertex processing, fragment processing and blending. - When considering the API documentation story, at some point we need a document introducing developers to how the "GPU pipeline" works so it should become intuitive that CoglPipeline maps back to that description of the GPU pipeline. - This is consistent in terminology and concept to OpenGL 4's new pipeline object which is a container for program objects. Note: The cogl-material.[ch] files have been renamed to cogl-material-compat.[ch] because otherwise git doesn't seem to treat the change as a moving the old cogl-material.c->cogl-pipeline.c and so we loose all our git-blame history.
2010-10-27 13:54:57 -04:00
CoglPipelineState change,
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
const CoglColor *new_color)
{
Dynamically load the GL or GLES library The GL or GLES library is now dynamically loaded by the CoglRenderer so that it can choose between GL, GLES1 and GLES2 at runtime. The library is loaded by the renderer because it needs to be done before calling eglInitialize. There is a new environment variable called COGL_DRIVER to choose between gl, gles1 or gles2. The #ifdefs for HAVE_COGL_GL, HAVE_COGL_GLES and HAVE_COGL_GLES2 have been changed so that they don't assume the ifdefs are mutually exclusive. They haven't been removed entirely so that it's possible to compile the GLES backends without the the enums from the GL headers. When using GLX the winsys additionally dynamically loads libGL because that also contains the GLX API. It can't be linked in directly because that would probably conflict with the GLES API if the EGL is selected. When compiling with EGL support the library links directly to libEGL because it doesn't contain any GL API so it shouldn't have any conflicts. When building for WGL or OSX Cogl still directly links against the GL API so there is a #define in config.h so that Cogl won't try to dlopen the library. Cogl-pango previously had a #ifdef to detect when the GL backend is used so that it can sneakily pass GL_QUADS to cogl_vertex_buffer_draw. This is now changed so that it queries the CoglContext for the backend. However to get this to work Cogl now needs to export the _cogl_context_get_default symbol and cogl-pango needs some extra -I flags to so that it can include cogl-context-private.h
2011-07-07 15:44:56 -04:00
_COGL_GET_CONTEXT (ctx, NO_RETVAL);
if ((change & _cogl_pipeline_get_state_for_fragment_codegen (ctx)))
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
dirty_shader_state (pipeline);
Merge cogl-program-{gl,gles}.c into one cogl-program.c This merges the two implementations of CoglProgram for the GLES2 and GL backends into one. The implementation is more like the GLES2 version which would track the uniform values and delay sending them to GL. CoglProgram is now effectively just a GList of CoglShaders along with an array of stored uniform values. CoglProgram never actually creates a GL program, instead this is left up to the GLSL material backend. This is necessary on GLES2 where we may need to relink the user's program with different generated shaders depending on the other emulated fixed function state. It will also be necessary in the future GLSL backends for regular OpenGL. The GLSL and ARBfp material backends are now the ones that create and link the GL program from the list of shaders. The linked program is attached to the private material state so that it can be reused if the CoglProgram is used again with the same material. This does mean the program will get relinked if the shader is used with multiple materials. This will be particularly bad if the legacy cogl_program_use function is used because that effectively always makes one-shot materials. This problem will hopefully be alleviated if we make a hash table with a cache of generated programs. The cogl program would then need to become part of the hash lookup. Each CoglProgram now has an age counter which is incremented every time a shader is added. This is used by the material backends to detect when we need to create a new GL program for the user program. The internal _cogl_use_program function now takes a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram. It no longer needs any special differences for GLES2. The GLES2 wrapper function now also uses this function to bind its generated shaders. The ARBfp shaders no longer store a copy of the program source but instead just directly create a program object when cogl_shader_source is called. This avoids having to reupload the source if the same shader is used in multiple materials. There are currently a few gross hacks to get the GLES2 backend to work with this. The problem is that the GLSL material backend is now generating a complete GL program but the GLES2 wrapper still needs to add its fixed function emulation shaders if the program doesn't provide either a vertex or fragment shader. There is a new function in the GLES2 wrapper called _cogl_gles2_use_program which replaces the previous cogl_program_use implementation. It extracts the GL shaders from the GL program object and creates a new GL program containing all of the shaders plus its fixed function emulation. This new program is returned to the GLSL material backend so that it can still flush the custom uniforms using it. The user_program is attached to the GLES2 settings struct as before but its stored using a GL program handle rather than a CoglProgram pointer. This hack will go away once the GLSL material backend replaces the GLES2 wrapper by generating the code itself. Under Mesa this currently generates some GL errors when glClear is called in test-cogl-shader-glsl. I think this is due to a bug in Mesa however. When the user program on the material is changed the GLSL backend gets notified and deletes the GL program that it linked from the user shaders. The program will still be bound in GL however. Leaving a deleted shader bound exposes a bug in Mesa's glClear implementation. More details are here: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=31194
2010-10-15 13:00:29 -04:00
}
/* NB: layers are considered immutable once they have any dependants
* so although multiple pipelines can end up depending on a single
* static layer, we can guarantee that if a layer is being *changed*
* then it can only have one pipeline depending on it.
*
* XXX: Don't forget this is *pre* change, we can't read the new value
* yet!
