mutter/cogl/cogl-pipeline.c

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/*
* Cogl
*
* An object oriented GL/GLES Abstraction/Utility Layer
*
* Copyright (C) 2008,2009,2010 Intel Corporation.
*
* This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
* License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
* version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
*
* This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
* Lesser General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* License along with this library. If not, see
* <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*
*
*
* Authors:
* Robert Bragg <robert@linux.intel.com>
*/
#ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H
#include "config.h"
#endif
#include "cogl.h"
#include "cogl-debug.h"
#include "cogl-internal.h"
#include "cogl-context.h"
#include "cogl-object.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-opengl-private.h"
#include "cogl-texture-private.h"
#include "cogl-blend-string.h"
#include "cogl-journal-private.h"
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
#include "cogl-color-private.h"
#include "cogl-util.h"
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
#include "cogl-profile.h"
#include <glib.h>
#include <glib/gprintf.h>
#include <string.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
typedef gboolean (*CoglPipelineStateComparitor) (CoglPipeline *authority0,
CoglPipeline *authority1);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
static CoglPipelineLayer *_cogl_pipeline_layer_copy (CoglPipelineLayer *layer);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
static void _cogl_pipeline_free (CoglPipeline *tex);
static void _cogl_pipeline_layer_free (CoglPipelineLayer *layer);
static void _cogl_pipeline_add_layer_difference (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
gboolean inc_n_layers);
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
static void handle_automatic_blend_enable (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipelineState changes);
static void recursively_free_layer_caches (CoglPipeline *pipeline);
static gboolean _cogl_pipeline_is_weak (CoglPipeline *pipeline);
const CoglPipelineFragend *_cogl_pipeline_fragends[COGL_PIPELINE_N_FRAGENDS];
const CoglPipelineVertend *_cogl_pipeline_vertends[COGL_PIPELINE_N_VERTENDS];
/* The 'MAX' here is so that we don't define an empty array when there
are no progends */
const CoglPipelineProgend *
_cogl_pipeline_progends[MAX (COGL_PIPELINE_N_PROGENDS, 1)];
#ifdef COGL_PIPELINE_FRAGEND_GLSL
#include "cogl-pipeline-fragend-glsl-private.h"
#endif
#ifdef COGL_PIPELINE_FRAGEND_ARBFP
#include "cogl-pipeline-fragend-arbfp-private.h"
#endif
#ifdef COGL_PIPELINE_FRAGEND_FIXED
#include "cogl-pipeline-fragend-fixed-private.h"
#endif
#ifdef COGL_PIPELINE_PROGEND_GLSL
#include "cogl-pipeline-progend-glsl-private.h"
#endif
#ifdef COGL_PIPELINE_VERTEND_GLSL
#include "cogl-pipeline-vertend-glsl-private.h"
#endif
#ifdef COGL_PIPELINE_VERTEND_FIXED
#include "cogl-pipeline-vertend-fixed-private.h"
#endif
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
COGL_OBJECT_DEFINE (Pipeline, pipeline);
/* This type was made deprecated before the cogl_is_pipeline_layer
function was ever exposed in the public headers so there's no need
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
to make the cogl_is_pipeline_layer function public. We use INTERNAL
so that the cogl_is_* function won't get defined */
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
COGL_OBJECT_INTERNAL_DEFINE (PipelineLayer, pipeline_layer);
GQuark
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
_cogl_pipeline_error_quark (void)
{
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
return g_quark_from_static_string ("cogl-pipeline-error-quark");
}
static void
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
_cogl_pipeline_node_init (CoglPipelineNode *node)
{
node->parent = NULL;
node->has_children = FALSE;
}
static void
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
_cogl_pipeline_node_set_parent_real (CoglPipelineNode *node,
CoglPipelineNode *parent,
CoglPipelineNodeUnparentVFunc unparent,
gboolean take_strong_reference)
{
/* NB: the old parent may indirectly be keeping the new parent alive
* so we have to ref the new parent before unrefing the old.
*
* Note: we take a reference here regardless of
* take_strong_reference because weak children may need special
* handling when the parent disposes itself which relies on a
* consistent link to all weak nodes. Once the node is linked to its
* parent then we remove the reference at the end if
* take_strong_reference == FALSE. */
cogl_object_ref (parent);
if (node->parent)
unparent (node);
if (G_UNLIKELY (parent->has_children))
parent->children = g_list_prepend (parent->children, node);
else
{
parent->has_children = TRUE;
parent->first_child = node;
parent->children = NULL;
}
node->parent = parent;
node->has_parent_reference = take_strong_reference;
/* Now that there is a consistent parent->child link we can remove
* the parent reference if no reference was requested. If it turns
* out that the new parent was only being kept alive by the old
* parent then it will be disposed of here. */
if (!take_strong_reference)
cogl_object_unref (parent);
}
static void
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
_cogl_pipeline_node_unparent_real (CoglPipelineNode *node)
{
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
CoglPipelineNode *parent = node->parent;
if (parent == NULL)
return;
g_return_if_fail (parent->has_children);
if (parent->first_child == node)
{
if (parent->children)
{
parent->first_child = parent->children->data;
parent->children =
g_list_delete_link (parent->children, parent->children);
}
else
parent->has_children = FALSE;
}
else
parent->children = g_list_remove (parent->children, node);
if (node->has_parent_reference)
cogl_object_unref (parent);
node->parent = NULL;
}
void
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
_cogl_pipeline_node_foreach_child (CoglPipelineNode *node,
CoglPipelineNodeChildCallback callback,
void *user_data)
{
if (node->has_children)
{
callback (node->first_child, user_data);
g_list_foreach (node->children, (GFunc)callback, user_data);
}
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/*
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
* This initializes the first pipeline owned by the Cogl context. All
* subsequently instantiated pipelines created via the cogl_pipeline_new()
* API will initially be a copy of this pipeline.
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
*
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
* The default pipeline is the topmost ancester for all pipelines.
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
*/
void
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
_cogl_pipeline_init_default_pipeline (void)
{
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
/* Create new - blank - pipeline */
CoglPipeline *pipeline = g_slice_new0 (CoglPipeline);
/* XXX: NB: It's important that we zero this to avoid polluting
* pipeline hash values with un-initialized data */
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
CoglPipelineBigState *big_state = g_slice_new0 (CoglPipelineBigState);
CoglPipelineLightingState *lighting_state = &big_state->lighting_state;
CoglPipelineAlphaFuncState *alpha_state = &big_state->alpha_state;
CoglPipelineBlendState *blend_state = &big_state->blend_state;
CoglPipelineDepthState *depth_state = &big_state->depth_state;
_COGL_GET_CONTEXT (ctx, NO_RETVAL);
/* Take this opportunity to setup the backends... */
#ifdef COGL_PIPELINE_FRAGEND_GLSL
_cogl_pipeline_fragends[COGL_PIPELINE_FRAGEND_GLSL] =
&_cogl_pipeline_glsl_fragend;
#endif
#ifdef COGL_PIPELINE_FRAGEND_ARBFP
_cogl_pipeline_fragends[COGL_PIPELINE_FRAGEND_ARBFP] =
&_cogl_pipeline_arbfp_fragend;
#endif
#ifdef COGL_PIPELINE_FRAGEND_FIXED
_cogl_pipeline_fragends[COGL_PIPELINE_FRAGEND_FIXED] =
&_cogl_pipeline_fixed_fragend;
#endif
#ifdef COGL_PIPELINE_PROGEND_GLSL
_cogl_pipeline_progends[COGL_PIPELINE_PROGEND_GLSL] =
&_cogl_pipeline_glsl_progend;
#endif
#ifdef COGL_PIPELINE_VERTEND_GLSL
_cogl_pipeline_vertends[COGL_PIPELINE_VERTEND_GLSL] =
&_cogl_pipeline_glsl_vertend;
#endif
#ifdef COGL_PIPELINE_VERTEND_FIXED
_cogl_pipeline_vertends[COGL_PIPELINE_VERTEND_FIXED] =
&_cogl_pipeline_fixed_vertend;
#endif
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
_cogl_pipeline_node_init (COGL_PIPELINE_NODE (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
pipeline->is_weak = FALSE;
pipeline->journal_ref_count = 0;
pipeline->fragend = COGL_PIPELINE_FRAGEND_UNDEFINED;
pipeline->vertend = COGL_PIPELINE_VERTEND_UNDEFINED;
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
pipeline->differences = COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_ALL_SPARSE;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
pipeline->real_blend_enable = FALSE;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
pipeline->blend_enable = COGL_PIPELINE_BLEND_ENABLE_AUTOMATIC;
pipeline->layer_differences = NULL;
pipeline->n_layers = 0;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
pipeline->big_state = big_state;
pipeline->has_big_state = TRUE;
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
pipeline->static_breadcrumb = "default pipeline";
pipeline->has_static_breadcrumb = TRUE;
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
pipeline->age = 0;
/* Use the same defaults as the GL spec... */
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
cogl_color_init_from_4ub (&pipeline->color, 0xff, 0xff, 0xff, 0xff);
/* Use the same defaults as the GL spec... */
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
lighting_state->ambient[0] = 0.2;
lighting_state->ambient[1] = 0.2;
lighting_state->ambient[2] = 0.2;
lighting_state->ambient[3] = 1.0;
lighting_state->diffuse[0] = 0.8;
lighting_state->diffuse[1] = 0.8;
lighting_state->diffuse[2] = 0.8;
lighting_state->diffuse[3] = 1.0;
lighting_state->specular[0] = 0;
lighting_state->specular[1] = 0;
lighting_state->specular[2] = 0;
lighting_state->specular[3] = 1.0;
lighting_state->emission[0] = 0;
lighting_state->emission[1] = 0;
lighting_state->emission[2] = 0;
lighting_state->emission[3] = 1.0;
lighting_state->shininess = 0.0f;
/* Use the same defaults as the GL spec... */
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
alpha_state->alpha_func = COGL_PIPELINE_ALPHA_FUNC_ALWAYS;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
alpha_state->alpha_func_reference = 0.0;
/* Not the same as the GL default, but seems saner... */
#ifndef HAVE_COGL_GLES
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
blend_state->blend_equation_rgb = GL_FUNC_ADD;
blend_state->blend_equation_alpha = GL_FUNC_ADD;
blend_state->blend_src_factor_alpha = GL_ONE;
blend_state->blend_dst_factor_alpha = GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA;
cogl_color_init_from_4ub (&blend_state->blend_constant,
0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00);
#endif
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
blend_state->blend_src_factor_rgb = GL_ONE;
blend_state->blend_dst_factor_rgb = GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
big_state->user_program = COGL_INVALID_HANDLE;
/* The same as the GL defaults */
depth_state->depth_test_enabled = FALSE;
depth_state->depth_test_function = COGL_DEPTH_TEST_FUNCTION_LESS;
depth_state->depth_writing_enabled = TRUE;
depth_state->depth_range_near = 0;
depth_state->depth_range_far = 1;
big_state->point_size = 1.0f;
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
ctx->default_pipeline = _cogl_pipeline_object_new (pipeline);
}
static void
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
_cogl_pipeline_unparent (CoglPipelineNode *pipeline)
{
/* Chain up */
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
_cogl_pipeline_node_unparent_real (pipeline);
}
static gboolean
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
recursively_free_layer_caches_cb (CoglPipelineNode *node,
void *user_data)
{
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
recursively_free_layer_caches (COGL_PIPELINE (node));
return TRUE;
}
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
/* This recursively frees the layers_cache of a pipeline and all of
* its descendants.
*
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
* For instance if we change a pipelines ->layer_differences list
* then that pipeline and all of its descendants may now have
* incorrect layer caches. */
static void
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
recursively_free_layer_caches (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
/* Note: we maintain the invariable that if a pipeline already has a
* dirty layers_cache then so do all of its descendants. */
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
if (pipeline->layers_cache_dirty)
return;
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
if (G_UNLIKELY (pipeline->layers_cache != pipeline->short_layers_cache))
g_slice_free1 (sizeof (CoglPipelineLayer *) * pipeline->n_layers,
pipeline->layers_cache);
pipeline->layers_cache_dirty = TRUE;
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
_cogl_pipeline_node_foreach_child (COGL_PIPELINE_NODE (pipeline),
recursively_free_layer_caches_cb,
NULL);
}
static void
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
_cogl_pipeline_set_parent (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipeline *parent,
gboolean take_strong_reference)
{
/* Chain up */
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
_cogl_pipeline_node_set_parent_real (COGL_PIPELINE_NODE (pipeline),
COGL_PIPELINE_NODE (parent),
_cogl_pipeline_unparent,
take_strong_reference);
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
/* Since we just changed the ancestry of the pipeline its cache of
* layers could now be invalid so free it... */
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
if (pipeline->differences & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS)
recursively_free_layer_caches (pipeline);
/* If the backends are also caching state along with the pipeline
* that depends on the pipeline's ancestry then it may be notified
* here...
*/
if (pipeline->fragend != COGL_PIPELINE_FRAGEND_UNDEFINED &&
_cogl_pipeline_fragends[pipeline->fragend]->pipeline_set_parent_notify)
{
const CoglPipelineFragend *fragend =
_cogl_pipeline_fragends[pipeline->fragend];
fragend->pipeline_set_parent_notify (pipeline);
}
}
static void
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
_cogl_pipeline_promote_weak_ancestors (CoglPipeline *strong)
{
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
CoglPipelineNode *n;
g_return_if_fail (!strong->is_weak);
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
for (n = COGL_PIPELINE_NODE (strong)->parent; n; n = n->parent)
{
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 *pipeline = COGL_PIPELINE (n);
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
cogl_object_ref (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
if (!pipeline->is_weak)
return;
}
}
static void
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
_cogl_pipeline_revert_weak_ancestors (CoglPipeline *strong)
{
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 *parent = _cogl_pipeline_get_parent (strong);
CoglPipelineNode *n;
g_return_if_fail (!strong->is_weak);
if (!parent || !parent->is_weak)
return;
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
for (n = COGL_PIPELINE_NODE (strong)->parent; n; n = n->parent)
{
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 *pipeline = COGL_PIPELINE (n);
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
cogl_object_unref (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
if (!pipeline->is_weak)
return;
}
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* XXX: Always have an eye out for opportunities to lower the cost of
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
* cogl_pipeline_copy. */
static CoglPipeline *
_cogl_pipeline_copy (CoglPipeline *src, gboolean is_weak)
{
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 *pipeline = g_slice_new (CoglPipeline);
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
_cogl_pipeline_node_init (COGL_PIPELINE_NODE (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
pipeline->is_weak = is_weak;
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
pipeline->journal_ref_count = 0;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
pipeline->differences = 0;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
pipeline->has_big_state = FALSE;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* NB: real_blend_enable isn't a sparse property, it's valid for
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
* every pipeline node so we have fast access to it. */
pipeline->real_blend_enable = src->real_blend_enable;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* XXX:
* consider generalizing the idea of "cached" properties. These
* would still have an authority like other sparse properties but
* you wouldn't have to walk up the ancestry to find the authority
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
* because the value would be cached directly in each pipeline.
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
*/
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
pipeline->layers_cache_dirty = TRUE;
pipeline->deprecated_get_layers_list_dirty = TRUE;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
pipeline->fragend = src->fragend;
pipeline->fragend_priv_set_mask = 0;
pipeline->vertend = src->vertend;
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
pipeline->has_static_breadcrumb = FALSE;
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
pipeline->age = 0;
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
_cogl_pipeline_set_parent (pipeline, src, !is_weak);
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
/* The semantics for copying a weak pipeline are that we promote all
* weak ancestors to temporarily become strong pipelines until the
* copy is freed. */
if (!is_weak)
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
_cogl_pipeline_promote_weak_ancestors (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
return _cogl_pipeline_object_new (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
CoglPipeline *
cogl_pipeline_copy (CoglPipeline *src)
{
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
return _cogl_pipeline_copy (src, FALSE);
}
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 *
_cogl_pipeline_weak_copy (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipelineDestroyCallback callback,
void *user_data)
{
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 *copy;
CoglPipeline *copy_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
copy = _cogl_pipeline_copy (pipeline, TRUE);
copy_pipeline = COGL_PIPELINE (copy);
copy_pipeline->destroy_callback = callback;
copy_pipeline->destroy_data = user_data;
return copy;
}
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 *
cogl_pipeline_new (void)
{
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 *new;
_COGL_GET_CONTEXT (ctx, NULL);
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
new = cogl_pipeline_copy (ctx->default_pipeline);
_cogl_pipeline_set_static_breadcrumb (new, "new");
return new;
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_fragend_free_priv (CoglPipeline *pipeline)
{
if (pipeline->fragend != COGL_PIPELINE_FRAGEND_UNDEFINED &&
_cogl_pipeline_fragends[pipeline->fragend]->free_priv)
{
const CoglPipelineFragend *fragend =
_cogl_pipeline_fragends[pipeline->fragend];
fragend->free_priv (pipeline);
}
}
static gboolean
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
destroy_weak_children_cb (CoglPipelineNode *node,
void *user_data)
{
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 *pipeline = COGL_PIPELINE (node);
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
if (_cogl_pipeline_is_weak (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
_cogl_pipeline_node_foreach_child (COGL_PIPELINE_NODE (pipeline),
destroy_weak_children_cb,
NULL);
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
pipeline->destroy_callback (pipeline, pipeline->destroy_data);
_cogl_pipeline_unparent (COGL_PIPELINE_NODE (pipeline));
}
return TRUE;
}
static void
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
_cogl_pipeline_free (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
if (!pipeline->is_weak)
_cogl_pipeline_revert_weak_ancestors (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
/* Weak pipelines don't take a reference on their parent */
_cogl_pipeline_node_foreach_child (COGL_PIPELINE_NODE (pipeline),
destroy_weak_children_cb,
NULL);
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
g_assert (!COGL_PIPELINE_NODE (pipeline)->has_children);
_cogl_pipeline_fragend_free_priv (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
_cogl_pipeline_unparent (COGL_PIPELINE_NODE (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
if (pipeline->differences & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_USER_SHADER &&
pipeline->big_state->user_program)
cogl_handle_unref (pipeline->big_state->user_program);
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
if (pipeline->differences & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_NEEDS_BIG_STATE)
g_slice_free (CoglPipelineBigState, pipeline->big_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
if (pipeline->differences & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
g_list_foreach (pipeline->layer_differences,
(GFunc)cogl_object_unref, NULL);
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
g_list_free (pipeline->layer_differences);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
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
g_slice_free (CoglPipeline, pipeline);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
gboolean
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_real_blend_enabled (CoglPipeline *pipeline)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
g_return_val_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline), FALSE);
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
return pipeline->real_blend_enable;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
/* XXX: Think twice before making this non static since it is used
* heavily and we expect the compiler to inline it...
*/
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
static CoglPipelineLayer *
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (CoglPipelineLayer *layer)
{
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
CoglPipelineNode *parent_node = COGL_PIPELINE_NODE (layer)->parent;
return COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER (parent_node);
}
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
CoglPipelineLayer *
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
unsigned long difference)
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *authority = layer;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
while (!(authority->differences & difference))
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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (authority);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return authority;
}
int
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_unit_index (CoglPipelineLayer *layer)
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *authority =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer, COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_UNIT);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return authority->unit_index;
}
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
static void
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
_cogl_pipeline_update_layers_cache (CoglPipeline *pipeline)
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
{
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
/* Note: we assume this pipeline is a _LAYERS authority */
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
int n_layers;
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 *current;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
int layers_found;
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
if (G_LIKELY (!pipeline->layers_cache_dirty) ||
pipeline->n_layers == 0)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return;
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
pipeline->layers_cache_dirty = FALSE;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
n_layers = pipeline->n_layers;
if (G_LIKELY (n_layers < G_N_ELEMENTS (pipeline->short_layers_cache)))
{
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
pipeline->layers_cache = pipeline->short_layers_cache;
memset (pipeline->layers_cache, 0,
sizeof (CoglPipelineLayer *) *
G_N_ELEMENTS (pipeline->short_layers_cache));
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
else
{
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
pipeline->layers_cache =
g_slice_alloc0 (sizeof (CoglPipelineLayer *) * n_layers);
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Notes:
*
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
* Each pipeline doesn't have to contain a complete list of the layers
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* it depends on, some of them are indirectly referenced through 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
* pipeline's ancestors.
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
*
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
* pipeline->layer_differences only contains a list of layers that
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* have changed in relation to its parent.
*
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
* pipeline->layer_differences is not maintained sorted, but it
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* won't contain multiple layers corresponding to a particular
* ->unit_index.
*
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
* Some of the ancestor pipelines may reference layers with
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* ->unit_index values >= n_layers so we ignore them.
*
* As we ascend through the ancestors we are searching for any
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
* CoglPipelineLayers corresponding to the texture ->unit_index
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* values in the range [0,n_layers-1]. As soon as a pointer is found
* we ignore layers of further ancestors with the same ->unit_index
* values.
*/
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
layers_found = 0;
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
for (current = pipeline;
_cogl_pipeline_get_parent (current);
current = _cogl_pipeline_get_parent (current))
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
GList *l;
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
if (!(current->differences & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS))
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
continue;
for (l = current->layer_differences; l; l = l->next)
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *layer = l->data;
int unit_index = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_unit_index (layer);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
if (unit_index < n_layers && !pipeline->layers_cache[unit_index])
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
pipeline->layers_cache[unit_index] = layer;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
layers_found++;
if (layers_found == n_layers)
return;
}
}
}
g_warn_if_reached ();
}
/* XXX: Be carefull when using this API that the callback given doesn't result
* in the layer cache being invalidated during the iteration! */
void
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
_cogl_pipeline_foreach_layer_internal (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipelineInternalLayerCallback callback,
void *user_data)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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 =
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
int n_layers;
int i;
gboolean cont;
n_layers = authority->n_layers;
if (n_layers == 0)
return;
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
_cogl_pipeline_update_layers_cache (authority);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
for (i = 0, cont = TRUE; i < n_layers && cont == TRUE; i++)
{
g_return_if_fail (authority->layers_cache_dirty == FALSE);
cont = callback (authority->layers_cache[i], user_data);
}
}
typedef struct
{
int i;
int *indices;
} AppendLayerIndexState;
static gboolean
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
append_layer_index_cb (CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
void *user_data)
{
AppendLayerIndexState *state = user_data;
state->indices[state->i++] = layer->index;
return TRUE;
}
void
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
cogl_pipeline_foreach_layer (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipelineLayerCallback callback,
void *user_data)
{
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 =
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS);
AppendLayerIndexState state;
gboolean cont;
int i;
/* XXX: We don't know what the user is going to want to do to the layers
* but any modification of layers can result in the layer graph changing
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
* which could confuse _cogl_pipeline_foreach_layer_internal(). We first
* get a list of layer indices which will remain valid so long as the
* user doesn't remove layers. */
state.i = 0;
state.indices = g_alloca (authority->n_layers * sizeof (int));
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
_cogl_pipeline_foreach_layer_internal (pipeline,
append_layer_index_cb,
&state);
for (i = 0, cont = TRUE; i < authority->n_layers && cont; i++)
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
cont = callback (pipeline, state.indices[i], user_data);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
static gboolean
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
layer_has_alpha_cb (CoglPipelineLayer *layer, void *data)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *combine_authority =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer,
COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_COMBINE);
CoglPipelineLayerBigState *big_state = combine_authority->big_state;
CoglPipelineLayer *tex_authority;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
gboolean *has_alpha = data;
/* has_alpha maintains the alpha status for the GL_PREVIOUS layer */
/* For anything but the default texture combine we currently just
* assume it may result in an alpha value < 1
*
* FIXME: we could do better than this. */
if (big_state->texture_combine_alpha_func !=
COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_FUNC_MODULATE ||
big_state->texture_combine_alpha_src[0] !=
COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_SOURCE_PREVIOUS ||
big_state->texture_combine_alpha_op[0] !=
COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_OP_SRC_ALPHA ||
big_state->texture_combine_alpha_src[1] !=
COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_SOURCE_TEXTURE ||
big_state->texture_combine_alpha_op[1] !=
COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_OP_SRC_ALPHA)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
*has_alpha = TRUE;
/* return FALSE to stop iterating layers... */
return FALSE;
}
/* NB: A layer may have a combine mode set on it but not yet
* have an associated texture which would mean we'd fallback
* to the default texture which doesn't have an alpha component
*/
tex_authority =
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer,
COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_TEXTURE_DATA);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (tex_authority->texture &&
cogl_texture_get_format (tex_authority->texture) & COGL_A_BIT)
{
*has_alpha = TRUE;
/* return FALSE to stop iterating layers... */
return FALSE;
}
*has_alpha = FALSE;
/* return FALSE to continue iterating layers... */
return TRUE;
}
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
static CoglPipeline *
_cogl_pipeline_get_user_program (CoglPipeline *pipeline)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
g_return_val_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline), NULL);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
authority =
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_USER_SHADER);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return authority->big_state->user_program;
}
static gboolean
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
_cogl_pipeline_needs_blending_enabled (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
unsigned long changes,
const CoglColor *override_color)
{
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 *enable_authority;
CoglPipeline *blend_authority;
CoglPipelineBlendState *blend_state;
CoglPipelineBlendEnable enabled;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
unsigned long other_state;
if (G_UNLIKELY (cogl_debug_flags & COGL_DEBUG_DISABLE_BLENDING))
return FALSE;
enable_authority =
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_BLEND_ENABLE);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
enabled = enable_authority->blend_enable;
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
if (enabled != COGL_PIPELINE_BLEND_ENABLE_AUTOMATIC)
return enabled == COGL_PIPELINE_BLEND_ENABLE_ENABLED ? TRUE : FALSE;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
blend_authority =
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_BLEND);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
blend_state = &blend_authority->big_state->blend_state;
/* We are trying to identify awkward cases that are equivalent to
* blending being disable, where the output is simply GL_SRC_COLOR.
*
* Note: we assume that all OpenGL drivers will identify the simple
* case of ADD (ONE, ZERO) as equivalent to blending being disabled.
*
* We should update this when we add support for more blend
* functions...
*/
#ifndef HAVE_COGL_GLES
/* GLES 1 can't change the function or have separate alpha factors */
if (blend_state->blend_equation_rgb != GL_FUNC_ADD ||
blend_state->blend_equation_alpha != GL_FUNC_ADD)
return TRUE;
if (blend_state->blend_src_factor_alpha != GL_ONE ||
blend_state->blend_dst_factor_alpha != GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA)
return TRUE;
#endif
if (blend_state->blend_src_factor_rgb != GL_ONE ||
blend_state->blend_dst_factor_rgb != GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA)
return TRUE;
/* Given the above constraints, it's now a case of finding any
* SRC_ALPHA that != 1 */
/* In the case of a layer state change we need to check everything
* else first since they contribute to the has_alpha status of the
* GL_PREVIOUS layer. */
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
if (changes & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS)
changes = COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_AFFECTS_BLENDING;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if ((override_color && cogl_color_get_alpha_byte (override_color) != 0xff))
return TRUE;
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
if (changes & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_COLOR)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
CoglColor tmp;
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
cogl_pipeline_get_color (pipeline, &tmp);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (cogl_color_get_alpha_byte (&tmp) != 0xff)
return TRUE;
}
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
if (changes & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_USER_SHADER)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
/* We can't make any assumptions about the alpha channel if the user
* is using an unknown fragment shader.
*
* TODO: check that it isn't just a vertex shader!
*/
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
if (_cogl_pipeline_get_user_program (pipeline) != COGL_INVALID_HANDLE)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return TRUE;
}
/* XXX: we should only need to look at these if lighting is enabled
*/
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
if (changes & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LIGHTING)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
/* XXX: This stuff is showing up in sysprof reports which is
* silly because lighting isn't currently actually supported
* by Cogl except for these token properties. When we actually
* expose lighting support we can avoid these checks when
* lighting is disabled. */
#if 0
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
CoglColor tmp;
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
cogl_pipeline_get_ambient (pipeline, &tmp);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (cogl_color_get_alpha_byte (&tmp) != 0xff)
return TRUE;
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
cogl_pipeline_get_diffuse (pipeline, &tmp);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (cogl_color_get_alpha_byte (&tmp) != 0xff)
return TRUE;
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
cogl_pipeline_get_specular (pipeline, &tmp);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (cogl_color_get_alpha_byte (&tmp) != 0xff)
return TRUE;
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
cogl_pipeline_get_emission (pipeline, &tmp);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (cogl_color_get_alpha_byte (&tmp) != 0xff)
return TRUE;
#endif
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
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
if (changes & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
/* has_alpha tracks the alpha status of the GL_PREVIOUS layer.
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
* To start with that's defined by the pipeline color which
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* must be fully opaque if we got this far. */
gboolean has_alpha = FALSE;
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
_cogl_pipeline_foreach_layer_internal (pipeline,
layer_has_alpha_cb,
&has_alpha);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (has_alpha)
return TRUE;
}
/* At this point, considering just the state that has changed it
* looks like blending isn't needed. If blending was previously
* enabled though it could be that some other state still requires
* that we have blending enabled. In this case we still need to
* go and check the other state...
*
* FIXME: We should explicitly keep track of the mask of state
* groups that are currently causing blending to be enabled so that
* we never have to resort to checking *all* the state and can
* instead always limit the check to those in the mask.
*/
if (pipeline->real_blend_enable)
{
other_state = COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_AFFECTS_BLENDING & ~changes;
if (other_state &&
_cogl_pipeline_needs_blending_enabled (pipeline,
other_state,
NULL))
return TRUE;
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return FALSE;
}
void
_cogl_pipeline_set_fragend (CoglPipeline *pipeline, int fragend)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
_cogl_pipeline_fragend_free_priv (pipeline);
pipeline->fragend = fragend;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
void
_cogl_pipeline_set_vertend (CoglPipeline *pipeline, int vertend)
{
pipeline->vertend = vertend;
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
static void
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
_cogl_pipeline_copy_differences (CoglPipeline *dest,
CoglPipeline *src,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
unsigned long differences)
{
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
CoglPipelineBigState *big_state;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
if (differences & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_COLOR)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
dest->color = src->color;
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
if (differences & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_BLEND_ENABLE)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
dest->blend_enable = src->blend_enable;
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
if (differences & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
GList *l;
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
if (dest->differences & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS &&
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
dest->layer_differences)
{
g_list_foreach (dest->layer_differences,
(GFunc)cogl_object_unref,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
NULL);
g_list_free (dest->layer_differences);
}
for (l = src->layer_differences; l; l = l->next)
{
/* NB: a layer can't have more than one ->owner so we can't
* simply take a references on each of the original
* layer_differences, we have to derive new layers from the
* originals instead. */
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
CoglPipelineLayer *copy = _cogl_pipeline_layer_copy (l->data);
_cogl_pipeline_add_layer_difference (dest, copy, FALSE);
cogl_object_unref (copy);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
/* Note: we initialize n_layers after adding the layer differences
* since the act of adding the layers will initialize n_layers to 0
* because dest isn't initially a STATE_LAYERS authority. */
dest->n_layers = src->n_layers;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
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
if (differences & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_NEEDS_BIG_STATE)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
if (!dest->has_big_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
dest->big_state = g_slice_new (CoglPipelineBigState);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
dest->has_big_state = TRUE;
}
big_state = dest->big_state;
}
else
goto check_for_blending_change;
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
if (differences & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LIGHTING)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
memcpy (&big_state->lighting_state,
&src->big_state->lighting_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
sizeof (CoglPipelineLightingState));
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
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
if (differences & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_ALPHA_FUNC)
big_state->alpha_state.alpha_func =
src->big_state->alpha_state.alpha_func;
if (differences & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_ALPHA_FUNC_REFERENCE)
big_state->alpha_state.alpha_func_reference =
src->big_state->alpha_state.alpha_func_reference;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
if (differences & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_BLEND)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
memcpy (&big_state->blend_state,
&src->big_state->blend_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
sizeof (CoglPipelineBlendState));
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
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
if (differences & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_USER_SHADER)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
if (src->big_state->user_program)
big_state->user_program =
cogl_handle_ref (src->big_state->user_program);
else
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
big_state->user_program = COGL_INVALID_HANDLE;
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
if (differences & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_DEPTH)
{
memcpy (&big_state->depth_state,
&src->big_state->depth_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
sizeof (CoglPipelineDepthState));
}
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
if (differences & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_FOG)
{
memcpy (&big_state->fog_state,
&src->big_state->fog_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
sizeof (CoglPipelineFogState));
}
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
if (differences & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_POINT_SIZE)
big_state->point_size = src->big_state->point_size;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* XXX: we shouldn't bother doing this in most cases since
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
* _copy_differences is typically used to initialize pipeline state
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* by copying it from the current authority, so it's not actually
* *changing* anything.
*/
check_for_blending_change:
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
if (differences & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_AFFECTS_BLENDING)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
handle_automatic_blend_enable (dest, differences);
dest->differences |= differences;
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_init_multi_property_sparse_state (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipelineState change)
{
CoglPipeline *authority;
g_return_if_fail (change & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_ALL_SPARSE);
if (!(change & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_MULTI_PROPERTY))
return;
authority = _cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, change);
switch (change)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
/* XXX: avoid using a default: label so we get a warning if we
* don't explicitly handle a newly defined state-group here. */
case COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_COLOR:
case COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_BLEND_ENABLE:
case COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_ALPHA_FUNC:
case COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_ALPHA_FUNC_REFERENCE:
case COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_POINT_SIZE:
case COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_USER_SHADER:
case COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_REAL_BLEND_ENABLE:
g_return_if_reached ();
case COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS:
pipeline->n_layers = authority->n_layers;
pipeline->layer_differences = NULL;
break;
case COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LIGHTING:
{
memcpy (&pipeline->big_state->lighting_state,
&authority->big_state->lighting_state,
sizeof (CoglPipelineLightingState));
break;
}
case COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_BLEND:
{
memcpy (&pipeline->big_state->blend_state,
&authority->big_state->blend_state,
sizeof (CoglPipelineBlendState));
break;
}
case COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_DEPTH:
{
memcpy (&pipeline->big_state->depth_state,
&authority->big_state->depth_state,
sizeof (CoglPipelineDepthState));
break;
}
case COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_FOG:
{
memcpy (&pipeline->big_state->fog_state,
&authority->big_state->fog_state,
sizeof (CoglPipelineFogState));
break;
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
}
static gboolean
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
check_if_strong_cb (CoglPipelineNode *node, void *user_data)
{
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 *pipeline = COGL_PIPELINE (node);
gboolean *has_strong_child = user_data;
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
if (!_cogl_pipeline_is_weak (pipeline))
{
*has_strong_child = TRUE;
return FALSE;
}
return TRUE;
}
static gboolean
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
has_strong_children (CoglPipeline *pipeline)
{
gboolean has_strong_child = FALSE;
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
_cogl_pipeline_node_foreach_child (COGL_PIPELINE_NODE (pipeline),
check_if_strong_cb,
&has_strong_child);
return has_strong_child;
}
static gboolean
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
_cogl_pipeline_is_weak (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
if (pipeline->is_weak && !has_strong_children (pipeline))
return TRUE;
else
return FALSE;
}
static gboolean
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
reparent_children_cb (CoglPipelineNode *node,
void *user_data)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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 *pipeline = COGL_PIPELINE (node);
CoglPipeline *parent = user_data;
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
_cogl_pipeline_set_parent (pipeline, parent, TRUE);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return TRUE;
}
static void
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
_cogl_pipeline_pre_change_notify (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipelineState change,
const CoglColor *new_color,
gboolean from_layer_change)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
int i;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
_COGL_GET_CONTEXT (ctx, NO_RETVAL);
/* If primitives have been logged in the journal referencing 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
* current state of this pipeline we need to flush the journal
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* before we can modify it... */
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
if (pipeline->journal_ref_count)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
gboolean skip_journal_flush = FALSE;
/* XXX: We don't usually need to flush the journal just due to
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
* color changes since pipeline colors are logged in the
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* journal's vertex buffer. The exception is when the change in
* color enables or disables the need for blending. */
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
if (change == COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_COLOR)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
gboolean will_need_blending =
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
_cogl_pipeline_needs_blending_enabled (pipeline,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
change,
new_color);
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
gboolean blend_enable = pipeline->real_blend_enable ? TRUE : FALSE;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (will_need_blending == blend_enable)
skip_journal_flush = TRUE;
}
if (!skip_journal_flush)
{
/* XXX: note we use cogl_flush() not _cogl_flush_journal() so
* we will flush *all* known journals that might reference the
* current pipeline. */
cogl_flush ();
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
/* The fixed function backend has no private state and can't
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
* do anything special to handle small pipeline changes so we may as
* well try to find a better backend whenever the pipeline changes.
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
*
* The programmable backends may be able to cache a lot of the code
* they generate and only need to update a small section of that
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
* code in response to a pipeline change therefore we don't want to
* try searching for another backend when the pipeline changes.
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
*/
#ifdef COGL_PIPELINE_FRAGEND_FIXED
if (pipeline->fragend == COGL_PIPELINE_FRAGEND_FIXED)
_cogl_pipeline_set_fragend (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_FRAGEND_UNDEFINED);
#endif
#ifdef COGL_PIPELINE_VERTEND_FIXED
if (pipeline->vertend == COGL_PIPELINE_VERTEND_FIXED)
_cogl_pipeline_set_vertend (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_VERTEND_UNDEFINED);
#endif
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* To simplify things for the backends we are careful about how
* we report STATE_LAYERS changes.
*
* All STATE_LAYERS changes with the exception of ->n_layers
* will also result in layer_pre_change_notifications. For
* backends that perform code generation for fragment processing
* they typically need to understand the details of how layers
* get changed to determine if they need to repeat codegen. It
* doesn't help them to report a pipeline STATE_LAYERS change
* for all layer changes since it's so broad, they really need
* to wait for the layer change to be notified. What does help
* though is to report a STATE_LAYERS change for a change in
* ->n_layers because they typically do need to repeat codegen
* in that case.
*
* This just ensures backends only get a single pipeline or
* layer pre-change notification for any particular change.
*/
if (pipeline->fragend != COGL_PIPELINE_FRAGEND_UNDEFINED &&
_cogl_pipeline_fragends[pipeline->fragend]->pipeline_pre_change_notify)
{
const CoglPipelineFragend *fragend =
_cogl_pipeline_fragends[pipeline->fragend];
if (!from_layer_change)
fragend->pipeline_pre_change_notify (pipeline, change, new_color);
}
if (pipeline->vertend != COGL_PIPELINE_VERTEND_UNDEFINED &&
_cogl_pipeline_vertends[pipeline->vertend]->pipeline_pre_change_notify)
{
const CoglPipelineVertend *vertend =
_cogl_pipeline_vertends[pipeline->vertend];
/* To simplify things for the backends we are careful about how
* we report STATE_LAYERS changes.
*
* All STATE_LAYERS changes with the exception of ->n_layers
* will also result in layer_pre_change_notifications. For
* backends that perform code generation for fragment processing
* they typically need to understand the details of how layers
* get changed to determine if they need to repeat codegen. It
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
* doesn't help them to report a pipeline STATE_LAYERS change
* for all layer changes since it's so broad, they really need
* to wait for the layer change to be notified. What does help
* though is to report a STATE_LAYERS change for a change in
* ->n_layers because they typically do need to repeat codegen
* in that case.
*
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
* This just ensures backends only get a single pipeline or
* layer pre-change notification for any particular change.
*/
if (!from_layer_change)
vertend->pipeline_pre_change_notify (pipeline, change, new_color);
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Notify all of the progends */
if (!from_layer_change)
for (i = 0; i < COGL_PIPELINE_N_PROGENDS; i++)
if (_cogl_pipeline_progends[i]->pipeline_pre_change_notify)
_cogl_pipeline_progends[i]->pipeline_pre_change_notify (pipeline,
change,
new_color);
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
/* There may be an arbitrary tree of descendants of this pipeline;
* any of which may indirectly depend on this pipeline as the
* authority for some set of properties. (Meaning for example that
* one of its descendants derives its color or blending state from
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
* this pipeline.)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
*
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
* We can't modify any property that this pipeline is the authority
* for unless we create another pipeline to take its place first and
* make sure descendants reference this new pipeline instead.
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
*/
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
/* The simplest descendants to handle are weak pipelines; we simply
* destroy them if we are modifying a pipeline they depend on. This
* means weak pipelines never cause us to do a copy-on-write. */
_cogl_pipeline_node_foreach_child (COGL_PIPELINE_NODE (pipeline),
destroy_weak_children_cb,
NULL);
/* If there are still children remaining though we'll need to
* perform a copy-on-write and reparent the dependants as children
* of the copy. */
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
if (COGL_PIPELINE_NODE (pipeline)->has_children)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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 *new_authority;
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
COGL_STATIC_COUNTER (pipeline_copy_on_write_counter,
"pipeline copy on write counter",
"Increments each time a pipeline "
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
"must be copied to allow modification",
0 /* no application private data */);
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
COGL_COUNTER_INC (_cogl_uprof_context, pipeline_copy_on_write_counter);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
new_authority =
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
cogl_pipeline_copy (_cogl_pipeline_get_parent (pipeline));
_cogl_pipeline_set_static_breadcrumb (new_authority,
"pre_change_notify:copy-on-write");
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* We could explicitly walk the descendants, OR together the set
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
* of differences that we determine this pipeline is the
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* authority on and only copy those differences copied across.
*
* Or, if we don't explicitly walk the descendants we at least
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
* know that pipeline->differences represents the largest set of
* differences that this pipeline could possibly be an authority
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* on.
*
* We do the later just because it's simplest, but we might need
* to come back to this later...
*/
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
_cogl_pipeline_copy_differences (new_authority, pipeline,
pipeline->differences);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
/* Reparent the dependants of pipeline to be children of
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* new_authority instead... */
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
_cogl_pipeline_node_foreach_child (COGL_PIPELINE_NODE (pipeline),
reparent_children_cb,
new_authority);
/* The children will keep the new authority alive so drop the
* reference we got when copying... */
cogl_object_unref (new_authority);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
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
/* At this point we know we have a pipeline with no strong
* dependants (though we may have some weak children) so we are now
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
* free to modify the pipeline. */
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
pipeline->age++;
if (change & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_NEEDS_BIG_STATE &&
!pipeline->has_big_state)
{
pipeline->big_state = g_slice_new (CoglPipelineBigState);
pipeline->has_big_state = TRUE;
}
/* Note: conceptually we have just been notified that a single
* property value is about to change, but since some state-groups
* contain multiple properties and 'pipeline' is about to take over
* being the authority for the property's corresponding state-group
* we need to maintain the integrity of the other property values
* too.
*
* To ensure this we handle multi-property state-groups by copying
* all the values from the old-authority to the new...
*
* We don't have to worry about non-sparse property groups since
* we never take over being an authority for such properties so
* they automatically maintain integrity.
*/
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
if (change & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_ALL_SPARSE &&
!(pipeline->differences & change))
{
_cogl_pipeline_init_multi_property_sparse_state (pipeline, change);
pipeline->differences |= change;
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
/* Each pipeline has a sorted cache of the layers it depends on
* which will need updating via _cogl_pipeline_update_layers_cache
* if a pipeline's layers are changed. */
if (change == COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS)
recursively_free_layer_caches (pipeline);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
/* If the pipeline being changed is the same as the last pipeline we
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* flushed then we keep a track of the changes so we can try to
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
* minimize redundant OpenGL calls if the same pipeline is flushed
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* again.
*/
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
if (ctx->current_pipeline == pipeline)
ctx->current_pipeline_changes_since_flush |= change;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
static void
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
_cogl_pipeline_add_layer_difference (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
gboolean inc_n_layers)
{
g_return_if_fail (layer->owner == NULL);
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
layer->owner = pipeline;
cogl_object_ref (layer);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* - Flush journal primitives referencing the current 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
* - Make sure the pipeline has no dependants so it may be modified.