*/
static void
_cogl_pipeline_fragend_glsl_layer_pre_change_notify (
CoglPipeline *owner,
CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
CoglPipelineLayerState change)
{
Dynamically load the GL or GLES library The GL or GLES library is now dynamically loaded by the CoglRenderer so that it can choose between GL, GLES1 and GLES2 at runtime. The library is loaded by the renderer because it needs to be done before calling eglInitialize. There is a new environment variable called COGL_DRIVER to choose between gl, gles1 or gles2. The #ifdefs for HAVE_COGL_GL, HAVE_COGL_GLES and HAVE_COGL_GLES2 have been changed so that they don't assume the ifdefs are mutually exclusive. They haven't been removed entirely so that it's possible to compile the GLES backends without the the enums from the GL headers. When using GLX the winsys additionally dynamically loads libGL because that also contains the GLX API. It can't be linked in directly because that would probably conflict with the GLES API if the EGL is selected. When compiling with EGL support the library links directly to libEGL because it doesn't contain any GL API so it shouldn't have any conflicts. When building for WGL or OSX Cogl still directly links against the GL API so there is a #define in config.h so that Cogl won't try to dlopen the library. Cogl-pango previously had a #ifdef to detect when the GL backend is used so that it can sneakily pass GL_QUADS to cogl_vertex_buffer_draw. This is now changed so that it queries the CoglContext for the backend. However to get this to work Cogl now needs to export the _cogl_context_get_default symbol and cogl-pango needs some extra -I flags to so that it can include cogl-context-private.h
2011-07-07 15:44:56 -04:00
_COGL_GET_CONTEXT (ctx, NO_RETVAL);
if ((change & _cogl_pipeline_get_layer_state_for_fragment_codegen (ctx)))
{
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
dirty_shader_state (owner);
return;
}
/* TODO: we could be saving snippets of texture combine code along
* with each layer and then when a layer changes we would just free
* the snippet. */
}
const CoglPipelineFragend _cogl_pipeline_glsl_fragend =
{
_cogl_pipeline_fragend_glsl_start,
_cogl_pipeline_fragend_glsl_add_layer,
NULL, /* passthrough */
_cogl_pipeline_fragend_glsl_end,
_cogl_pipeline_fragend_glsl_pre_change_notify,
cogl: rename CoglMaterial -> CoglPipeline This applies an API naming change that's been deliberated over for a while now which is to rename CoglMaterial to CoglPipeline. For now the new pipeline API is marked as experimental and public headers continue to talk about materials not pipelines. The CoglMaterial API is now maintained in terms of the cogl_pipeline API internally. Currently this API is targeting Cogl 2.0 so we will have time to integrate it properly with other upcoming Cogl 2.0 work. The basic reasons for the rename are: - That the term "material" implies to many people that they are constrained to fragment processing; perhaps as some kind of high-level texture abstraction. - In Clutter they get exposed by ClutterTexture actors which may be re-inforcing this misconception. - When comparing how other frameworks use the term material, a material sometimes describes a multi-pass fragment processing technique which isn't the case in Cogl. - In code, "CoglPipeline" will hopefully be a much more self documenting summary of what these objects represent; a full GPU pipeline configuration including, for example, vertex processing, fragment processing and blending. - When considering the API documentation story, at some point we need a document introducing developers to how the "GPU pipeline" works so it should become intuitive that CoglPipeline maps back to that description of the GPU pipeline. - This is consistent in terminology and concept to OpenGL 4's new pipeline object which is a container for program objects. Note: The cogl-material.[ch] files have been renamed to cogl-material-compat.[ch] because otherwise git doesn't seem to treat the change as a moving the old cogl-material.c->cogl-pipeline.c and so we loose all our git-blame history.
2010-10-27 13:54:57 -04:00
NULL, /* pipeline_set_parent_notify */
pipeline: Unify how the backends store private data Previously the fragends had a separate private data pointer which was used by the GLSL and ARBfp fragends to store a tiny struct containing a single pointer to the ref-counted shader state. The space for the private data pointer is reserved in all of the pipelines for all of the potential backends. The vertends and progends however did this differently by directly storing the pointer to the ref counted data using cogl_object_set_user_data. This patch unifies the different methods so that they all use cogl_object_set_user_data and the fragends don't bother with the separate tiny allocation for the private data. The private data pointer array has been removed from CoglPipeline and the corresponding fragend virtual to free the private data has also been removed because this can instead be done with the destroy notify from the object user data. The variable names used have been unified so that all of the vertends and fragends name their data struct CoglPipelineShaderState and use a variable called shader_state to refer to it. The progend uses CoglPipelineProgramState and a variable called program_state. This should also fix two potential bugs. the ARBfp fragend was apprently leaking a reference to the private state when it creates the private data because it was adding a reference before stroring the pointer to the newly allocated data but the ref count is already set to 1 on creation. The other potential bug is that the free function for CoglPipeline was only calling the free_priv virtual for the currently used fragend of the pipeline. The design of the fragends is meant to allow a pipeline to have multiple fragend priv datas because a child pipeline could be attaching its fragend data to the ancestor and its allowed to pick a different fragend.
2011-06-30 08:39:48 -04:00
_cogl_pipeline_fragend_glsl_layer_pre_change_notify
};
#endif /* COGL_PIPELINE_FRAGEND_GLSL */