* - If the pipeline isn't currently an authority for the state being
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* changed, then initialize that state from the current authority.
*/
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
_cogl_pipeline_pre_change_notify (pipeline,
COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS,
NULL,
FALSE);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
pipeline->differences |= COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
pipeline->layer_differences =
g_list_prepend (pipeline->layer_differences, layer);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (inc_n_layers)
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
pipeline->n_layers++;
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* NB: If you are calling this it's your responsibility to have
* already called:
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
* _cogl_pipeline_pre_change_notify (m, _CHANGE_LAYERS, NULL);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
*/
static void
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
_cogl_pipeline_remove_layer_difference (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
gboolean dec_n_layers)
{
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
g_return_if_fail (layer->owner == pipeline);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* - Flush journal primitives referencing the current 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
* - Make sure the pipeline has no dependants so it may be modified.
* - If the pipeline isn't currently an authority for the state being
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* changed, then initialize that state from the current authority.
*/
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
_cogl_pipeline_pre_change_notify (pipeline,
COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS,
NULL,
FALSE);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
layer->owner = NULL;
cogl_object_unref (layer);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
pipeline->differences |= COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
pipeline->layer_differences =
g_list_remove (pipeline->layer_differences, layer);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (dec_n_layers)
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
pipeline->n_layers--;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
static void
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
_cogl_pipeline_try_reverting_layers_authority (CoglPipeline *authority,
CoglPipeline *old_authority)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
if (authority->layer_differences == NULL &&
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_parent (authority))
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
/* If the previous _STATE_LAYERS authority has the same
* ->n_layers then we can revert to that being the authority
* again. */
if (!old_authority)
{
old_authority =
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (_cogl_pipeline_get_parent (authority),
COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
if (old_authority->n_layers == authority->n_layers)
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
authority->differences &= ~COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
}
static void
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
handle_automatic_blend_enable (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipelineState change)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
gboolean blend_enable =
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
_cogl_pipeline_needs_blending_enabled (pipeline, change, NULL);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
if (blend_enable != pipeline->real_blend_enable)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
/* - Flush journal primitives referencing the current 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
* - Make sure the pipeline has no dependants so it may be
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* modified.
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
* - If the pipeline isn't currently an authority for the state
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* being changed, then initialize that state from the current
* authority.
*/
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
_cogl_pipeline_pre_change_notify (pipeline,
COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_REAL_BLEND_ENABLE,
NULL,
FALSE);
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
pipeline->real_blend_enable = blend_enable;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
}
typedef struct
{
int keep_n;
int current_pos;
gboolean needs_pruning;
int first_index_to_prune;
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
} CoglPipelinePruneLayersInfo;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
static gboolean
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
update_prune_layers_info_cb (CoglPipelineLayer *layer, void *user_data)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelinePruneLayersInfo *state = user_data;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (state->current_pos == state->keep_n)
{
state->needs_pruning = TRUE;
state->first_index_to_prune = layer->index;
return FALSE;
}
state->current_pos++;
return TRUE;
}
void
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
_cogl_pipeline_prune_to_n_layers (CoglPipeline *pipeline, int n)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelinePruneLayersInfo state;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
gboolean notified_change = TRUE;
GList *l;
GList *next;
state.keep_n = n;
state.current_pos = 0;
state.needs_pruning = FALSE;
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
_cogl_pipeline_foreach_layer_internal (pipeline,
update_prune_layers_info_cb,
&state);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
pipeline->n_layers = n;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (!state.needs_pruning)
return;
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
if (!(pipeline->differences & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS))
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return;
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
/* It's possible that this pipeline owns some of the layers being
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* discarded, so we'll need to unlink them... */
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
for (l = pipeline->layer_differences; l; l = next)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *layer = l->data;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
next = l->next; /* we're modifying the list we're iterating */
if (layer->index > state.first_index_to_prune)
{
if (!notified_change)
{
/* - Flush journal primitives referencing the current
* 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
* - Make sure the pipeline has no dependants so it may
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* be modified.
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
* - If the pipeline isn't currently an authority for
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* the state being changed, then initialize that state
* from the current authority.
*/
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
_cogl_pipeline_pre_change_notify (pipeline,
COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS,
NULL,
FALSE);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
notified_change = TRUE;
}
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
pipeline->layer_differences =
g_list_delete_link (pipeline->layer_differences, l);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
}
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_fragend_layer_change_notify (CoglPipeline *owner,
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
CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
CoglPipelineLayerState change)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
/* NB: Although layers can have private state associated with them
* by multiple backends we know that a layer can't be *changed* if
* it has multiple dependants so if we reach here we know we only
* have a single owner and can only be associated with a single
* backend that needs to be notified of the layer change...
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
*/
if (owner->fragend != COGL_PIPELINE_FRAGEND_UNDEFINED &&
_cogl_pipeline_fragends[owner->fragend]->layer_pre_change_notify)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
const CoglPipelineFragend *fragend =
_cogl_pipeline_fragends[owner->fragend];
fragend->layer_pre_change_notify (owner, layer, change);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_vertend_layer_change_notify (CoglPipeline *owner,
CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
CoglPipelineLayerState change)
{
/* NB: The comment in fragend_layer_change_notify applies here too */
if (owner->vertend != COGL_PIPELINE_VERTEND_UNDEFINED &&
_cogl_pipeline_vertends[owner->vertend]->layer_pre_change_notify)
{
const CoglPipelineVertend *vertend =
_cogl_pipeline_vertends[owner->vertend];
vertend->layer_pre_change_notify (owner, layer, change);
}
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_progend_layer_change_notify (CoglPipeline *owner,
CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
CoglPipelineLayerState change)
{
int i;
/* Give all of the progends a chance to notice that the layer has
changed */
for (i = 0; i < COGL_PIPELINE_N_PROGENDS; i++)
if (_cogl_pipeline_progends[i]->layer_pre_change_notify)
_cogl_pipeline_progends[i]->layer_pre_change_notify (owner,
layer,
change);
}
unsigned int
_cogl_get_n_args_for_combine_func (CoglPipelineCombineFunc func)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
switch (func)
{
case COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_FUNC_REPLACE:
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return 1;
case COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_FUNC_MODULATE:
case COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_FUNC_ADD:
case COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_FUNC_ADD_SIGNED:
case COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_FUNC_SUBTRACT:
case COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_FUNC_DOT3_RGB:
case COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_FUNC_DOT3_RGBA:
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return 2;
case COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_FUNC_INTERPOLATE:
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return 3;
}
return 0;
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_layer_init_multi_property_sparse_state (
CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
CoglPipelineLayerState change)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
CoglPipelineLayer *authority;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Nothing to initialize in these cases since they are all comprised
* of one member which we expect to immediately be overwritten. */
if (!(change & COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_MULTI_PROPERTY))
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return;
authority = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer, change);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
switch (change)
{
/* XXX: avoid using a default: label so we get a warning if we
* don't explicitly handle a newly defined state-group here. */
case COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_UNIT:
case COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_TEXTURE_TARGET:
case COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_TEXTURE_DATA:
case COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_POINT_SPRITE_COORDS:
case COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_USER_MATRIX:
case COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_COMBINE_CONSTANT:
g_return_if_reached ();
/* XXX: technically we could probably even consider these as
* single property state-groups from the pov that currently the
* corresponding property setters always update all of the values
* at the same time. */
case COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_FILTERS:
layer->min_filter = authority->min_filter;
layer->mag_filter = authority->mag_filter;
break;
case COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_WRAP_MODES:
layer->wrap_mode_s = authority->wrap_mode_s;
layer->wrap_mode_t = authority->wrap_mode_t;
layer->wrap_mode_p = authority->wrap_mode_p;
break;
case COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_COMBINE:
{
int n_args;
int i;
CoglPipelineLayerBigState *big_state = layer->big_state;
GLint func = big_state->texture_combine_rgb_func;
big_state->texture_combine_rgb_func = func;
n_args = _cogl_get_n_args_for_combine_func (func);
for (i = 0; i < n_args; i++)
{
big_state->texture_combine_rgb_src[i] =
authority->big_state->texture_combine_rgb_src[i];
big_state->texture_combine_rgb_op[i] =
authority->big_state->texture_combine_rgb_op[i];
}
func = authority->big_state->texture_combine_alpha_func;
big_state->texture_combine_alpha_func = func;
n_args = _cogl_get_n_args_for_combine_func (func);
for (i = 0; i < n_args; i++)
{
big_state->texture_combine_alpha_src[i] =
authority->big_state->texture_combine_alpha_src[i];
big_state->texture_combine_alpha_op[i] =
authority->big_state->texture_combine_alpha_op[i];
}
break;
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
}
/* NB: This function will allocate a new derived layer if you are
* trying to change the state of a layer with dependants so you must
* always check the return value.
*
* If a new layer is returned it will be owned by required_owner.
*
* required_owner can only by NULL for new, currently unowned layers
* with no dependants.
*/
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
static CoglPipelineLayer *
_cogl_pipeline_layer_pre_change_notify (CoglPipeline *required_owner,
CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
CoglPipelineLayerState change)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
CoglTextureUnit *unit;
/* Identify the case where the layer is new with no owner or
* dependants and so we don't need to do anything. */
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
if (COGL_PIPELINE_NODE (layer)->has_children == FALSE &&
layer->owner == NULL)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
goto init_layer_state;
/* We only allow a NULL required_owner for new layers */
g_return_val_if_fail (required_owner != NULL, layer);
/* Chain up:
* A modification of a layer is indirectly also a modification of
* its owner so first make sure to flush the journal of any
* references to the current owner state and if necessary perform
* a copy-on-write for the required_owner if it has dependants.
*/
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
_cogl_pipeline_pre_change_notify (required_owner,
COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS,
NULL,
TRUE);
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
/* Unlike pipelines; layers are simply considered immutable once
* they have dependants - either direct children, or another
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
* pipeline as an owner.
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
*/
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
if (COGL_PIPELINE_NODE (layer)->has_children ||
layer->owner != required_owner)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *new = _cogl_pipeline_layer_copy (layer);
if (layer->owner == required_owner)
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
_cogl_pipeline_remove_layer_difference (required_owner, layer, FALSE);
_cogl_pipeline_add_layer_difference (required_owner, new, FALSE);
cogl_object_unref (new);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
layer = new;
goto init_layer_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
/* Note: At this point we know there is only one pipeline dependant on
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* this layer (required_owner), and there are no other layers
* dependant on this layer so it's ok to modify it. */
_cogl_pipeline_fragend_layer_change_notify (required_owner, layer, change);
_cogl_pipeline_vertend_layer_change_notify (required_owner, layer, change);
_cogl_pipeline_progend_layer_change_notify (required_owner, layer, change);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* If the layer being changed is the same as the last layer we
* flushed to the corresponding texture unit then we keep a track of
* the changes so we can try to minimize redundant OpenGL calls if
* the same layer is flushed again.
*/
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
unit = _cogl_get_texture_unit (_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_unit_index (layer));
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (unit->layer == layer)
unit->layer_changes_since_flush |= change;
init_layer_state:
if (required_owner)
required_owner->age++;
if (change & COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_NEEDS_BIG_STATE &&
!layer->has_big_state)
{
layer->big_state = g_slice_new (CoglPipelineLayerBigState);
layer->has_big_state = TRUE;
}
/* Note: conceptually we have just been notified that a single
* property value is about to change, but since some state-groups
* contain multiple properties and 'layer' is about to take over
* being the authority for the property's corresponding state-group
* we need to maintain the integrity of the other property values
* too.
*
* To ensure this we handle multi-property state-groups by copying
* all the values from the old-authority to the new...
*
* We don't have to worry about non-sparse property groups since
* we never take over being an authority for such properties so
* they automatically maintain integrity.
*/
if (change & COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_ALL_SPARSE &&
!(layer->differences & change))
{
_cogl_pipeline_layer_init_multi_property_sparse_state (layer, change);
layer->differences |= change;
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return layer;
}
static void
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_unparent (CoglPipelineNode *layer)
{
/* Chain up */
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
_cogl_pipeline_node_unparent_real (layer);
}
static void
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_set_parent (CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
CoglPipelineLayer *parent)
{
/* Chain up */
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
_cogl_pipeline_node_set_parent_real (COGL_PIPELINE_NODE (layer),
COGL_PIPELINE_NODE (parent),
_cogl_pipeline_layer_unparent,
TRUE);
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* XXX: This is duplicated logic; the same as for
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
* _cogl_pipeline_prune_redundant_ancestry it would be nice to find a
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* way to consolidate these functions! */
static void
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_prune_redundant_ancestry (CoglPipelineLayer *layer)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *new_parent = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (layer);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* walk up past ancestors that are now redundant and potentially
* reparent the layer. */
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
while (_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (new_parent) &&
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
(new_parent->differences | layer->differences) ==
layer->differences)
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
new_parent = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (new_parent);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_set_parent (layer, new_parent);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
/*
* XXX: consider special casing layer->unit_index so it's not a sparse
* property so instead we can assume it's valid for all layer
* instances.
* - We would need to initialize ->unit_index in
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
* _cogl_pipeline_layer_copy ().
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
*
* XXX: If you use this API you should consider that the given layer
* might not be writeable and so a new derived layer will be allocated
* and modified instead. The layer modified will be returned so you
* can identify when this happens.
*/
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
static CoglPipelineLayer *
_cogl_pipeline_set_layer_unit (CoglPipeline *required_owner,
CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
int unit_index)
{
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
CoglPipelineLayerState change = COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_UNIT;
CoglPipelineLayer *authority =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer, change);
CoglPipelineLayer *new;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (authority->unit_index == unit_index)
return layer;
new =
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_pre_change_notify (required_owner,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
layer,
change);
if (new != layer)
layer = new;
else
{
/* If the layer we found is currently the authority on the state
* we are changing see if we can revert to one of our ancestors
* being the authority. */
if (layer == authority &&
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (authority) != NULL)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *parent =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (authority);
CoglPipelineLayer *old_authority =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (parent, change);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (old_authority->unit_index == unit_index)
{
layer->differences &= ~change;
return layer;
}
}
}
layer->unit_index = unit_index;
/* If we weren't previously the authority on this state then we need
* to extended our differences mask and so it's possible that some
* of our ancestry will now become redundant, so we aim to reparent
* ourselves if that's true... */
if (layer != authority)
{
layer->differences |= change;
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_prune_redundant_ancestry (layer);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
return layer;
}
typedef struct
{
/* The layer we are trying to find */
int layer_index;
/* The layer we find or untouched if not found */
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
CoglPipelineLayer *layer;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* If the layer can't be found then a new layer should be
* inserted after this texture unit index... */
int insert_after;
/* When adding a layer we need the list of layers to shift up
* to a new texture unit. When removing we need the list of
* layers to shift down.
*
* Note: the list isn't sorted */
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
CoglPipelineLayer **layers_to_shift;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
int n_layers_to_shift;
/* When adding a layer we don't need a complete list of
* layers_to_shift if we find a layer already corresponding to the
* layer_index. */
gboolean ignore_shift_layers_if_found;
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
} CoglPipelineLayerInfo;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Returns TRUE once we know there is nothing more to update */
static gboolean
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
update_layer_info (CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
CoglPipelineLayerInfo *layer_info)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
if (layer->index == layer_info->layer_index)
{
layer_info->layer = layer;
if (layer_info->ignore_shift_layers_if_found)
return TRUE;
}
else if (layer->index < layer_info->layer_index)
{
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
int unit_index = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_unit_index (layer);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
layer_info->insert_after = unit_index;
}
else
layer_info->layers_to_shift[layer_info->n_layers_to_shift++] =
layer;
return FALSE;
}
/* Returns FALSE to break out of a _foreach_layer () iteration */
static gboolean
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
update_layer_info_cb (CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
void *user_data)
{
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
CoglPipelineLayerInfo *layer_info = user_data;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (update_layer_info (layer, layer_info))
return FALSE; /* break */
else
return TRUE; /* continue */
}
static void
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_layer_info (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipelineLayerInfo *layer_info)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
/* Note: we are assuming this pipeline is a _STATE_LAYERS authority */
int n_layers = pipeline->n_layers;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
int i;
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
/* FIXME: _cogl_pipeline_foreach_layer_internal now calls
* _cogl_pipeline_update_layers_cache anyway so this codepath is
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* pointless! */
if (layer_info->ignore_shift_layers_if_found &&
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
pipeline->layers_cache_dirty)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
/* The expectation is that callers of
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
* _cogl_pipeline_get_layer_info are likely to be modifying the
* list of layers associated with a pipeline so in this case
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* where we don't have a cache of the layers and we don't
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
* necessarily have to iterate all the layers of the pipeline we
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* use a foreach_layer callback instead of updating the cache
* and iterating that as below. */
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
_cogl_pipeline_foreach_layer_internal (pipeline,
update_layer_info_cb,
layer_info);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return;
}
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
_cogl_pipeline_update_layers_cache (pipeline);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
for (i = 0; i < n_layers; i++)
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *layer = pipeline->layers_cache[i];
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (update_layer_info (layer, layer_info))
return;
}
}
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
static CoglPipelineLayer *
_cogl_pipeline_get_layer (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
int layer_index)
{
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 =
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS);
CoglPipelineLayerInfo layer_info;
CoglPipelineLayer *layer;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
int unit_index;
int i;
_COGL_GET_CONTEXT (ctx, NULL);
/* The layer index of the layer we want info about */
layer_info.layer_index = layer_index;
/* If a layer already exists with the given index this will be
* updated. */
layer_info.layer = NULL;
/* If a layer isn't found for the given index we'll need to know
* where to insert a new layer. */
layer_info.insert_after = -1;
/* If a layer can't be found then we'll need to insert a new layer
* and bump up the texture unit for all layers with an index
* > layer_index. */
layer_info.layers_to_shift =
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
g_alloca (sizeof (CoglPipelineLayer *) * authority->n_layers);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
layer_info.n_layers_to_shift = 0;
/* If an exact match is found though we don't need a complete
* list of layers with indices > layer_index... */
layer_info.ignore_shift_layers_if_found = TRUE;
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_layer_info (authority, &layer_info);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (layer_info.layer)
return layer_info.layer;
unit_index = layer_info.insert_after + 1;
if (unit_index == 0)
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
layer = _cogl_pipeline_layer_copy (ctx->default_layer_0);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
else
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *new;
layer = _cogl_pipeline_layer_copy (ctx->default_layer_n);
new = _cogl_pipeline_set_layer_unit (NULL, layer, unit_index);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Since we passed a newly allocated layer we wouldn't expect
* _set_layer_unit() to have to allocate *another* layer. */
g_assert (new == layer);
}
layer->index = layer_index;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
for (i = 0; i < layer_info.n_layers_to_shift; i++)
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *shift_layer = layer_info.layers_to_shift[i];
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
unit_index = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_unit_index (shift_layer);
_cogl_pipeline_set_layer_unit (pipeline, shift_layer, unit_index + 1);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* NB: shift_layer may not be writeable so _set_layer_unit()
* will allocate a derived layer internally which will become
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
* owned by pipeline. Check the return value if we need to do
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* anything else with this layer. */
}
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
_cogl_pipeline_add_layer_difference (pipeline, layer, TRUE);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
cogl_object_unref (layer);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return layer;
}
CoglHandle
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_texture_real (CoglPipelineLayer *layer)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *authority =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer,
COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_TEXTURE_DATA);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return authority->texture;
}
CoglHandle
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_layer_texture (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
int layer_index)
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *layer =
_cogl_pipeline_get_layer (pipeline, layer_index);
return _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_texture (layer);
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
static void
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
_cogl_pipeline_prune_empty_layer_difference (CoglPipeline *layers_authority,
CoglPipelineLayer *layer)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
/* Find the GList link that references the empty layer */
GList *link = g_list_find (layers_authority->layer_differences, layer);
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
/* No pipeline directly owns the root node layer so this is safe... */
CoglPipelineLayer *layer_parent = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (layer);
CoglPipelineLayerInfo layer_info;
CoglPipeline *old_layers_authority;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
g_return_if_fail (link != NULL);
/* If the layer's parent doesn't have an owner then we can simply
* take ownership ourselves and drop our reference on the empty
* layer.
*/
if (layer_parent->index == layer->index && layer_parent->owner == NULL)
{
cogl_object_ref (layer_parent);
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
link->data = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (layer);
cogl_object_unref (layer);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
recursively_free_layer_caches (layers_authority);
return;
}
/* Now we want to find the layer that would become the authority for
* layer->index if we were to remove layer from
* layers_authority->layer_differences
*/
/* The layer index of the layer we want info about */
layer_info.layer_index = layer->index;
/* If a layer already exists with the given index this will be
* updated. */
layer_info.layer = NULL;
/* If a layer can't be found then we'll need to insert a new layer
* and bump up the texture unit for all layers with an index
* > layer_index. */
layer_info.layers_to_shift =
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
g_alloca (sizeof (CoglPipelineLayer *) * layers_authority->n_layers);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
layer_info.n_layers_to_shift = 0;
/* If an exact match is found though we don't need a complete
* list of layers with indices > layer_index... */
layer_info.ignore_shift_layers_if_found = TRUE;
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
/* We know the default/root pipeline isn't a LAYERS authority so it's
* safe to use the result of _cogl_pipeline_get_parent (layers_authority)
* without checking it.
*/
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
old_layers_authority =
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (_cogl_pipeline_get_parent (layers_authority),
COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_layer_info (old_layers_authority, &layer_info);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* If layer is the defining layer for the corresponding ->index then
* we can't get rid of it. */
if (!layer_info.layer)
return;
/* If the layer that would become the authority for layer->index is
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
* _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (layer) then we can simply remove the
* layer difference. */
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
if (layer_info.layer == _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (layer))
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
_cogl_pipeline_remove_layer_difference (layers_authority, layer, FALSE);
_cogl_pipeline_try_reverting_layers_authority (layers_authority,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
old_layers_authority);
}
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_set_layer_texture_target (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
int layer_index,
GLenum target)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
CoglPipelineLayerState change = COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_TEXTURE_TARGET;
CoglPipelineLayer *layer;
CoglPipelineLayer *authority;
CoglPipelineLayer *new;
/* Note: this will ensure that the layer exists, creating one if it
* doesn't already.
*
* Note: If the layer already existed it's possibly owned by another
* pipeline. If the layer is created then it will be owned by
* pipeline. */
layer = _cogl_pipeline_get_layer (pipeline, layer_index);
/* Now find the ancestor of the layer that is the authority for the
* state we want to change */
authority = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer, change);
if (target == authority->target)
return;
new = _cogl_pipeline_layer_pre_change_notify (pipeline, layer, change);
if (new != layer)
layer = new;
else
{
/* If the original layer we found is currently the authority on
* the state we are changing see if we can revert to one of our
* ancestors being the authority. */
if (layer == authority &&
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (authority) != NULL)
{
CoglPipelineLayer *parent =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (authority);
CoglPipelineLayer *old_authority =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (parent, change);
if (old_authority->target == target)
{
layer->differences &= ~change;
g_assert (layer->owner == pipeline);
if (layer->differences == 0)
_cogl_pipeline_prune_empty_layer_difference (pipeline,
layer);
goto changed;
}
}
}
layer->target = target;
/* If we weren't previously the authority on this state then we need
* to extended our differences mask and so it's possible that some
* of our ancestry will now become redundant, so we aim to reparent
* ourselves if that's true... */
if (layer != authority)
{
layer->differences |= change;
_cogl_pipeline_layer_prune_redundant_ancestry (layer);
}
changed:
handle_automatic_blend_enable (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS);
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_set_layer_texture_data (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
int layer_index,
CoglHandle texture)
{
CoglPipelineLayerState change = COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_TEXTURE_DATA;
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
CoglPipelineLayer *layer;
CoglPipelineLayer *authority;
CoglPipelineLayer *new;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Note: this will ensure that the layer exists, creating one if it
* doesn't already.
*
* Note: If the layer already existed it's possibly owned by another
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
* pipeline. If the layer is created then it will be owned by
* pipeline. */
layer = _cogl_pipeline_get_layer (pipeline, layer_index);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Now find the ancestor of the layer that is the authority for the
* state we want to change */
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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer, change);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (authority->texture == texture)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return;
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
new = _cogl_pipeline_layer_pre_change_notify (pipeline, layer, change);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (new != layer)
layer = new;
else
{
/* If the original layer we found is currently the authority on
* the state we are changing see if we can revert to one of our
* ancestors being the authority. */
if (layer == authority &&
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (authority) != NULL)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *parent =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (authority);
CoglPipelineLayer *old_authority =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (parent, change);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (old_authority->texture == texture)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
layer->differences &= ~change;
if (layer->texture != COGL_INVALID_HANDLE)
cogl_handle_unref (layer->texture);
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
g_assert (layer->owner == pipeline);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (layer->differences == 0)
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
_cogl_pipeline_prune_empty_layer_difference (pipeline,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
layer);
goto changed;
}
}
}
if (texture != COGL_INVALID_HANDLE)
cogl_handle_ref (texture);
if (layer == authority &&
layer->texture != COGL_INVALID_HANDLE)
cogl_handle_unref (layer->texture);
layer->texture = texture;
/* If we weren't previously the authority on this state then we need
* to extended our differences mask and so it's possible that some
* of our ancestry will now become redundant, so we aim to reparent
* ourselves if that's true... */
if (layer != authority)
{
layer->differences |= change;
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_prune_redundant_ancestry (layer);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
changed:
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
handle_automatic_blend_enable (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
/* A convenience for querying the target of a given texture that
* notably returns 0 for NULL textures - so we can say that a layer
* with no associated CoglTexture will have a texture target of 0.
*/
static GLenum
get_texture_target (CoglHandle texture)
{
GLuint ignore_handle;
GLenum gl_target;
if (texture)
cogl_texture_get_gl_texture (texture, &ignore_handle, &gl_target);
else
return 0;/* XXX: An invalid GL target enum */
return gl_target;
}
void
cogl_pipeline_set_layer_texture (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
int layer_index,
CoglHandle texture)
{
/* For the convenience of fragend code we separate texture state
* into the "target" and the "data", and setting a layer texture
* updates both of these properties.
*
* One example for why this is helpful is that the fragends may
* cache programs they generate and want to re-use those programs
* with all pipelines having equivalent fragment processing state.
* For the sake of determining if pipelines have equivalent fragment
* processing state we don't need to compare that the same
* underlying texture objects are referenced by the pipelines but we
* do need to see if they use the same texture targets. Making this
* distinction is much simpler if they are in different state
* groups.
*/
_cogl_pipeline_set_layer_texture_target (pipeline, layer_index,
get_texture_target (texture));
_cogl_pipeline_set_layer_texture_data (pipeline, layer_index, texture);
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
typedef struct
{
int i;
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 *pipeline;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
unsigned long fallback_layers;
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
} CoglPipelineFallbackState;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
static gboolean
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
fallback_layer_cb (CoglPipelineLayer *layer, void *user_data)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineFallbackState *state = user_data;
CoglPipeline *pipeline = state->pipeline;
CoglHandle texture = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_texture (layer);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
GLenum gl_target;
COGL_STATIC_COUNTER (layer_fallback_counter,
"layer fallback counter",
"Increments each time a layer's texture is "
"forced to a fallback texture",
0 /* no application private data */);
_COGL_GET_CONTEXT (ctx, FALSE);
if (!(state->fallback_layers & 1<<state->i))
return TRUE;
COGL_COUNTER_INC (_cogl_uprof_context, layer_fallback_counter);
if (G_LIKELY (texture != COGL_INVALID_HANDLE))
cogl_texture_get_gl_texture (texture, NULL, &gl_target);
else
gl_target = GL_TEXTURE_2D;
if (gl_target == GL_TEXTURE_2D)
texture = ctx->default_gl_texture_2d_tex;
#ifdef HAVE_COGL_GL
else if (gl_target == GL_TEXTURE_RECTANGLE_ARB)
texture = ctx->default_gl_texture_rect_tex;
#endif
else
{
g_warning ("We don't have a fallback texture we can use to fill "
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
"in for an invalid pipeline layer, since it was "
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
"using an unsupported texture target ");
/* might get away with this... */
texture = ctx->default_gl_texture_2d_tex;
}
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
cogl_pipeline_set_layer_texture (pipeline, layer->index, texture);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
state->i++;
return TRUE;
}
void
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
_cogl_pipeline_set_layer_wrap_modes (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
CoglPipelineLayer *authority,
CoglPipelineWrapModeInternal wrap_mode_s,
CoglPipelineWrapModeInternal wrap_mode_t,
CoglPipelineWrapModeInternal wrap_mode_p)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *new;
CoglPipelineLayerState change = COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_WRAP_MODES;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (authority->wrap_mode_s == wrap_mode_s &&
authority->wrap_mode_t == wrap_mode_t &&
authority->wrap_mode_p == wrap_mode_p)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return;
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
new = _cogl_pipeline_layer_pre_change_notify (pipeline, layer, change);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (new != layer)
layer = new;
else
{
/* If the original layer we found is currently the authority on
* the state we are changing see if we can revert to one of our
* ancestors being the authority. */
if (layer == authority &&
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (authority) != NULL)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *parent =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (authority);
CoglPipelineLayer *old_authority =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (parent, change);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (old_authority->wrap_mode_s == wrap_mode_s &&
old_authority->wrap_mode_t == wrap_mode_t &&
old_authority->wrap_mode_p == wrap_mode_p)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
layer->differences &= ~change;
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
g_assert (layer->owner == pipeline);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (layer->differences == 0)
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
_cogl_pipeline_prune_empty_layer_difference (pipeline,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
layer);
return;
}
}
}
layer->wrap_mode_s = wrap_mode_s;
layer->wrap_mode_t = wrap_mode_t;
layer->wrap_mode_p = wrap_mode_p;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* If we weren't previously the authority on this state then we need
* to extended our differences mask and so it's possible that some
* of our ancestry will now become redundant, so we aim to reparent
* ourselves if that's true... */
if (layer != authority)
{
layer->differences |= change;
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_prune_redundant_ancestry (layer);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
}
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
static CoglPipelineWrapModeInternal
public_to_internal_wrap_mode (CoglPipelineWrapMode mode)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
return (CoglPipelineWrapModeInternal)mode;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
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
static CoglPipelineWrapMode
internal_to_public_wrap_mode (CoglPipelineWrapModeInternal internal_mode)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
g_return_val_if_fail (internal_mode !=
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
COGL_PIPELINE_WRAP_MODE_INTERNAL_CLAMP_TO_BORDER,
COGL_PIPELINE_WRAP_MODE_AUTOMATIC);
return (CoglPipelineWrapMode)internal_mode;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
void
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
cogl_pipeline_set_layer_wrap_mode_s (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
int layer_index,
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
CoglPipelineWrapMode mode)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayerState change = COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_WRAP_MODES;
CoglPipelineLayer *layer;
CoglPipelineLayer *authority;
CoglPipelineWrapModeInternal internal_mode =
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
public_to_internal_wrap_mode (mode);
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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline));
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Note: this will ensure that the layer exists, creating one if it
* doesn't already.
*
* Note: If the layer already existed it's possibly owned by another
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
* pipeline. If the layer is created then it will be owned by
* pipeline. */
layer = _cogl_pipeline_get_layer (pipeline, layer_index);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Now find the ancestor of the layer that is the authority for the
* state we want to change */
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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer, change);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
_cogl_pipeline_set_layer_wrap_modes (pipeline, layer, authority,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
internal_mode,
authority->wrap_mode_t,
authority->wrap_mode_p);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
void
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
cogl_pipeline_set_layer_wrap_mode_t (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
int layer_index,
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
CoglPipelineWrapMode mode)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayerState change = COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_WRAP_MODES;
CoglPipelineLayer *layer;
CoglPipelineLayer *authority;
CoglPipelineWrapModeInternal internal_mode =
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
public_to_internal_wrap_mode (mode);
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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline));
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Note: this will ensure that the layer exists, creating one if it
* doesn't already.
*
* Note: If the layer already existed it's possibly owned by another
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
* pipeline. If the layer is created then it will be owned by
* pipeline. */
layer = _cogl_pipeline_get_layer (pipeline, layer_index);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Now find the ancestor of the layer that is the authority for the
* state we want to change */
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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer, change);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
_cogl_pipeline_set_layer_wrap_modes (pipeline, layer, authority,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
authority->wrap_mode_s,
internal_mode,
authority->wrap_mode_p);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
/* The rationale for naming the third texture coordinate 'p' instead
of OpenGL's usual 'r' is that 'r' conflicts with the usual naming
of the 'red' component when treating a vector as a color. Under
GLSL this is awkward because the texture swizzling for a vector
uses a single letter for each component and the names for colors,
textures and positions are synonymous. GLSL works around this by
naming the components of the texture s, t, p and q. Cogl already
effectively already exposes this naming because it exposes GLSL so
it makes sense to use that naming consistently. Another alternative
could be u, v and w. This is what Blender and Direct3D use. However
the w component conflicts with the w component of a position
vertex. */
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
void
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
cogl_pipeline_set_layer_wrap_mode_p (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
int layer_index,
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
CoglPipelineWrapMode mode)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayerState change = COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_WRAP_MODES;
CoglPipelineLayer *layer;
CoglPipelineLayer *authority;
CoglPipelineWrapModeInternal internal_mode =
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
public_to_internal_wrap_mode (mode);
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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline));
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Note: this will ensure that the layer exists, creating one if it
* doesn't already.
*
* Note: If the layer already existed it's possibly owned by another
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
* pipeline. If the layer is created then it will be owned by
* pipeline. */
layer = _cogl_pipeline_get_layer (pipeline, layer_index);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Now find the ancestor of the layer that is the authority for the
* state we want to change */
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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer, change);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
_cogl_pipeline_set_layer_wrap_modes (pipeline, layer, authority,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
authority->wrap_mode_s,
authority->wrap_mode_t,
internal_mode);
}
void
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
cogl_pipeline_set_layer_wrap_mode (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
int layer_index,
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
CoglPipelineWrapMode mode)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayerState change = COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_WRAP_MODES;
CoglPipelineLayer *layer;
CoglPipelineLayer *authority;
CoglPipelineWrapModeInternal internal_mode =
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
public_to_internal_wrap_mode (mode);
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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline));
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Note: this will ensure that the layer exists, creating one if it
* doesn't already.
*
* Note: If the layer already existed it's possibly owned by another
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
* pipeline. If the layer is created then it will be owned by
* pipeline. */
layer = _cogl_pipeline_get_layer (pipeline, layer_index);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Now find the ancestor of the layer that is the authority for the
* state we want to change */
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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer, change);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
_cogl_pipeline_set_layer_wrap_modes (pipeline, layer, authority,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
internal_mode,
internal_mode,
internal_mode);
/* XXX: I wonder if we should really be duplicating the mode into
* the 'r' wrap mode too? */
}
/* FIXME: deprecate this API */
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
CoglPipelineWrapMode
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_wrap_mode_s (CoglPipelineLayer *layer)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayerState change = COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_WRAP_MODES;
CoglPipelineLayer *authority;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
g_return_val_if_fail (_cogl_is_pipeline_layer (layer), FALSE);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Now find the ancestor of the layer that is the authority for the
* state we want to change */
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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer, change);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return internal_to_public_wrap_mode (authority->wrap_mode_s);
}
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
CoglPipelineWrapMode
cogl_pipeline_get_layer_wrap_mode_s (CoglPipeline *pipeline, int layer_index)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *layer;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
g_return_val_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline), FALSE);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Note: this will ensure that the layer exists, creating one if it
* doesn't already.
*
* Note: If the layer already existed it's possibly owned by another
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
* pipeline. If the layer is created then it will be owned by
* pipeline. */
layer = _cogl_pipeline_get_layer (pipeline, layer_index);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* FIXME: we shouldn't ever construct a layer in a getter function */
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
return _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_wrap_mode_s (layer);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
/* FIXME: deprecate this API */
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
CoglPipelineWrapMode
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_wrap_mode_t (CoglPipelineLayer *layer)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayerState change = COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_WRAP_MODES;
CoglPipelineLayer *authority;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
g_return_val_if_fail (_cogl_is_pipeline_layer (layer), FALSE);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Now find the ancestor of the layer that is the authority for the
* state we want to change */
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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer, change);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return internal_to_public_wrap_mode (authority->wrap_mode_t);
}
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
CoglPipelineWrapMode
cogl_pipeline_get_layer_wrap_mode_t (CoglPipeline *pipeline, int layer_index)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *layer;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
g_return_val_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline), FALSE);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Note: this will ensure that the layer exists, creating one if it
* doesn't already.
*
* Note: If the layer already existed it's possibly owned by another
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
* pipeline. If the layer is created then it will be owned by
* pipeline. */
layer = _cogl_pipeline_get_layer (pipeline, layer_index);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* FIXME: we shouldn't ever construct a layer in a getter function */
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
return _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_wrap_mode_t (layer);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
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
CoglPipelineWrapMode
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_wrap_mode_p (CoglPipelineLayer *layer)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayerState change = COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_WRAP_MODES;
CoglPipelineLayer *authority =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer, change);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return internal_to_public_wrap_mode (authority->wrap_mode_p);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
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
CoglPipelineWrapMode
cogl_pipeline_get_layer_wrap_mode_p (CoglPipeline *pipeline, int layer_index)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *layer;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
g_return_val_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline), FALSE);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Note: this will ensure that the layer exists, creating one if it
* doesn't already.
*
* Note: If the layer already existed it's possibly owned by another
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
* pipeline. If the layer is created then it will be owned by
* pipeline. */
layer = _cogl_pipeline_get_layer (pipeline, layer_index);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
return _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_wrap_mode_p (layer);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
void
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_wrap_modes (CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
CoglPipelineWrapModeInternal *wrap_mode_s,
CoglPipelineWrapModeInternal *wrap_mode_t,
CoglPipelineWrapModeInternal *wrap_mode_p)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *authority =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer,
COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_WRAP_MODES);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
*wrap_mode_s = authority->wrap_mode_s;
*wrap_mode_t = authority->wrap_mode_t;
*wrap_mode_p = authority->wrap_mode_p;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
gboolean
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
cogl_pipeline_set_layer_point_sprite_coords_enabled (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
int layer_index,
gboolean enable,
GError **error)
{
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
CoglPipelineLayerState change =
COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_POINT_SPRITE_COORDS;
CoglPipelineLayer *layer;
CoglPipelineLayer *new;
CoglPipelineLayer *authority;
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
g_return_val_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline), FALSE);
/* Don't allow point sprite coordinates to be enabled if the driver
doesn't support it */
if (enable && !cogl_features_available (COGL_FEATURE_POINT_SPRITE))
{
if (error)
{
g_set_error (error, COGL_ERROR, COGL_ERROR_UNSUPPORTED,
"Point sprite texture coordinates are enabled "
"for a layer but the GL driver does not support it.");
}
else
{
static gboolean warning_seen = FALSE;
if (!warning_seen)
g_warning ("Point sprite texture coordinates are enabled "
"for a layer but the GL driver does not support it.");
warning_seen = TRUE;
}
return FALSE;
}
/* Note: this will ensure that the layer exists, creating one if it
* doesn't already.
*
* Note: If the layer already existed it's possibly owned by another
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
* pipeline. If the layer is created then it will be owned by
* pipeline. */
layer = _cogl_pipeline_get_layer (pipeline, layer_index);
/* Now find the ancestor of the layer that is the authority for the
* state we want to change */
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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer, change);
if (authority->big_state->point_sprite_coords == enable)
return TRUE;
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
new = _cogl_pipeline_layer_pre_change_notify (pipeline, layer, change);
if (new != layer)
layer = new;
else
{
/* If the original layer we found is currently the authority on
* the state we are changing see if we can revert to one of our
* ancestors being the authority. */
if (layer == authority &&
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (authority) != NULL)
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *parent =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (authority);
CoglPipelineLayer *old_authority =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (parent, change);
if (old_authority->big_state->point_sprite_coords == enable)
{
layer->differences &= ~change;
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
g_assert (layer->owner == pipeline);
if (layer->differences == 0)
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
_cogl_pipeline_prune_empty_layer_difference (pipeline,
layer);
return TRUE;
}
}
}
layer->big_state->point_sprite_coords = enable;
/* If we weren't previously the authority on this state then we need
* to extended our differences mask and so it's possible that some
* of our ancestry will now become redundant, so we aim to reparent
* ourselves if that's true... */
if (layer != authority)
{
layer->differences |= change;
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_prune_redundant_ancestry (layer);
}
return TRUE;
}
gboolean
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
cogl_pipeline_get_layer_point_sprite_coords_enabled (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
int layer_index)
{
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
CoglPipelineLayerState change =
COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_POINT_SPRITE_COORDS;
CoglPipelineLayer *layer;
CoglPipelineLayer *authority;
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
g_return_val_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline), FALSE);
/* Note: this will ensure that the layer exists, creating one if it
* doesn't already.
*
* Note: If the layer already existed it's possibly owned by another
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
* pipeline. If the layer is created then it will be owned by
* pipeline. */
layer = _cogl_pipeline_get_layer (pipeline, layer_index);
/* FIXME: we shouldn't ever construct a layer in a getter function */
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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer, change);
return authority->big_state->point_sprite_coords;
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
typedef struct
{
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 *pipeline;
CoglHandle texture;
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
} CoglPipelineOverrideLayerState;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
static gboolean
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
override_layer_texture_cb (CoglPipelineLayer *layer, void *user_data)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineOverrideLayerState *state = user_data;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
cogl_pipeline_set_layer_texture (state->pipeline,
layer->index,
state->texture);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return TRUE;
}
void
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
_cogl_pipeline_apply_overrides (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipelineFlushOptions *options)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
COGL_STATIC_COUNTER (apply_overrides_counter,
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
"pipeline overrides counter",
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
"Increments each time we have to apply "
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
"override options to a pipeline",
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
0 /* no application private data */);
COGL_COUNTER_INC (_cogl_uprof_context, apply_overrides_counter);
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
if (options->flags & COGL_PIPELINE_FLUSH_DISABLE_MASK)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
int i;
/* NB: we can assume that once we see one bit to disable
* a layer, all subsequent layers are also disabled. */
for (i = 0; i < 32 && options->disable_layers & (1<<i); i++)
;
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
_cogl_pipeline_prune_to_n_layers (pipeline, i);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
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
if (options->flags & COGL_PIPELINE_FLUSH_FALLBACK_MASK)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineFallbackState state;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
state.i = 0;
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
state.pipeline = pipeline;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
state.fallback_layers = options->fallback_layers;
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
_cogl_pipeline_foreach_layer_internal (pipeline,
fallback_layer_cb,
&state);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
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
if (options->flags & COGL_PIPELINE_FLUSH_LAYER0_OVERRIDE)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineOverrideLayerState state;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
_cogl_pipeline_prune_to_n_layers (pipeline, 1);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* NB: we are overriding the first layer, but we don't know
* the user's given layer_index, which is why we use
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
* _cogl_pipeline_foreach_layer_internal() here even though we know
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* there's only one layer. */
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
state.pipeline = pipeline;
state.texture = options->layer0_override_texture;
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
_cogl_pipeline_foreach_layer_internal (pipeline,
override_layer_texture_cb,
&state);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
}
static gboolean
_cogl_pipeline_layer_texture_target_equal (CoglPipelineLayer *authority0,
CoglPipelineLayer *authority1,
CoglPipelineEvalFlags flags)
{
return authority0->target == authority1->target;
}
static gboolean
_cogl_pipeline_layer_texture_data_equal (CoglPipelineLayer *authority0,
CoglPipelineLayer *authority1,
CoglPipelineEvalFlags flags)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
GLuint gl_handle0, gl_handle1;
cogl_texture_get_gl_texture (authority0->texture, &gl_handle0, NULL);
cogl_texture_get_gl_texture (authority1->texture, &gl_handle1, NULL);
return gl_handle0 == gl_handle1;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
/* Determine the mask of differences between two layers.
*
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
* XXX: If layers and pipelines could both be cast to a common Tree
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* type of some kind then we could have a unified
* compare_differences() function.
*/
unsigned long
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_compare_differences (CoglPipelineLayer *layer0,
CoglPipelineLayer *layer1)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *node0;
CoglPipelineLayer *node1;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
int len0;
int len1;
int len0_index;
int len1_index;
int count;
int i;
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
CoglPipelineLayer *common_ancestor = NULL;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
unsigned long layers_difference = 0;
_COGL_GET_CONTEXT (ctx, 0);
/* Algorithm:
*
* 1) Walk the ancestors of each layer to the root node, adding a
* pointer to each ancester node to two GArrays:
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
* ctx->pipeline0_nodes, and ctx->pipeline1_nodes.
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
*
* 2) Compare the arrays to find the nodes where they stop to
* differ.
*
* 3) For each array now iterate from index 0 to the first node of
* difference ORing that nodes ->difference mask into the final
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
* pipeline_differences mask.
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
*/
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
g_array_set_size (ctx->pipeline0_nodes, 0);
g_array_set_size (ctx->pipeline1_nodes, 0);
for (node0 = layer0; node0; node0 = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (node0))
g_array_append_vals (ctx->pipeline0_nodes, &node0, 1);
for (node1 = layer1; node1; node1 = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (node1))
g_array_append_vals (ctx->pipeline1_nodes, &node1, 1);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
len0 = ctx->pipeline0_nodes->len;
len1 = ctx->pipeline1_nodes->len;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* There's no point looking at the last entries since we know both
* layers must have the same default layer as their root node. */
len0_index = len0 - 2;
len1_index = len1 - 2;
count = MIN (len0, len1) - 1;
for (i = 0; i < count; i++)
{
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
node0 = g_array_index (ctx->pipeline0_nodes,
CoglPipelineLayer *, len0_index--);
node1 = g_array_index (ctx->pipeline1_nodes,
CoglPipelineLayer *, len1_index--);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (node0 != node1)
{
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
common_ancestor = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (node0);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
break;
}
}
/* If we didn't already find the first the common_ancestor ancestor
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
* that's because one pipeline is a direct descendant of the other
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* and in this case the first common ancestor is the last node we
* looked at. */
if (!common_ancestor)
common_ancestor = node0;
count = len0 - 1;
for (i = 0; i < count; i++)
{
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
node0 = g_array_index (ctx->pipeline0_nodes, CoglPipelineLayer *, i);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (node0 == common_ancestor)
break;
layers_difference |= node0->differences;
}
count = len1 - 1;
for (i = 0; i < count; i++)
{
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
node1 = g_array_index (ctx->pipeline1_nodes, CoglPipelineLayer *, i);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (node1 == common_ancestor)
break;
layers_difference |= node1->differences;
}
return layers_difference;
}
static gboolean
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_combine_state_equal (CoglPipelineLayer *authority0,
CoglPipelineLayer *authority1)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayerBigState *big_state0 = authority0->big_state;
CoglPipelineLayerBigState *big_state1 = authority1->big_state;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
int n_args;
int i;
if (big_state0->texture_combine_rgb_func !=
big_state1->texture_combine_rgb_func)
return FALSE;
if (big_state0->texture_combine_alpha_func !=
big_state1->texture_combine_alpha_func)
return FALSE;
n_args =
_cogl_get_n_args_for_combine_func (big_state0->texture_combine_rgb_func);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
for (i = 0; i < n_args; i++)
{
if ((big_state0->texture_combine_rgb_src[i] !=
big_state1->texture_combine_rgb_src[i]) ||
(big_state0->texture_combine_rgb_op[i] !=
big_state1->texture_combine_rgb_op[i]))
return FALSE;
}
n_args =
_cogl_get_n_args_for_combine_func (big_state0->texture_combine_alpha_func);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
for (i = 0; i < n_args; i++)
{
if ((big_state0->texture_combine_alpha_src[i] !=
big_state1->texture_combine_alpha_src[i]) ||
(big_state0->texture_combine_alpha_op[i] !=
big_state1->texture_combine_alpha_op[i]))
return FALSE;
}
return TRUE;
}
static gboolean
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_combine_constant_equal (CoglPipelineLayer *authority0,
CoglPipelineLayer *authority1)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
return memcmp (authority0->big_state->texture_combine_constant,
authority1->big_state->texture_combine_constant,
sizeof (float) * 4) == 0 ? TRUE : FALSE;
}
static gboolean
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_filters_equal (CoglPipelineLayer *authority0,
CoglPipelineLayer *authority1)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
if (authority0->mag_filter != authority1->mag_filter)
return FALSE;
if (authority0->min_filter != authority1->min_filter)
return FALSE;
return TRUE;
}
static gboolean
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_wrap_modes_equal (CoglPipelineLayer *authority0,
CoglPipelineLayer *authority1)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
if (authority0->wrap_mode_s != authority1->wrap_mode_s ||
authority0->wrap_mode_t != authority1->wrap_mode_t ||
authority0->wrap_mode_p != authority1->wrap_mode_p)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return FALSE;
return TRUE;
}
static gboolean
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_user_matrix_equal (CoglPipelineLayer *authority0,
CoglPipelineLayer *authority1)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayerBigState *big_state0 = authority0->big_state;
CoglPipelineLayerBigState *big_state1 = authority1->big_state;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (!cogl_matrix_equal (&big_state0->matrix, &big_state1->matrix))
return FALSE;
return TRUE;
}
static gboolean
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_point_sprite_coords_equal (CoglPipelineLayer *authority0,
CoglPipelineLayer *authority1)
{
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
CoglPipelineLayerBigState *big_state0 = authority0->big_state;
CoglPipelineLayerBigState *big_state1 = authority1->big_state;
return big_state0->point_sprite_coords == big_state1->point_sprite_coords;
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
typedef gboolean
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
(*CoglPipelineLayerStateComparitor) (CoglPipelineLayer *authority0,
CoglPipelineLayer *authority1);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
static gboolean
layer_state_equal (CoglPipelineLayerStateIndex state_index,
CoglPipelineLayer **authorities0,
CoglPipelineLayer **authorities1,
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
CoglPipelineLayerStateComparitor comparitor)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
return comparitor (authorities0[state_index], authorities1[state_index]);
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_layer_resolve_authorities (CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
unsigned long differences,
CoglPipelineLayer **authorities)
{
unsigned long remaining = differences;
CoglPipelineLayer *authority = layer;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
do
{
unsigned long found = authority->differences & remaining;
int i;
if (found == 0)
continue;
for (i = 0; TRUE; i++)
{
unsigned long state = (1L<<i);
if (state & found)
authorities[i] = authority;
else if (state > found)
break;
}
remaining &= ~found;
if (remaining == 0)
return;
}
while ((authority = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (authority)));
g_assert (remaining == 0);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
static gboolean
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_equal (CoglPipelineLayer *layer0,
CoglPipelineLayer *layer1,
unsigned long differences_mask,
CoglPipelineEvalFlags flags)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
unsigned long layers_difference;
CoglPipelineLayer *authorities0[COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_SPARSE_COUNT];
CoglPipelineLayer *authorities1[COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_SPARSE_COUNT];
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (layer0 == layer1)
return TRUE;
layers_difference =
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_compare_differences (layer0, layer1);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Only compare the sparse state groups requested by the caller... */
layers_difference &= differences_mask;
_cogl_pipeline_layer_resolve_authorities (layer0,
layers_difference,
authorities0);
_cogl_pipeline_layer_resolve_authorities (layer1,
layers_difference,
authorities1);
if (layers_difference & COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_TEXTURE_TARGET)
{
CoglPipelineLayerStateIndex state_index =
COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_TEXTURE_TARGET_INDEX;
if (!_cogl_pipeline_layer_texture_target_equal (authorities0[state_index],
authorities1[state_index],
flags))
return FALSE;
}
if (layers_difference & COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_TEXTURE_DATA)
{
CoglPipelineLayerStateIndex state_index =
COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_TEXTURE_DATA_INDEX;
if (!_cogl_pipeline_layer_texture_data_equal (authorities0[state_index],
authorities1[state_index],
flags))
return FALSE;
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
if (layers_difference & COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_COMBINE &&
!layer_state_equal (COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_COMBINE_INDEX,
authorities0, authorities1,
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_combine_state_equal))
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return FALSE;
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
if (layers_difference & COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_COMBINE_CONSTANT &&
!layer_state_equal (COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_COMBINE_CONSTANT_INDEX,
authorities0, authorities1,
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_combine_constant_equal))
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return FALSE;
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
if (layers_difference & COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_FILTERS &&
!layer_state_equal (COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_FILTERS_INDEX,
authorities0, authorities1,
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_filters_equal))
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return FALSE;
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
if (layers_difference & COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_WRAP_MODES &&
!layer_state_equal (COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_WRAP_MODES_INDEX,
authorities0, authorities1,
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_wrap_modes_equal))
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return FALSE;
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
if (layers_difference & COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_USER_MATRIX &&
!layer_state_equal (COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_USER_MATRIX_INDEX,
authorities0, authorities1,
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_user_matrix_equal))
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return FALSE;
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
if (layers_difference & COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_POINT_SPRITE_COORDS &&
!layer_state_equal (COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_POINT_SPRITE_COORDS_INDEX,
authorities0, authorities1,
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_point_sprite_coords_equal))
return FALSE;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return TRUE;
}
static gboolean
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
_cogl_pipeline_color_equal (CoglPipeline *authority0,
CoglPipeline *authority1)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
return cogl_color_equal (&authority0->color, &authority1->color);
}
static gboolean
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
_cogl_pipeline_lighting_state_equal (CoglPipeline *authority0,
CoglPipeline *authority1)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLightingState *state0 = &authority0->big_state->lighting_state;
CoglPipelineLightingState *state1 = &authority1->big_state->lighting_state;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (memcmp (state0->ambient, state1->ambient, sizeof (float) * 4) != 0)
return FALSE;
if (memcmp (state0->diffuse, state1->diffuse, sizeof (float) * 4) != 0)
return FALSE;
if (memcmp (state0->specular, state1->specular, sizeof (float) * 4) != 0)
return FALSE;
if (memcmp (state0->emission, state1->emission, sizeof (float) * 4) != 0)
return FALSE;
if (state0->shininess != state1->shininess)
return FALSE;
return TRUE;
}
static gboolean
_cogl_pipeline_alpha_func_state_equal (CoglPipeline *authority0,
CoglPipeline *authority1)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineAlphaFuncState *alpha_state0 =
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
&authority0->big_state->alpha_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
CoglPipelineAlphaFuncState *alpha_state1 =
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
&authority1->big_state->alpha_state;
return alpha_state0->alpha_func == alpha_state1->alpha_func;
}
static gboolean
_cogl_pipeline_alpha_func_reference_state_equal (CoglPipeline *authority0,
CoglPipeline *authority1)
{
CoglPipelineAlphaFuncState *alpha_state0 =
&authority0->big_state->alpha_state;
CoglPipelineAlphaFuncState *alpha_state1 =
&authority1->big_state->alpha_state;
return (alpha_state0->alpha_func_reference ==
alpha_state1->alpha_func_reference);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
static gboolean
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
_cogl_pipeline_blend_state_equal (CoglPipeline *authority0,
CoglPipeline *authority1)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineBlendState *blend_state0 = &authority0->big_state->blend_state;
CoglPipelineBlendState *blend_state1 = &authority1->big_state->blend_state;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
#ifndef HAVE_COGL_GLES
if (blend_state0->blend_equation_rgb != blend_state1->blend_equation_rgb)
return FALSE;
if (blend_state0->blend_equation_alpha !=
blend_state1->blend_equation_alpha)
return FALSE;
if (blend_state0->blend_src_factor_alpha !=
blend_state1->blend_src_factor_alpha)
return FALSE;
if (blend_state0->blend_dst_factor_alpha !=
blend_state1->blend_dst_factor_alpha)
return FALSE;
#endif
if (blend_state0->blend_src_factor_rgb !=
blend_state1->blend_src_factor_rgb)
return FALSE;
if (blend_state0->blend_dst_factor_rgb !=
blend_state1->blend_dst_factor_rgb)
return FALSE;
#ifndef HAVE_COGL_GLES
if (blend_state0->blend_src_factor_rgb == GL_ONE_MINUS_CONSTANT_COLOR ||
blend_state0->blend_src_factor_rgb == GL_CONSTANT_COLOR ||
blend_state0->blend_dst_factor_rgb == GL_ONE_MINUS_CONSTANT_COLOR ||
blend_state0->blend_dst_factor_rgb == GL_CONSTANT_COLOR)
{
if (!cogl_color_equal (&blend_state0->blend_constant,
&blend_state1->blend_constant))
return FALSE;
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
#endif
return TRUE;
}
static gboolean
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
_cogl_pipeline_depth_state_equal (CoglPipeline *authority0,
CoglPipeline *authority1)
{
if (authority0->big_state->depth_state.depth_test_enabled == FALSE &&
authority1->big_state->depth_state.depth_test_enabled == FALSE)
return TRUE;
else
return memcmp (&authority0->big_state->depth_state,
&authority1->big_state->depth_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
sizeof (CoglPipelineDepthState)) == 0;
}
static gboolean
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
_cogl_pipeline_fog_state_equal (CoglPipeline *authority0,
CoglPipeline *authority1)
{
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
CoglPipelineFogState *fog_state0 = &authority0->big_state->fog_state;
CoglPipelineFogState *fog_state1 = &authority1->big_state->fog_state;
if (fog_state0->enabled == fog_state1->enabled &&
cogl_color_equal (&fog_state0->color, &fog_state1->color) &&
fog_state0->mode == fog_state1->mode &&
fog_state0->density == fog_state1->density &&
fog_state0->z_near == fog_state1->z_near &&
fog_state0->z_far == fog_state1->z_far)
return TRUE;
else
return FALSE;
}
static gboolean
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
_cogl_pipeline_point_size_equal (CoglPipeline *authority0,
CoglPipeline *authority1)
{
return authority0->big_state->point_size == authority1->big_state->point_size;
}
static gboolean
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
_cogl_pipeline_user_shader_equal (CoglPipeline *authority0,
CoglPipeline *authority1)
{
return (authority0->big_state->user_program ==
authority1->big_state->user_program);
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
static gboolean
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
_cogl_pipeline_layers_equal (CoglPipeline *authority0,
CoglPipeline *authority1,
unsigned long differences,
CoglPipelineEvalFlags flags)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
int i;
if (authority0->n_layers != authority1->n_layers)
return FALSE;
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
_cogl_pipeline_update_layers_cache (authority0);
_cogl_pipeline_update_layers_cache (authority1);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
for (i = 0; i < authority0->n_layers; i++)
{
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
if (!_cogl_pipeline_layer_equal (authority0->layers_cache[i],
authority1->layers_cache[i],
differences,
flags))
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return FALSE;
}
return TRUE;
}
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
/* Determine the mask of differences between two pipelines */
unsigned long
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
_cogl_pipeline_compare_differences (CoglPipeline *pipeline0,
CoglPipeline *pipeline1)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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 *node0;
CoglPipeline *node1;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
int len0;
int len1;
int len0_index;
int len1_index;
int count;
int i;
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 *common_ancestor = NULL;
unsigned long pipelines_difference = 0;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
_COGL_GET_CONTEXT (ctx, 0);
/* Algorithm:
*
* 1) Walk the ancestors of each layer to the root node, adding a
* pointer to each ancester node to two GArrays:
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
* ctx->pipeline0_nodes, and ctx->pipeline1_nodes.
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
*
* 2) Compare the arrays to find the nodes where they stop to
* differ.
*
* 3) For each array now iterate from index 0 to the first node of
* difference ORing that nodes ->difference mask into the final
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
* pipeline_differences mask.
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
*/
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
g_array_set_size (ctx->pipeline0_nodes, 0);
g_array_set_size (ctx->pipeline1_nodes, 0);
for (node0 = pipeline0; node0; node0 = _cogl_pipeline_get_parent (node0))
g_array_append_vals (ctx->pipeline0_nodes, &node0, 1);
for (node1 = pipeline1; node1; node1 = _cogl_pipeline_get_parent (node1))
g_array_append_vals (ctx->pipeline1_nodes, &node1, 1);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
len0 = ctx->pipeline0_nodes->len;
len1 = ctx->pipeline1_nodes->len;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* There's no point looking at the last entries since we know both
* layers must have the same default layer as their root node. */
len0_index = len0 - 2;
len1_index = len1 - 2;
count = MIN (len0, len1) - 1;
for (i = 0; i < count; i++)
{
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
node0 = g_array_index (ctx->pipeline0_nodes,
CoglPipeline *, len0_index--);
node1 = g_array_index (ctx->pipeline1_nodes,
CoglPipeline *, len1_index--);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (node0 != node1)
{
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
common_ancestor = _cogl_pipeline_get_parent (node0);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
break;
}
}
/* If we didn't already find the first the common_ancestor ancestor
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
* that's because one pipeline is a direct descendant of the other
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* and in this case the first common ancestor is the last node we
* looked at. */
if (!common_ancestor)
common_ancestor = node0;
count = len0 - 1;
for (i = 0; i < count; i++)
{
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
node0 = g_array_index (ctx->pipeline0_nodes, CoglPipeline *, i);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (node0 == common_ancestor)
break;
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
pipelines_difference |= node0->differences;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
count = len1 - 1;
for (i = 0; i < count; i++)
{
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
node1 = g_array_index (ctx->pipeline1_nodes, CoglPipeline *, i);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (node1 == common_ancestor)
break;
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
pipelines_difference |= node1->differences;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
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
return pipelines_difference;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
static gboolean
simple_property_equal (CoglPipeline **authorities0,
CoglPipeline **authorities1,
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,
CoglPipelineStateIndex state_index,
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
CoglPipelineStateComparitor comparitor)
{
if (pipelines_difference & (1L<<state_index))
{
if (!comparitor (authorities0[state_index], authorities1[state_index]))
return FALSE;
}
return TRUE;
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_resolve_authorities (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
unsigned long differences,
CoglPipeline **authorities)
{
unsigned long remaining = differences;
CoglPipeline *authority = pipeline;
do
{
unsigned long found = authority->differences & remaining;
int i;
if (found == 0)
continue;
for (i = 0; TRUE; i++)
{
unsigned long state = (1L<<i);
if (state & found)
authorities[i] = authority;
else if (state > found)
break;
}
remaining &= ~found;
if (remaining == 0)
return;
}
while ((authority = _cogl_pipeline_get_parent (authority)));
g_assert (remaining == 0);
}
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
/* Comparison of two arbitrary pipelines is done by:
* 1) walking up the parents of each pipeline until a common
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* ancestor is found, and at each step ORing together the
* difference masks.
*
* 2) using the final difference mask to determine which state
* groups to compare.
*
* This is used, for example, by the Cogl journal to compare pipelines so that
* it can split up geometry that needs different OpenGL state.
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
*
* XXX: When comparing texture layers, _cogl_pipeline_equal will actually
* compare the underlying GL texture handle that the Cogl texture uses so that
* atlas textures and sub textures will be considered equal if they point to
* the same texture. This is useful for comparing pipelines in the journal but
* it means that _cogl_pipeline_equal doesn't strictly compare whether the
* pipelines are the same. If we needed those semantics we could perhaps add
* another function or some flags to control the behaviour.
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
*/
gboolean
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
_cogl_pipeline_equal (CoglPipeline *pipeline0,
CoglPipeline *pipeline1,
unsigned long differences,
unsigned long layer_differences,
CoglPipelineEvalFlags flags)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
unsigned long pipelines_difference;
CoglPipeline *authorities0[COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_SPARSE_COUNT];
CoglPipeline *authorities1[COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_SPARSE_COUNT];
gboolean ret;
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
COGL_STATIC_TIMER (pipeline_equal_timer,
"Mainloop", /* parent */
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
"_cogl_pipeline_equal",
"The time spent comparing cogl pipelines",
0 /* no application private data */);
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
COGL_TIMER_START (_cogl_uprof_context, pipeline_equal_timer);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
if (pipeline0 == pipeline1)
{
ret = TRUE;
goto done;
}
ret = FALSE;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* First check non-sparse properties */
if (differences & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_REAL_BLEND_ENABLE &&
pipeline0->real_blend_enable != pipeline1->real_blend_enable)
goto done;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Then check sparse properties */
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
pipelines_difference =
_cogl_pipeline_compare_differences (pipeline0, pipeline1);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Only compare the sparse state groups requested by the caller... */
pipelines_difference &= differences;
_cogl_pipeline_resolve_authorities (pipeline0,
pipelines_difference,
authorities0);
_cogl_pipeline_resolve_authorities (pipeline1,
pipelines_difference,
authorities1);
/* FIXME: we should resolve all the required authorities up front since
* that should reduce some repeat ancestor traversals. */
if (pipelines_difference & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_COLOR)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
CoglPipeline *authority0 = authorities0[COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_COLOR_INDEX];
CoglPipeline *authority1 = authorities1[COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_COLOR_INDEX];
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (!cogl_color_equal (&authority0->color, &authority1->color))
goto done;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
if (!simple_property_equal (authorities0, authorities1,
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
pipelines_difference,
COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LIGHTING_INDEX,
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
_cogl_pipeline_lighting_state_equal))
goto done;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (!simple_property_equal (authorities0, authorities1,
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
pipelines_difference,
COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_ALPHA_FUNC_INDEX,
_cogl_pipeline_alpha_func_state_equal))
goto done;
if (!simple_property_equal (authorities0, authorities1,
pipelines_difference,
COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_ALPHA_FUNC_REFERENCE_INDEX,
_cogl_pipeline_alpha_func_reference_state_equal))
goto done;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* We don't need to compare the detailed blending state if we know
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
* blending is disabled for both pipelines. */
if (pipeline0->real_blend_enable &&
pipelines_difference & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_BLEND)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
CoglPipeline *authority0 = authorities0[COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_BLEND_INDEX];
CoglPipeline *authority1 = authorities1[COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_BLEND_INDEX];
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
if (!_cogl_pipeline_blend_state_equal (authority0, authority1))
goto done;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
/* XXX: we don't need to compare the BLEND_ENABLE state because it's
* already reflected in ->real_blend_enable */
#if 0
if (!simple_property_equal (authorities0, authorities1,
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
pipelines_difference,
COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_BLEND_INDEX,
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
_cogl_pipeline_blend_enable_equal))
return FALSE;
#endif
if (!simple_property_equal (authorities0, authorities1,
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
pipelines_difference,
COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_DEPTH_INDEX,
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
_cogl_pipeline_depth_state_equal))
goto done;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (!simple_property_equal (authorities0, authorities1,
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
pipelines_difference,
COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_FOG_INDEX,
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
_cogl_pipeline_fog_state_equal))
goto done;
if (!simple_property_equal (authorities0, authorities1,
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
pipelines_difference,
COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_POINT_SIZE_INDEX,
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
_cogl_pipeline_point_size_equal))
goto done;
if (!simple_property_equal (authorities0, authorities1,
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
pipelines_difference,
COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_USER_SHADER_INDEX,
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
_cogl_pipeline_user_shader_equal))
goto done;
if (pipelines_difference & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS)
{
CoglPipelineStateIndex state_index = COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS_INDEX;
if (!_cogl_pipeline_layers_equal (authorities0[state_index],
authorities1[state_index],
layer_differences,
flags))
goto done;
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
ret = TRUE;
done:
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
COGL_TIMER_STOP (_cogl_uprof_context, pipeline_equal_timer);
return ret;
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
}
void
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
cogl_pipeline_get_color (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglColor *color)
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
{
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;
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline));
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
authority =
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_COLOR);
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
*color = authority->color;
}
/* This is used heavily by the cogl journal when logging quads */
void
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_colorubv (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
guint8 *color)
{
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 =
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_COLOR);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
_cogl_color_get_rgba_4ubv (&authority->color, color);
}
static void
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
_cogl_pipeline_prune_redundant_ancestry (CoglPipeline *pipeline)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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 *new_parent = _cogl_pipeline_get_parent (pipeline);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Before considering pruning redundant ancestry we check if this
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
* pipeline is an authority for layer state and if so only consider
* reparenting if it *owns* all the layers it depends on. NB: A
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
* pipeline can be be a STATE_LAYERS authority but it may still
* defer to its ancestors to define the state for some of its
* layers.
*
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
* For example a pipeline that derives from a parent with 5 layers
* can become a STATE_LAYERS authority by simply changing it's
* ->n_layers count to 4 and in that case it can still defer to its
* ancestors to define the state of those 4 layers.
*
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
* If a pipeline depends on any ancestors for layer state then we
* immediatly bail out.
*/
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
if (pipeline->differences & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS)
{
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
if (pipeline->n_layers != g_list_length (pipeline->layer_differences))
return;
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* walk up past ancestors that are now redundant and potentially
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
* reparent the pipeline. */
while (_cogl_pipeline_get_parent (new_parent) &&
(new_parent->differences | pipeline->differences) ==
pipeline->differences)
new_parent = _cogl_pipeline_get_parent (new_parent);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
if (new_parent != _cogl_pipeline_get_parent (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
gboolean is_weak = _cogl_pipeline_is_weak (pipeline);
_cogl_pipeline_set_parent (pipeline, new_parent, is_weak ? FALSE : TRUE);
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
static void
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
_cogl_pipeline_update_authority (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipeline *authority,
CoglPipelineState state,
CoglPipelineStateComparitor comparitor)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
/* If we are the current authority see if we can revert to one of
* our ancestors being the authority */
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
if (pipeline == authority &&
_cogl_pipeline_get_parent (authority) != NULL)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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 *parent = _cogl_pipeline_get_parent (authority);
CoglPipeline *old_authority =
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (parent, state);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (comparitor (authority, old_authority))
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
pipeline->differences &= ~state;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
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
else if (pipeline != authority)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
/* If we weren't previously the authority on this state then we
* need to extended our differences mask and so it's possible
* that some of our ancestry will now become redundant, so we
* aim to reparent ourselves if that's true... */
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
pipeline->differences |= state;
_cogl_pipeline_prune_redundant_ancestry (pipeline);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
}
void
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
cogl_pipeline_set_color (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
const CoglColor *color)
{
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 state = COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_COLOR;
CoglPipeline *authority;
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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, state);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (cogl_color_equal (color, &authority->color))
return;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* - Flush journal primitives referencing the current 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
* - Make sure the pipeline has no dependants so it may be modified.
* - If the pipeline isn't currently an authority for the state being
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* changed, then initialize that state from the current authority.
*/
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
_cogl_pipeline_pre_change_notify (pipeline, state, color, FALSE);
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
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
pipeline->color = *color;
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
_cogl_pipeline_update_authority (pipeline, authority, state,
_cogl_pipeline_color_equal);
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
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
handle_automatic_blend_enable (pipeline, state);
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
}
void
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
cogl_pipeline_set_color4ub (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
guint8 red,
guint8 green,
guint8 blue,
guint8 alpha)
{
CoglColor color;
cogl_color_init_from_4ub (&color, red, green, blue, alpha);
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
cogl_pipeline_set_color (pipeline, &color);
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
}
void
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
cogl_pipeline_set_color4f (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
float red,
float green,
float blue,
float alpha)
{
CoglColor color;
cogl_color_init_from_4f (&color, red, green, blue, alpha);
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
cogl_pipeline_set_color (pipeline, &color);
}
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
CoglPipelineBlendEnable
_cogl_pipeline_get_blend_enabled (CoglPipeline *pipeline)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
g_return_val_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline), FALSE);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
authority =
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_BLEND_ENABLE);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return authority->blend_enable;
}
static gboolean
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
_cogl_pipeline_blend_enable_equal (CoglPipeline *authority0,
CoglPipeline *authority1)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
return authority0->blend_enable == authority1->blend_enable ? TRUE : FALSE;
}
void
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
_cogl_pipeline_set_blend_enabled (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipelineBlendEnable enable)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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 state = COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_BLEND_ENABLE;
CoglPipeline *authority;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline));
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
g_return_if_fail (enable > 1 &&
"don't pass TRUE or FALSE to _set_blend_enabled!");
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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, state);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (authority->blend_enable == enable)
return;
/* - Flush journal primitives referencing the current 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
* - Make sure the pipeline has no dependants so it may be modified.
* - If the pipeline isn't currently an authority for the state being
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* changed, then initialize that state from the current authority.
*/
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
_cogl_pipeline_pre_change_notify (pipeline, state, NULL, FALSE);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
pipeline->blend_enable = enable;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
_cogl_pipeline_update_authority (pipeline, authority, state,
_cogl_pipeline_blend_enable_equal);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
handle_automatic_blend_enable (pipeline, state);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
void
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
cogl_pipeline_get_ambient (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglColor *ambient)
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
{
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;
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline));
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
authority =
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LIGHTING);
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
cogl_color_init_from_4fv (ambient,
authority->big_state->lighting_state.ambient);
}
void
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
cogl_pipeline_set_ambient (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
const CoglColor *ambient)
{
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 state = COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LIGHTING;
CoglPipeline *authority;
CoglPipelineLightingState *lighting_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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, state);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
lighting_state = &authority->big_state->lighting_state;
if (cogl_color_equal (ambient, &lighting_state->ambient))
return;
/* - Flush journal primitives referencing the current 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
* - Make sure the pipeline has no dependants so it may be modified.
* - If the pipeline isn't currently an authority for the state being
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* changed, then initialize that state from the current authority.
*/
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
_cogl_pipeline_pre_change_notify (pipeline, state, NULL, FALSE);
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
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
lighting_state = &pipeline->big_state->lighting_state;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
lighting_state->ambient[0] = cogl_color_get_red_float (ambient);
lighting_state->ambient[1] = cogl_color_get_green_float (ambient);
lighting_state->ambient[2] = cogl_color_get_blue_float (ambient);
lighting_state->ambient[3] = cogl_color_get_alpha_float (ambient);
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
_cogl_pipeline_update_authority (pipeline, authority, state,
_cogl_pipeline_lighting_state_equal);
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
handle_automatic_blend_enable (pipeline, state);
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
}
void
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
cogl_pipeline_get_diffuse (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglColor *diffuse)
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
{
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;
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline));
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
authority =
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LIGHTING);
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
cogl_color_init_from_4fv (diffuse,
authority->big_state->lighting_state.diffuse);
}
void
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
cogl_pipeline_set_diffuse (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
const CoglColor *diffuse)
{
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 state = COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LIGHTING;
CoglPipeline *authority;
CoglPipelineLightingState *lighting_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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, state);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
lighting_state = &authority->big_state->lighting_state;
if (cogl_color_equal (diffuse, &lighting_state->diffuse))
return;
/* - Flush journal primitives referencing the current 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
* - Make sure the pipeline has no dependants so it may be modified.
* - If the pipeline isn't currently an authority for the state being
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* changed, then initialize that state from the current authority.
*/
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
_cogl_pipeline_pre_change_notify (pipeline, state, NULL, FALSE);
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
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
lighting_state = &pipeline->big_state->lighting_state;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
lighting_state->diffuse[0] = cogl_color_get_red_float (diffuse);
lighting_state->diffuse[1] = cogl_color_get_green_float (diffuse);
lighting_state->diffuse[2] = cogl_color_get_blue_float (diffuse);
lighting_state->diffuse[3] = cogl_color_get_alpha_float (diffuse);
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
_cogl_pipeline_update_authority (pipeline, authority, state,
_cogl_pipeline_lighting_state_equal);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
handle_automatic_blend_enable (pipeline, state);
}
void
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
cogl_pipeline_set_ambient_and_diffuse (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
const CoglColor *color)
{
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
cogl_pipeline_set_ambient (pipeline, color);
cogl_pipeline_set_diffuse (pipeline, color);
}
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
void
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
cogl_pipeline_get_specular (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglColor *specular)
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
{
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;
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline));
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
authority =
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LIGHTING);
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
cogl_color_init_from_4fv (specular,
authority->big_state->lighting_state.specular);
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
}
void
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
cogl_pipeline_set_specular (CoglPipeline *pipeline, const CoglColor *specular)
{
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;
CoglPipelineState state = COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LIGHTING;
CoglPipelineLightingState *lighting_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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, state);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
lighting_state = &authority->big_state->lighting_state;
if (cogl_color_equal (specular, &lighting_state->specular))
return;
/* - Flush journal primitives referencing the current 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
* - Make sure the pipeline has no dependants so it may be modified.
* - If the pipeline isn't currently an authority for the state being
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* changed, then initialize that state from the current authority.
*/
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
_cogl_pipeline_pre_change_notify (pipeline, state, NULL, FALSE);
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
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
lighting_state = &pipeline->big_state->lighting_state;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
lighting_state->specular[0] = cogl_color_get_red_float (specular);
lighting_state->specular[1] = cogl_color_get_green_float (specular);
lighting_state->specular[2] = cogl_color_get_blue_float (specular);
lighting_state->specular[3] = cogl_color_get_alpha_float (specular);
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
_cogl_pipeline_update_authority (pipeline, authority, state,
_cogl_pipeline_lighting_state_equal);
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
handle_automatic_blend_enable (pipeline, state);
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
}
float
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
cogl_pipeline_get_shininess (CoglPipeline *pipeline)
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
{
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;
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
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
g_return_val_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline), 0);
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
authority =
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LIGHTING);
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return authority->big_state->lighting_state.shininess;
}
void
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
cogl_pipeline_set_shininess (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
float shininess)
{
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;
CoglPipelineState state = COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LIGHTING;
CoglPipelineLightingState *lighting_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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline));
if (shininess < 0.0)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
g_warning ("Out of range shininess %f supplied for pipeline\n",
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
shininess);
return;
}
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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, state);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
lighting_state = &authority->big_state->lighting_state;
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (lighting_state->shininess == shininess)
return;
/* - Flush journal primitives referencing the current 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
* - Make sure the pipeline has no dependants so it may be modified.
* - If the pipeline isn't currently an authority for the state being
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* changed, then initialize that state from the current authority.
*/
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
_cogl_pipeline_pre_change_notify (pipeline, state, NULL, FALSE);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
lighting_state = &pipeline->big_state->lighting_state;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
lighting_state->shininess = shininess;
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
_cogl_pipeline_update_authority (pipeline, authority, state,
_cogl_pipeline_lighting_state_equal);
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
}
void
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
cogl_pipeline_get_emission (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglColor *emission)
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
{
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;
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline));
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
authority =
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LIGHTING);
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
cogl_color_init_from_4fv (emission,
authority->big_state->lighting_state.emission);
}
void
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
cogl_pipeline_set_emission (CoglPipeline *pipeline, const CoglColor *emission)
{
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;
CoglPipelineState state = COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LIGHTING;
CoglPipelineLightingState *lighting_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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, state);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
lighting_state = &authority->big_state->lighting_state;
if (cogl_color_equal (emission, &lighting_state->emission))
return;
/* - Flush journal primitives referencing the current 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
* - Make sure the pipeline has no dependants so it may be modified.
* - If the pipeline isn't currently an authority for the state being
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* changed, then initialize that state from the current authority.
*/
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
_cogl_pipeline_pre_change_notify (pipeline, state, NULL, FALSE);
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
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
lighting_state = &pipeline->big_state->lighting_state;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
lighting_state->emission[0] = cogl_color_get_red_float (emission);
lighting_state->emission[1] = cogl_color_get_green_float (emission);
lighting_state->emission[2] = cogl_color_get_blue_float (emission);
lighting_state->emission[3] = cogl_color_get_alpha_float (emission);
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
_cogl_pipeline_update_authority (pipeline, authority, state,
_cogl_pipeline_lighting_state_equal);
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
handle_automatic_blend_enable (pipeline, state);
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_set_alpha_test_function (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipelineAlphaFunc alpha_func)
{
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 state = COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_ALPHA_FUNC;
CoglPipeline *authority;
CoglPipelineAlphaFuncState *alpha_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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, state);
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
alpha_state = &authority->big_state->alpha_state;
if (alpha_state->alpha_func == alpha_func)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return;
/* - Flush journal primitives referencing the current 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
* - Make sure the pipeline has no dependants so it may be modified.
* - If the pipeline isn't currently an authority for the state being
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* changed, then initialize that state from the current authority.
*/
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
_cogl_pipeline_pre_change_notify (pipeline, state, NULL, FALSE);
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
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
alpha_state = &pipeline->big_state->alpha_state;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
alpha_state->alpha_func = alpha_func;
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
_cogl_pipeline_update_authority (pipeline, authority, state,
_cogl_pipeline_alpha_func_state_equal);
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_set_alpha_test_function_reference (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
float alpha_reference)
{
CoglPipelineState state = COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_ALPHA_FUNC_REFERENCE;
CoglPipeline *authority;
CoglPipelineAlphaFuncState *alpha_state;
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline));
authority = _cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, state);
alpha_state = &authority->big_state->alpha_state;
if (alpha_state->alpha_func_reference == alpha_reference)
return;
/* - Flush journal primitives referencing the current state.
* - Make sure the pipeline has no dependants so it may be modified.
* - If the pipeline isn't currently an authority for the state being
* changed, then initialize that state from the current authority.
*/
_cogl_pipeline_pre_change_notify (pipeline, state, NULL, FALSE);
alpha_state = &pipeline->big_state->alpha_state;
alpha_state->alpha_func_reference = alpha_reference;
_cogl_pipeline_update_authority
(pipeline, authority, state,
_cogl_pipeline_alpha_func_reference_state_equal);
}
void
cogl_pipeline_set_alpha_test_function (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipelineAlphaFunc alpha_func,
float alpha_reference)
{
_cogl_pipeline_set_alpha_test_function (pipeline, alpha_func);
_cogl_pipeline_set_alpha_test_function_reference (pipeline, alpha_reference);
}
CoglPipelineAlphaFunc
cogl_pipeline_get_alpha_test_function (CoglPipeline *pipeline)
{
CoglPipeline *authority;
g_return_val_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline), 0);
authority =
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_ALPHA_FUNC);
return authority->big_state->alpha_state.alpha_func;
}
float
cogl_pipeline_get_alpha_test_reference (CoglPipeline *pipeline)
{
CoglPipeline *authority;
g_return_val_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline), 0.0f);
authority =
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline,
COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_ALPHA_FUNC_REFERENCE);
return authority->big_state->alpha_state.alpha_func_reference;
}
GLenum
arg_to_gl_blend_factor (CoglBlendStringArgument *arg)
{
if (arg->source.is_zero)
return GL_ZERO;
if (arg->factor.is_one)
return GL_ONE;
else if (arg->factor.is_src_alpha_saturate)
return GL_SRC_ALPHA_SATURATE;
else if (arg->factor.source.info->type ==
COGL_BLEND_STRING_COLOR_SOURCE_SRC_COLOR)
{
if (arg->factor.source.mask != COGL_BLEND_STRING_CHANNEL_MASK_ALPHA)
{
if (arg->factor.source.one_minus)
return GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_COLOR;
else
return GL_SRC_COLOR;
}
else
{
if (arg->factor.source.one_minus)
return GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA;
else
return GL_SRC_ALPHA;
}
}
else if (arg->factor.source.info->type ==
COGL_BLEND_STRING_COLOR_SOURCE_DST_COLOR)
{
if (arg->factor.source.mask != COGL_BLEND_STRING_CHANNEL_MASK_ALPHA)
{
if (arg->factor.source.one_minus)
return GL_ONE_MINUS_DST_COLOR;
else
return GL_DST_COLOR;
}
else
{
if (arg->factor.source.one_minus)
return GL_ONE_MINUS_DST_ALPHA;
else
return GL_DST_ALPHA;
}
}
#ifndef HAVE_COGL_GLES
else if (arg->factor.source.info->type ==
COGL_BLEND_STRING_COLOR_SOURCE_CONSTANT)
{
if (arg->factor.source.mask != COGL_BLEND_STRING_CHANNEL_MASK_ALPHA)
{
if (arg->factor.source.one_minus)
return GL_ONE_MINUS_CONSTANT_COLOR;
else
return GL_CONSTANT_COLOR;
}
else
{
if (arg->factor.source.one_minus)
return GL_ONE_MINUS_CONSTANT_ALPHA;
else
return GL_CONSTANT_ALPHA;
}
}
#endif
g_warning ("Unable to determine valid blend factor from blend string\n");
return GL_ONE;
}
void
setup_blend_state (CoglBlendStringStatement *statement,
GLenum *blend_equation,
GLint *blend_src_factor,
GLint *blend_dst_factor)
{
#ifndef HAVE_COGL_GLES
switch (statement->function->type)
{
case COGL_BLEND_STRING_FUNCTION_ADD:
*blend_equation = GL_FUNC_ADD;
break;
/* TODO - add more */
default:
g_warning ("Unsupported blend function given");
*blend_equation = GL_FUNC_ADD;
}
#endif
*blend_src_factor = arg_to_gl_blend_factor (&statement->args[0]);
*blend_dst_factor = arg_to_gl_blend_factor (&statement->args[1]);
}
gboolean
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
cogl_pipeline_set_blend (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
const char *blend_description,
GError **error)
{
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 state = COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_BLEND;
CoglPipeline *authority;
CoglBlendStringStatement statements[2];
CoglBlendStringStatement *rgb;
CoglBlendStringStatement *a;
GError *internal_error = NULL;
int count;
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
CoglPipelineBlendState *blend_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
g_return_val_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline), FALSE);
count =
_cogl_blend_string_compile (blend_description,
COGL_BLEND_STRING_CONTEXT_BLENDING,
statements,
&internal_error);
if (!count)
{
if (error)
g_propagate_error (error, internal_error);
else
{
g_warning ("Cannot compile blend description: %s\n",
internal_error->message);
g_error_free (internal_error);
}
return FALSE;
}
if (count == 1)
rgb = a = statements;
else
{
rgb = &statements[0];
a = &statements[1];
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
authority =
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, state);
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* - Flush journal primitives referencing the current 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
* - Make sure the pipeline has no dependants so it may be modified.
* - If the pipeline isn't currently an authority for the state being
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* changed, then initialize that state from the current authority.
*/
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
_cogl_pipeline_pre_change_notify (pipeline, state, NULL, FALSE);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
blend_state = &pipeline->big_state->blend_state;
#ifndef HAVE_COGL_GLES
setup_blend_state (rgb,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
&blend_state->blend_equation_rgb,
&blend_state->blend_src_factor_rgb,
&blend_state->blend_dst_factor_rgb);
setup_blend_state (a,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
&blend_state->blend_equation_alpha,
&blend_state->blend_src_factor_alpha,
&blend_state->blend_dst_factor_alpha);
#else
setup_blend_state (rgb,
NULL,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
&blend_state->blend_src_factor_rgb,
&blend_state->blend_dst_factor_rgb);
#endif
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* If we are the current authority see if we can revert to one of our
* ancestors being the authority */
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
if (pipeline == authority &&
_cogl_pipeline_get_parent (authority) != NULL)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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 *parent = _cogl_pipeline_get_parent (authority);
CoglPipeline *old_authority =
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (parent, state);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
if (_cogl_pipeline_blend_state_equal (authority, old_authority))
pipeline->differences &= ~state;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
/* If we weren't previously the authority on this state then we need
* to extended our differences mask and so it's possible that some
* of our ancestry will now become redundant, so we aim to reparent
* ourselves if that's true... */
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
if (pipeline != authority)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
pipeline->differences |= state;
_cogl_pipeline_prune_redundant_ancestry (pipeline);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
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
handle_automatic_blend_enable (pipeline, state);
return TRUE;
}
void
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
cogl_pipeline_set_blend_constant (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
const CoglColor *constant_color)
{
#ifndef HAVE_COGL_GLES
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 state = COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_BLEND;
CoglPipeline *authority;
CoglPipelineBlendState *blend_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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, state);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
blend_state = &authority->big_state->blend_state;
if (cogl_color_equal (constant_color, &blend_state->blend_constant))
return;
/* - Flush journal primitives referencing the current 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
* - Make sure the pipeline has no dependants so it may be modified.
* - If the pipeline isn't currently an authority for the state being
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* changed, then initialize that state from the current authority.
*/
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
_cogl_pipeline_pre_change_notify (pipeline, state, NULL, FALSE);
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
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
blend_state = &pipeline->big_state->blend_state;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
blend_state->blend_constant = *constant_color;
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
_cogl_pipeline_update_authority (pipeline, authority, state,
_cogl_pipeline_blend_state_equal);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
handle_automatic_blend_enable (pipeline, state);
#endif
}
CoglHandle
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
cogl_pipeline_get_user_program (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
CoglPipeline *authority;
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
g_return_val_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline), COGL_INVALID_HANDLE);
authority =
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_USER_SHADER);
return authority->big_state->user_program;
}
/* XXX: for now we don't mind if the program has vertex shaders
* attached but if we ever make a similar API public we should only
* allow attaching of programs containing fragment shaders. Eventually
* we will have a CoglPipeline abstraction to also cover vertex
* processing.
*/
void
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
cogl_pipeline_set_user_program (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglHandle program)
{
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 state = COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_USER_SHADER;
CoglPipeline *authority;
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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, state);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (authority->big_state->user_program == program)
return;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* - Flush journal primitives referencing the current 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
* - Make sure the pipeline has no dependants so it may be modified.
* - If the pipeline isn't currently an authority for the state being
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* changed, then initialize that state from the current authority.
*/
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
_cogl_pipeline_pre_change_notify (pipeline, state, NULL, FALSE);
if (program != COGL_INVALID_HANDLE)
{
_cogl_pipeline_set_fragend (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_FRAGEND_DEFAULT);
_cogl_pipeline_set_vertend (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_VERTEND_DEFAULT);
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* If we are the current authority see if we can revert to one of our
* ancestors being the authority */
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
if (pipeline == authority &&
_cogl_pipeline_get_parent (authority) != NULL)
{
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 *parent = _cogl_pipeline_get_parent (authority);
CoglPipeline *old_authority =
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (parent, state);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (old_authority->big_state->user_program == program)
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
pipeline->differences &= ~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
else if (pipeline != authority)
{
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* If we weren't previously the authority on this state then we
* need to extended our differences mask and so it's possible
* that some of our ancestry will now become redundant, so we
* aim to reparent ourselves if that's true... */
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
pipeline->differences |= state;
_cogl_pipeline_prune_redundant_ancestry (pipeline);
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (program != COGL_INVALID_HANDLE)
cogl_handle_ref (program);
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
if (authority == pipeline &&
pipeline->big_state->user_program != COGL_INVALID_HANDLE)
cogl_handle_unref (pipeline->big_state->user_program);
pipeline->big_state->user_program = program;
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
handle_automatic_blend_enable (pipeline, state);
}
void
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
cogl_pipeline_set_depth_test_enabled (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
gboolean enable)
{
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 state = COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_DEPTH;
CoglPipeline *authority;
CoglPipelineDepthState *depth_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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, state);
depth_state = &authority->big_state->depth_state;
if (depth_state->depth_test_enabled == enable)
return;
/* - Flush journal primitives referencing the current 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
* - Make sure the pipeline has no dependants so it may be modified.
* - If the pipeline isn't currently an authority for the state being
* changed, then initialize that state from the current authority.
*/
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
_cogl_pipeline_pre_change_notify (pipeline, state, NULL, FALSE);
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
pipeline->big_state->depth_state.depth_test_enabled = enable;
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
_cogl_pipeline_update_authority (pipeline, authority, state,
_cogl_pipeline_depth_state_equal);
}
gboolean
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
cogl_pipeline_get_depth_test_enabled (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
CoglPipeline *authority;
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
g_return_val_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline), FALSE);
authority =
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_DEPTH);
return authority->big_state->depth_state.depth_test_enabled;
}
void
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
cogl_pipeline_set_depth_writing_enabled (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
gboolean enable)
{
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 state = COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_DEPTH;
CoglPipeline *authority;
CoglPipelineDepthState *depth_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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, state);
depth_state = &authority->big_state->depth_state;
if (depth_state->depth_writing_enabled == enable)
return;
/* - Flush journal primitives referencing the current 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
* - Make sure the pipeline has no dependants so it may be modified.
* - If the pipeline isn't currently an authority for the state being
* changed, then initialize that state from the current authority.
*/
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
_cogl_pipeline_pre_change_notify (pipeline, state, NULL, FALSE);
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
pipeline->big_state->depth_state.depth_writing_enabled = enable;
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
_cogl_pipeline_update_authority (pipeline, authority, state,
_cogl_pipeline_depth_state_equal);
}
gboolean
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
cogl_pipeline_get_depth_writing_enabled (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
CoglPipeline *authority;
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
g_return_val_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline), TRUE);
authority =
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_DEPTH);
return authority->big_state->depth_state.depth_writing_enabled;
}
void
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
cogl_pipeline_set_depth_test_function (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglDepthTestFunction function)
{
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 state = COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_DEPTH;
CoglPipeline *authority;
CoglPipelineDepthState *depth_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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, state);
depth_state = &authority->big_state->depth_state;
if (depth_state->depth_test_function == function)
return;
/* - Flush journal primitives referencing the current 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
* - Make sure the pipeline has no dependants so it may be modified.
* - If the pipeline isn't currently an authority for the state being
* changed, then initialize that state from the current authority.
*/
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
_cogl_pipeline_pre_change_notify (pipeline, state, NULL, FALSE);
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
pipeline->big_state->depth_state.depth_test_function = function;
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
_cogl_pipeline_update_authority (pipeline, authority, state,
_cogl_pipeline_depth_state_equal);
}
CoglDepthTestFunction
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
cogl_pipeline_get_depth_test_function (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
CoglPipeline *authority;
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
g_return_val_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline),
COGL_DEPTH_TEST_FUNCTION_LESS);
authority =
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_DEPTH);
return authority->big_state->depth_state.depth_test_function;
}
gboolean
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
cogl_pipeline_set_depth_range (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
float near_val,
float far_val,
GError **error)
{
#ifndef COGL_HAS_GLES
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 state = COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_DEPTH;
CoglPipeline *authority;
CoglPipelineDepthState *depth_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
g_return_val_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline), FALSE);
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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, state);
depth_state = &authority->big_state->depth_state;
if (depth_state->depth_range_near == near_val &&
depth_state->depth_range_far == far_val)
return TRUE;
/* - Flush journal primitives referencing the current 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
* - Make sure the pipeline has no dependants so it may be modified.
* - If the pipeline isn't currently an authority for the state being
* changed, then initialize that state from the current authority.
*/
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
_cogl_pipeline_pre_change_notify (pipeline, state, NULL, FALSE);
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
pipeline->big_state->depth_state.depth_range_near = near_val;
pipeline->big_state->depth_state.depth_range_far = far_val;
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
_cogl_pipeline_update_authority (pipeline, authority, state,
_cogl_pipeline_depth_state_equal);
return TRUE;
#else
g_set_error (error,
COGL_ERROR,
COGL_ERROR_UNSUPPORTED,
"glDepthRange not available on GLES 1");
return FALSE;
#endif
}
void
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
cogl_pipeline_get_depth_range (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
float *near_val,
float *far_val)
{
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;
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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline));
authority =
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_DEPTH);
*near_val = authority->big_state->depth_state.depth_range_near;
*far_val = authority->big_state->depth_state.depth_range_far;
}
static void
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
_cogl_pipeline_set_fog_state (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
const CoglPipelineFogState *fog_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
CoglPipelineState state = COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_FOG;
CoglPipeline *authority;
CoglPipelineFogState *current_fog_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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, state);
current_fog_state = &authority->big_state->fog_state;
if (current_fog_state->enabled == fog_state->enabled &&
cogl_color_equal (&current_fog_state->color, &fog_state->color) &&
current_fog_state->mode == fog_state->mode &&
current_fog_state->density == fog_state->density &&
current_fog_state->z_near == fog_state->z_near &&
current_fog_state->z_far == fog_state->z_far)
return;
/* - Flush journal primitives referencing the current 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
* - Make sure the pipeline has no dependants so it may be modified.
* - If the pipeline isn't currently an authority for the state being
* changed, then initialize that state from the current authority.
*/
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
_cogl_pipeline_pre_change_notify (pipeline, state, NULL, FALSE);
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
pipeline->big_state->fog_state = *fog_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
_cogl_pipeline_update_authority (pipeline, authority, state,
_cogl_pipeline_fog_state_equal);
}
unsigned long
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_age (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
g_return_val_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline), 0);
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
return pipeline->age;
}
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
static CoglPipelineLayer *
_cogl_pipeline_layer_copy (CoglPipelineLayer *src)
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *layer = g_slice_new (CoglPipelineLayer);
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
_cogl_pipeline_node_init (COGL_PIPELINE_NODE (layer));
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
layer->owner = NULL;
layer->index = src->index;
layer->differences = 0;
layer->has_big_state = FALSE;
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_set_parent (layer, src);
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
return _cogl_pipeline_layer_object_new (layer);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
static void
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_free (CoglPipelineLayer *layer)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_unparent (COGL_PIPELINE_NODE (layer));
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
if (layer->differences & COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_TEXTURE_DATA &&
layer->texture != COGL_INVALID_HANDLE)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
cogl_handle_unref (layer->texture);
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
if (layer->differences & COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_NEEDS_BIG_STATE)
g_slice_free (CoglPipelineLayerBigState, layer->big_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
g_slice_free (CoglPipelineLayer, layer);
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* If a layer has descendants we can't modify it freely
*
* If the layer is owned and the owner has descendants we can't
* modify it freely.
*
* In both cases when we can't freely modify a layer we can either:
* - create a new layer; splice it in to replace the layer so it can
* be directly modified.
* XXX: disadvantage is that we have to invalidate the layers_cache
* for the owner and its descendants.
* - create a new derived layer and modify that.
*/
/* XXX: how is the caller expected to deal with ref-counting?
*
* If the layer can't be freely modified and we return a new layer
* then that will effectively make the caller own a new reference
* which doesn't happen if we simply modify the given layer.
*
* We could make it consistent by taking a reference on the layer if
* we don't create a new one. At least this way the caller could
* deal with it consistently, though the semantics are a bit
* strange.
*
* Alternatively we could leave it to the caller to check
* ...?
*/
void
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
_cogl_pipeline_init_default_layers (void)
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *layer = g_slice_new0 (CoglPipelineLayer);
CoglPipelineLayerBigState *big_state =
g_slice_new0 (CoglPipelineLayerBigState);
CoglPipelineLayer *new;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
_COGL_GET_CONTEXT (ctx, NO_RETVAL);
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
_cogl_pipeline_node_init (COGL_PIPELINE_NODE (layer));
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
layer->index = 0;
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
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
layer->differences = COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_ALL_SPARSE;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
layer->unit_index = 0;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
layer->texture = COGL_INVALID_HANDLE;
layer->target = 0;
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
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
layer->mag_filter = COGL_PIPELINE_FILTER_LINEAR;
layer->min_filter = COGL_PIPELINE_FILTER_LINEAR;
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
layer->wrap_mode_s = COGL_PIPELINE_WRAP_MODE_AUTOMATIC;
layer->wrap_mode_t = COGL_PIPELINE_WRAP_MODE_AUTOMATIC;
layer->wrap_mode_p = COGL_PIPELINE_WRAP_MODE_AUTOMATIC;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
layer->big_state = big_state;
layer->has_big_state = TRUE;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Choose the same default combine mode as OpenGL:
* RGBA = MODULATE(PREVIOUS[RGBA],TEXTURE[RGBA]) */
big_state->texture_combine_rgb_func =
COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_FUNC_MODULATE;
big_state->texture_combine_rgb_src[0] =
COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_SOURCE_PREVIOUS;
big_state->texture_combine_rgb_src[1] =
COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_SOURCE_TEXTURE;
big_state->texture_combine_rgb_op[0] =
COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_OP_SRC_COLOR;
big_state->texture_combine_rgb_op[1] =
COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_OP_SRC_COLOR;
big_state->texture_combine_alpha_func =
COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_FUNC_MODULATE;
big_state->texture_combine_alpha_src[0] =
COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_SOURCE_PREVIOUS;
big_state->texture_combine_alpha_src[1] =
COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_SOURCE_TEXTURE;
big_state->texture_combine_alpha_op[0] =
COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_OP_SRC_ALPHA;
big_state->texture_combine_alpha_op[1] =
COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_OP_SRC_ALPHA;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
big_state->point_sprite_coords = FALSE;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
cogl_matrix_init_identity (&big_state->matrix);
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
ctx->default_layer_0 = _cogl_pipeline_layer_object_new (layer);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* TODO: we should make default_layer_n comprise of two
* descendants of default_layer_0:
* - the first descendant should change the texture combine
* to what we expect is most commonly used for multitexturing
* - the second should revert the above change.
*
* why? the documentation for how a new layer is initialized
* doesn't say that layers > 0 have different defaults so unless
* we change the documentation we can't use different defaults,
* but if the user does what we expect and changes the
* texture combine then we can revert the authority to the
* first descendant which means we can maximize the number
* of layers with a common ancestor.
*
* The main problem will be that we'll need to disable the
* optimizations for flattening the ancestry when we make
* the second descendant which reverts the 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
ctx->default_layer_n = _cogl_pipeline_layer_copy (layer);
new = _cogl_pipeline_set_layer_unit (NULL, ctx->default_layer_n, 1);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
g_assert (new == ctx->default_layer_n);
/* Since we passed a newly allocated layer we don't expect that
* _set_layer_unit() will have to allocate *another* layer. */
/* Finally we create a dummy dependant for ->default_layer_n which
* effectively ensures that ->default_layer_n and ->default_layer_0
* remain immutable.
*/
ctx->dummy_layer_dependant =
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_copy (ctx->default_layer_n);
}
static void
setup_texture_combine_state (CoglBlendStringStatement *statement,
CoglPipelineCombineFunc *texture_combine_func,
CoglPipelineCombineSource *texture_combine_src,
CoglPipelineCombineOp *texture_combine_op)
{
int i;
switch (statement->function->type)
{
case COGL_BLEND_STRING_FUNCTION_REPLACE:
*texture_combine_func = COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_FUNC_REPLACE;
break;
case COGL_BLEND_STRING_FUNCTION_MODULATE:
*texture_combine_func = COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_FUNC_MODULATE;
break;
case COGL_BLEND_STRING_FUNCTION_ADD:
*texture_combine_func = COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_FUNC_ADD;
break;
case COGL_BLEND_STRING_FUNCTION_ADD_SIGNED:
*texture_combine_func = COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_FUNC_ADD_SIGNED;
break;
case COGL_BLEND_STRING_FUNCTION_INTERPOLATE:
*texture_combine_func = COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_FUNC_INTERPOLATE;
break;
case COGL_BLEND_STRING_FUNCTION_SUBTRACT:
*texture_combine_func = COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_FUNC_SUBTRACT;
break;
case COGL_BLEND_STRING_FUNCTION_DOT3_RGB:
*texture_combine_func = COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_FUNC_DOT3_RGB;
break;
case COGL_BLEND_STRING_FUNCTION_DOT3_RGBA:
*texture_combine_func = COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_FUNC_DOT3_RGBA;
break;
}
for (i = 0; i < statement->function->argc; i++)
{
CoglBlendStringArgument *arg = &statement->args[i];
switch (arg->source.info->type)
{
case COGL_BLEND_STRING_COLOR_SOURCE_CONSTANT:
texture_combine_src[i] = COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_SOURCE_CONSTANT;
break;
case COGL_BLEND_STRING_COLOR_SOURCE_TEXTURE:
texture_combine_src[i] = COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_SOURCE_TEXTURE;
break;
case COGL_BLEND_STRING_COLOR_SOURCE_TEXTURE_N:
texture_combine_src[i] =
COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_SOURCE_TEXTURE0 + arg->source.texture;
break;
case COGL_BLEND_STRING_COLOR_SOURCE_PRIMARY:
texture_combine_src[i] = COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_SOURCE_PRIMARY_COLOR;
break;
case COGL_BLEND_STRING_COLOR_SOURCE_PREVIOUS:
texture_combine_src[i] = COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_SOURCE_PREVIOUS;
break;
default:
g_warning ("Unexpected texture combine source");
texture_combine_src[i] = COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_SOURCE_TEXTURE;
}
if (arg->source.mask == COGL_BLEND_STRING_CHANNEL_MASK_RGB)
{
if (statement->args[i].source.one_minus)
texture_combine_op[i] =
COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_OP_ONE_MINUS_SRC_COLOR;
else
texture_combine_op[i] = COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_OP_SRC_COLOR;
}
else
{
if (statement->args[i].source.one_minus)
texture_combine_op[i] =
COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_OP_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA;
else
texture_combine_op[i] = COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_OP_SRC_ALPHA;
}
}
}
gboolean
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
cogl_pipeline_set_layer_combine (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
cogl: improves header and coding style consistency We've had complaints that our Cogl code/headers are a bit "special" so this is a first pass at tidying things up by giving them some consistency. These changes are all consistent with how new code in Cogl is being written, but the style isn't consistently applied across all code yet. There are two parts to this patch; but since each one required a large amount of effort to maintain tidy indenting it made sense to combine the changes to reduce the time spent re indenting the same lines. The first change is to use a consistent style for declaring function prototypes in headers. Cogl headers now consistently use this style for prototypes: return_type cogl_function_name (CoglType arg0, CoglType arg1); Not everyone likes this style, but it seems that most of the currently active Cogl developers agree on it. The second change is to constrain the use of redundant glib data types in Cogl. Uses of gint, guint, gfloat, glong, gulong and gchar have all been replaced with int, unsigned int, float, long, unsigned long and char respectively. When talking about pixel data; use of guchar has been replaced with guint8, otherwise unsigned char can be used. The glib types that we continue to use for portability are gboolean, gint{8,16,32,64}, guint{8,16,32,64} and gsize. The general intention is that Cogl should look palatable to the widest range of C programmers including those outside the Gnome community so - especially for the public API - we want to minimize the number of foreign looking typedefs.
2010-02-09 20:57:32 -05:00
int layer_index,
const char *combine_description,
GError **error)
{
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
CoglPipelineLayerState state = COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_COMBINE;
CoglPipelineLayer *authority;
CoglPipelineLayer *layer;
CoglBlendStringStatement statements[2];
CoglBlendStringStatement split[2];
CoglBlendStringStatement *rgb;
CoglBlendStringStatement *a;
GError *internal_error = NULL;
int count;
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
g_return_val_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline), FALSE);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Note: this will ensure that the layer exists, creating one if it
* doesn't already.
*
* Note: If the layer already existed it's possibly owned by another
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
* pipeline. If the layer is created then it will be owned by
* pipeline. */
layer = _cogl_pipeline_get_layer (pipeline, layer_index);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Now find the ancestor of the layer that is the authority for the
* state we want to change */
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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer, state);
count =
_cogl_blend_string_compile (combine_description,
COGL_BLEND_STRING_CONTEXT_TEXTURE_COMBINE,
statements,
&internal_error);
if (!count)
{
if (error)
g_propagate_error (error, internal_error);
else
{
g_warning ("Cannot compile combine description: %s\n",
internal_error->message);
g_error_free (internal_error);
}
return FALSE;
}
if (statements[0].mask == COGL_BLEND_STRING_CHANNEL_MASK_RGBA)
{
_cogl_blend_string_split_rgba_statement (statements,
&split[0], &split[1]);
rgb = &split[0];
a = &split[1];
}
else
{
rgb = &statements[0];
a = &statements[1];
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* FIXME: compare the new state with the current state! */
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
/* possibly flush primitives referencing the current 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
layer = _cogl_pipeline_layer_pre_change_notify (pipeline, layer, state);
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
setup_texture_combine_state (rgb,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
&layer->big_state->texture_combine_rgb_func,
layer->big_state->texture_combine_rgb_src,
layer->big_state->texture_combine_rgb_op);
setup_texture_combine_state (a,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
&layer->big_state->texture_combine_alpha_func,
layer->big_state->texture_combine_alpha_src,
layer->big_state->texture_combine_alpha_op);
/* If the original layer we found is currently the authority on
* the state we are changing see if we can revert to one of our
* ancestors being the authority. */
if (layer == authority &&
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (authority) != NULL)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *parent = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (authority);
CoglPipelineLayer *old_authority =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (parent, state);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
if (_cogl_pipeline_layer_combine_state_equal (authority,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
old_authority))
{
layer->differences &= ~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
g_assert (layer->owner == pipeline);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (layer->differences == 0)
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
_cogl_pipeline_prune_empty_layer_difference (pipeline,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
layer);
goto changed;
}
}
/* If we weren't previously the authority on this state then we need
* to extended our differences mask and so it's possible that some
* of our ancestry will now become redundant, so we aim to reparent
* ourselves if that's true... */
if (layer != authority)
{
layer->differences |= 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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_prune_redundant_ancestry (layer);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
changed:
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
handle_automatic_blend_enable (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS);
return TRUE;
}
void
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
cogl_pipeline_set_layer_combine_constant (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
cogl: improves header and coding style consistency We've had complaints that our Cogl code/headers are a bit "special" so this is a first pass at tidying things up by giving them some consistency. These changes are all consistent with how new code in Cogl is being written, but the style isn't consistently applied across all code yet. There are two parts to this patch; but since each one required a large amount of effort to maintain tidy indenting it made sense to combine the changes to reduce the time spent re indenting the same lines. The first change is to use a consistent style for declaring function prototypes in headers. Cogl headers now consistently use this style for prototypes: return_type cogl_function_name (CoglType arg0, CoglType arg1); Not everyone likes this style, but it seems that most of the currently active Cogl developers agree on it. The second change is to constrain the use of redundant glib data types in Cogl. Uses of gint, guint, gfloat, glong, gulong and gchar have all been replaced with int, unsigned int, float, long, unsigned long and char respectively. When talking about pixel data; use of guchar has been replaced with guint8, otherwise unsigned char can be used. The glib types that we continue to use for portability are gboolean, gint{8,16,32,64}, guint{8,16,32,64} and gsize. The general intention is that Cogl should look palatable to the widest range of C programmers including those outside the Gnome community so - especially for the public API - we want to minimize the number of foreign looking typedefs.
2010-02-09 20:57:32 -05:00
int layer_index,
const CoglColor *constant_color)
{
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
CoglPipelineLayerState state = COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_COMBINE_CONSTANT;
CoglPipelineLayer *layer;
CoglPipelineLayer *authority;
CoglPipelineLayer *new;
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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline));
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Note: this will ensure that the layer exists, creating one if it
* doesn't already.
*
* Note: If the layer already existed it's possibly owned by another
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
* pipeline. If the layer is created then it will be owned by
* pipeline. */
layer = _cogl_pipeline_get_layer (pipeline, layer_index);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Now find the ancestor of the layer that is the authority for the
* state we want to change */
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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer, state);
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (memcmp (authority->big_state->texture_combine_constant,
constant_color, sizeof (float) * 4) == 0)
return;
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
new = _cogl_pipeline_layer_pre_change_notify (pipeline, layer, state);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (new != layer)
layer = new;
else
{
/* If the original layer we found is currently the authority on
* the state we are changing see if we can revert to one of our
* ancestors being the authority. */
if (layer == authority &&
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (authority) != NULL)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *parent =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (authority);
CoglPipelineLayer *old_authority =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (parent, state);
CoglPipelineLayerBigState *old_big_state = old_authority->big_state;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (memcmp (old_big_state->texture_combine_constant,
constant_color, sizeof (float) * 4) == 0)
{
layer->differences &= ~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
g_assert (layer->owner == pipeline);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (layer->differences == 0)
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
_cogl_pipeline_prune_empty_layer_difference (pipeline,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
layer);
goto changed;
}
}
}
layer->big_state->texture_combine_constant[0] =
cogl_color_get_red_float (constant_color);
layer->big_state->texture_combine_constant[1] =
cogl_color_get_green_float (constant_color);
layer->big_state->texture_combine_constant[2] =
cogl_color_get_blue_float (constant_color);
layer->big_state->texture_combine_constant[3] =
cogl_color_get_alpha_float (constant_color);
/* If we weren't previously the authority on this state then we need
* to extended our differences mask and so it's possible that some
* of our ancestry will now become redundant, so we aim to reparent
* ourselves if that's true... */
if (layer != authority)
{
layer->differences |= 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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_prune_redundant_ancestry (layer);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
changed:
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
handle_automatic_blend_enable (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS);
}
void
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_layer_combine_constant (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
int layer_index,
float *constant)
{
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
CoglPipelineLayerState change =
COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_COMBINE_CONSTANT;
CoglPipelineLayer *layer;
CoglPipelineLayer *authority;
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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline));
/* Note: this will ensure that the layer exists, creating one if it
* doesn't already.
*
* Note: If the layer already existed it's possibly owned by another
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
* pipeline. If the layer is created then it will be owned by
* pipeline. */
layer = _cogl_pipeline_get_layer (pipeline, layer_index);
/* FIXME: we shouldn't ever construct a layer in a getter function */
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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer, change);
memcpy (constant, authority->big_state->texture_combine_constant,
sizeof (float) * 4);
}
/* We should probably make a public API version of this that has a
matrix out-param. For an internal API it's good to be able to avoid
copying the matrix */
const CoglMatrix *
_cogl_pipeline_get_layer_matrix (CoglPipeline *pipeline, int layer_index)
{
CoglPipelineLayerState change =
COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_USER_MATRIX;
CoglPipelineLayer *layer;
CoglPipelineLayer *authority;
g_return_val_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline), NULL);
layer = _cogl_pipeline_get_layer (pipeline, layer_index);
authority = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer, change);
return &authority->big_state->matrix;
}
void
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
cogl_pipeline_set_layer_matrix (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
cogl: improves header and coding style consistency We've had complaints that our Cogl code/headers are a bit "special" so this is a first pass at tidying things up by giving them some consistency. These changes are all consistent with how new code in Cogl is being written, but the style isn't consistently applied across all code yet. There are two parts to this patch; but since each one required a large amount of effort to maintain tidy indenting it made sense to combine the changes to reduce the time spent re indenting the same lines. The first change is to use a consistent style for declaring function prototypes in headers. Cogl headers now consistently use this style for prototypes: return_type cogl_function_name (CoglType arg0, CoglType arg1); Not everyone likes this style, but it seems that most of the currently active Cogl developers agree on it. The second change is to constrain the use of redundant glib data types in Cogl. Uses of gint, guint, gfloat, glong, gulong and gchar have all been replaced with int, unsigned int, float, long, unsigned long and char respectively. When talking about pixel data; use of guchar has been replaced with guint8, otherwise unsigned char can be used. The glib types that we continue to use for portability are gboolean, gint{8,16,32,64}, guint{8,16,32,64} and gsize. The general intention is that Cogl should look palatable to the widest range of C programmers including those outside the Gnome community so - especially for the public API - we want to minimize the number of foreign looking typedefs.
2010-02-09 20:57:32 -05:00
int layer_index,
const CoglMatrix *matrix)
{
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
CoglPipelineLayerState state = COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_USER_MATRIX;
CoglPipelineLayer *layer;
CoglPipelineLayer *authority;
CoglPipelineLayer *new;
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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline));
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Note: this will ensure that the layer exists, creating one if it
* doesn't already.
*
* Note: If the layer already existed it's possibly owned by another
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
* pipeline. If the layer is created then it will be owned by
* pipeline. */
layer = _cogl_pipeline_get_layer (pipeline, layer_index);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Now find the ancestor of the layer that is the authority for the
* state we want to change */
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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer, state);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (cogl_matrix_equal (matrix, &authority->big_state->matrix))
return;
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
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
new = _cogl_pipeline_layer_pre_change_notify (pipeline, layer, state);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (new != layer)
layer = new;
else
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
/* If the original layer we found is currently the authority on
* the state we are changing see if we can revert to one of our
* ancestors being the authority. */
if (layer == authority &&
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (authority) != NULL)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *parent =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (authority);
CoglPipelineLayer *old_authority =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (parent, state);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (cogl_matrix_equal (matrix, &old_authority->big_state->matrix))
{
layer->differences &= ~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
g_assert (layer->owner == pipeline);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (layer->differences == 0)
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
_cogl_pipeline_prune_empty_layer_difference (pipeline,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
layer);
return;
}
}
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
layer->big_state->matrix = *matrix;
/* If we weren't previously the authority on this state then we need
* to extended our differences mask and so it's possible that some
* of our ancestry will now become redundant, so we aim to reparent
* ourselves if that's true... */
if (layer != authority)
{
layer->differences |= 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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_prune_redundant_ancestry (layer);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
}
void
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
cogl_pipeline_remove_layer (CoglPipeline *pipeline, int layer_index)
{
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;
CoglPipelineLayerInfo layer_info;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
int i;
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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline));
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
authority =
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS);
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* The layer index of the layer we want info about */
layer_info.layer_index = layer_index;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* This will be updated with a reference to the layer being removed
* if it can be found. */
layer_info.layer = NULL;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* This will be filled in with a list of layers that need to be
* dropped down to a lower texture unit to fill the gap of the
* removed layer. */
layer_info.layers_to_shift =
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
g_alloca (sizeof (CoglPipelineLayer *) * authority->n_layers);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
layer_info.n_layers_to_shift = 0;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Unlike when we query layer info when adding a layer we must
* always have a complete layers_to_shift list... */
layer_info.ignore_shift_layers_if_found = FALSE;
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_layer_info (authority, &layer_info);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (layer_info.layer == NULL)
return;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
for (i = 0; i < layer_info.n_layers_to_shift; i++)
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *shift_layer = layer_info.layers_to_shift[i];
int unit_index = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_unit_index (shift_layer);
_cogl_pipeline_set_layer_unit (pipeline, shift_layer, unit_index - 1);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* NB: shift_layer may not be writeable so _set_layer_unit()
* will allocate a derived layer internally which will become
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
* owned by pipeline. Check the return value if we need to do
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* anything else with this layer. */
}
Fully integrates CoglMaterial throughout the rest of Cogl This glues CoglMaterial in as the fundamental way that Cogl describes how to fill in geometry. It adds cogl_set_source (), which is used to set the material which will be used by all subsequent drawing functions It adds cogl_set_source_texture as a convenience for setting up a default material with a single texture layer, and cogl_set_source_color is now also a convenience for setting up a material with a solid fill. "drawing functions" include, cogl_rectangle, cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles, cogl_texture_polygon (though the cogl_texture_* funcs have been renamed; see below for details), cogl_path_fill/stroke and cogl_vertex_buffer_draw*. cogl_texture_rectangle, cogl_texture_multiple_rectangles and cogl_texture_polygon no longer take a texture handle; instead the current source material is referenced. The functions have also been renamed to: cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords, cogl_rectangles_with_texture_coords and cogl_polygon respectivly. Most code that previously did: cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); needs to be changed to now do: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_rectangle_with_texture_coords (x, y,....); In the less likely case where you were blending your source texture with a color like: cogl_set_source_color4ub (r,g,b,a); /* where r,g,b,a isn't just white */ cogl_texture_rectangle (tex_handle, x, y,...); you will need your own material to do that: mat = cogl_material_new (); cogl_material_set_color4ub (r,g,b,a); cogl_material_set_layer (mat, 0, tex_handle)); cogl_set_source_material (mat); Code that uses the texture coordinates, 0, 0, 1, 1 don't need to use cog_rectangle_with_texure_coords since these are the coordinates that cogl_rectangle will use. For cogl_texture_polygon; as well as dropping the texture handle, the n_vertices and vertices arguments were transposed for consistency. So code previously written as: cogl_texture_polygon (tex_handle, 3, verts, TRUE); need to be written as: cogl_set_source_texture (tex_handle); cogl_polygon (verts, 3, TRUE); All of the unit tests have been updated to now use the material API and test-cogl-material has been renamed to test-cogl-multitexture since any textured quad is now technically a test of CoglMaterial but this test specifically creates a material with multiple texture layers. Note: The GLES backend has not been updated yet; that will be done in a following commit.
2009-01-23 11:15:40 -05:00
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
_cogl_pipeline_remove_layer_difference (pipeline, layer_info.layer, TRUE);
_cogl_pipeline_try_reverting_layers_authority (pipeline, NULL);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
handle_automatic_blend_enable (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS);
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
static gboolean
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
prepend_layer_to_list_cb (CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
void *user_data)
{
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
GList **layers = user_data;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
*layers = g_list_prepend (*layers, layer);
return TRUE;
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* TODO: deprecate this API and replace it with
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
* cogl_pipeline_foreach_layer
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
* TODO: update the docs to note that if the user modifies any layers
* then the list may become invalid.
*/
const GList *
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_layers (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
g_return_val_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline), NULL);
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
if (!pipeline->deprecated_get_layers_list_dirty)
g_list_free (pipeline->deprecated_get_layers_list);
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
pipeline->deprecated_get_layers_list = NULL;
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
_cogl_pipeline_foreach_layer_internal (pipeline,
prepend_layer_to_list_cb,
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
&pipeline->deprecated_get_layers_list);
pipeline->deprecated_get_layers_list =
g_list_reverse (pipeline->deprecated_get_layers_list);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
pipeline->deprecated_get_layers_list_dirty = 0;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
return pipeline->deprecated_get_layers_list;
}
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
int
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
cogl_pipeline_get_n_layers (CoglPipeline *pipeline)
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
{
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;
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
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
g_return_val_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline), 0);
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
authority =
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS);
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return authority->n_layers;
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* FIXME: deprecate and replace with
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
* cogl_pipeline_get_layer_texture() instead. */
CoglHandle
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_texture (CoglPipelineLayer *layer)
{
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
g_return_val_if_fail (_cogl_is_pipeline_layer (layer),
COGL_INVALID_HANDLE);
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
return _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_texture_real (layer);
}
gboolean
_cogl_pipeline_layer_has_user_matrix (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
int layer_index)
{
CoglPipelineLayer *layer;
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
CoglPipelineLayer *authority;
layer = _cogl_pipeline_get_layer (pipeline, layer_index);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
authority =
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer,
COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_USER_MATRIX);
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
/* If the authority is the default pipeline then no, otherwise yes */
return _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (authority) ? TRUE : FALSE;
}
void
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_filters (CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
CoglPipelineFilter *min_filter,
CoglPipelineFilter *mag_filter)
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *authority =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer,
COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_FILTERS);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
*min_filter = authority->min_filter;
*mag_filter = authority->mag_filter;
}
void
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_layer_filters (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
int layer_index,
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
CoglPipelineFilter *min_filter,
CoglPipelineFilter *mag_filter)
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *layer;
CoglPipelineLayer *authority;
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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (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
layer = _cogl_pipeline_get_layer (pipeline, layer_index);
authority =
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer,
COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_FILTERS);
*min_filter = authority->min_filter;
*mag_filter = authority->mag_filter;
}
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
CoglPipelineFilter
_cogl_pipeline_get_layer_min_filter (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
int layer_index)
{
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
CoglPipelineFilter min_filter;
CoglPipelineFilter mag_filter;
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_layer_filters (pipeline, layer_index,
&min_filter, &mag_filter);
return min_filter;
}
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
CoglPipelineFilter
_cogl_pipeline_get_layer_mag_filter (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
int layer_index)
{
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
CoglPipelineFilter min_filter;
CoglPipelineFilter mag_filter;
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_layer_filters (pipeline, layer_index,
&min_filter, &mag_filter);
return mag_filter;
}
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
void
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_pre_paint (CoglPipelineLayer *layer)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *texture_authority;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
texture_authority =
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer,
COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_TEXTURE_DATA);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (texture_authority->texture != COGL_INVALID_HANDLE)
{
CoglTexturePrePaintFlags flags = 0;
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
CoglPipelineFilter min_filter;
CoglPipelineFilter mag_filter;
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_filters (layer, &min_filter, &mag_filter);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
if (min_filter == COGL_PIPELINE_FILTER_NEAREST_MIPMAP_NEAREST
|| min_filter == COGL_PIPELINE_FILTER_LINEAR_MIPMAP_NEAREST
|| min_filter == COGL_PIPELINE_FILTER_NEAREST_MIPMAP_LINEAR
|| min_filter == COGL_PIPELINE_FILTER_LINEAR_MIPMAP_LINEAR)
flags |= COGL_TEXTURE_NEEDS_MIPMAP;
_cogl_texture_pre_paint (texture_authority->texture, flags);
}
}
void
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
_cogl_pipeline_pre_paint_for_layer (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
int layer_id)
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *layer = _cogl_pipeline_get_layer (pipeline, layer_id);
_cogl_pipeline_layer_pre_paint (layer);
}
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
CoglPipelineFilter
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_min_filter (CoglPipelineLayer *layer)
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *authority;
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
g_return_val_if_fail (_cogl_is_pipeline_layer (layer), 0);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
authority =
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer,
COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_FILTERS);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return authority->min_filter;
}
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
CoglPipelineFilter
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_mag_filter (CoglPipelineLayer *layer)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *authority;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
g_return_val_if_fail (_cogl_is_pipeline_layer (layer), 0);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
authority =
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer,
COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_FILTERS);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
return authority->mag_filter;
}
void
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
cogl_pipeline_set_layer_filters (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
int layer_index,
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
CoglPipelineFilter min_filter,
CoglPipelineFilter mag_filter)
{
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
CoglPipelineLayerState state = COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_FILTERS;
CoglPipelineLayer *layer;
CoglPipelineLayer *authority;
CoglPipelineLayer *new;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (pipeline));
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Note: this will ensure that the layer exists, creating one if it
* doesn't already.
*
* Note: If the layer already existed it's possibly owned by another
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
* pipeline. If the layer is created then it will be owned by
* pipeline. */
layer = _cogl_pipeline_get_layer (pipeline, layer_index);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* Now find the ancestor of the layer that is the authority for the
* state we want to change */
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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (layer, state);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (authority->min_filter == min_filter &&
authority->mag_filter == mag_filter)
return;
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
new = _cogl_pipeline_layer_pre_change_notify (pipeline, layer, state);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (new != layer)
layer = new;
else
{
/* If the original layer we found is currently the authority on
* the state we are changing see if we can revert to one of our
* ancestors being the authority. */
if (layer == authority &&
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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (authority) != NULL)
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *parent =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_parent (authority);
CoglPipelineLayer *old_authority =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_get_authority (parent, state);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (old_authority->min_filter == min_filter &&
old_authority->mag_filter == mag_filter)
{
layer->differences &= ~state;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
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
g_assert (layer->owner == pipeline);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
if (layer->differences == 0)
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
_cogl_pipeline_prune_empty_layer_difference (pipeline,
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
layer);
return;
}
}
}
layer->min_filter = min_filter;
layer->mag_filter = mag_filter;
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
/* If we weren't previously the authority on this state then we need
* to extended our differences mask and so it's possible that some
* of our ancestry will now become redundant, so we aim to reparent
* ourselves if that's true... */
if (layer != authority)
{
layer->differences |= 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
_cogl_pipeline_layer_prune_redundant_ancestry (layer);
CoglMaterial: Implements sparse materials design This is a complete overhaul of the data structures used to manage CoglMaterial state. We have these requirements that were aiming to meet: (Note: the references to "renderlists" correspond to the effort to support scenegraph level shuffling of Clutter actor primitives so we can minimize GPU state changes) Sparse State: We wanted a design that allows sparse descriptions of state so it scales well as we make CoglMaterial responsible for more and more state. It needs to scale well in terms of memory usage and the cost of operations we need to apply to materials such as comparing, copying and flushing their state. I.e. we would rather have these things scale by the number of real changes a material represents not by how much overall state CoglMaterial becomes responsible for. Cheap Copies: As we add support for renderlists in Clutter we will need to be able to get an immutable handle for a given material's current state so that we can retain a record of a primitive with its associated material without worrying that changes to the original material will invalidate that record. No more flush override options: We want to get rid of the flush overrides mechanism we currently use to deal with texture fallbacks, wrap mode changes and to handle the use of highlevel CoglTextures that need to be resolved into lowlevel textures before flushing the material state. The flush options structure has been expanding in size and the structure is logged with every journal entry so it is not an approach that scales well at all. It also makes flushing material state that much more complex. Weak Materials: Again for renderlists we need a way to create materials derived from other materials but without the strict requirement that modifications to the original material wont affect the derived ("weak") material. The only requirement is that its possible to later check if the original material has been changed. A summary of the new design: A CoglMaterial now basically represents a diff against its parent. Each material has a single parent and a mask of state that it changes. Each group of state (such as the blending state) has an "authority" which is found by walking up from a given material through its ancestors checking the difference mask until a match for that group is found. There is only one root node to the graph of all materials, which is the default material first created when Cogl is being initialized. All the groups of state are divided into two types, such that infrequently changed state belongs in a separate "BigState" structure that is only allocated and attached to a material when necessary. CoglMaterialLayers are another sparse structure. Like CoglMaterials they represent a diff against their parent and all the layers are part of another graph with the "default_layer_0" layer being the root node that Cogl creates during initialization. Copying a material is now basically just a case of slice allocating a CoglMaterial, setting the parent to be the source being copied and zeroing the mask of changes. Flush overrides should now be handled by simply relying on the cheapness of copying a material and making changes to it. (This will be done in a follow on commit) Weak material support will be added in a follow on commit.
2010-04-08 07:21:04 -04:00
}
}
float
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
cogl_pipeline_get_point_size (CoglHandle handle)
{
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 *pipeline = COGL_PIPELINE (handle);
CoglPipeline *authority;
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
g_return_val_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (handle), FALSE);
authority =
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
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_POINT_SIZE);
return authority->big_state->point_size;
}
void
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
cogl_pipeline_set_point_size (CoglHandle handle,
float point_size)
{
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 *pipeline = COGL_PIPELINE (handle);
CoglPipelineState state = COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_POINT_SIZE;
CoglPipeline *authority;
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
g_return_if_fail (cogl_is_pipeline (handle));
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
authority = _cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline, state);
if (authority->big_state->point_size == point_size)
return;
/* - Flush journal primitives referencing the current 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
* - Make sure the pipeline has no dependants so it may be modified.
* - If the pipeline isn't currently an authority for the state being
* changed, then initialize that state from the current authority.
*/
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
_cogl_pipeline_pre_change_notify (pipeline, state, NULL, FALSE);
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
pipeline->big_state->point_size = point_size;
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
_cogl_pipeline_update_authority (pipeline, authority, state,
_cogl_pipeline_point_size_equal);
}
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
/* While a pipeline is referenced by the Cogl journal we can not allow
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
* modifications, so this gives us a mechanism to track journal
* references separately */
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 *
_cogl_pipeline_journal_ref (CoglPipeline *pipeline)
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
{
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
pipeline->journal_ref_count++;
return cogl_object_ref (pipeline);
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
}
void
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
_cogl_pipeline_journal_unref (CoglPipeline *pipeline)
[cogl] Improving Cogl journal to minimize driver overheads + GPU state changes Previously the journal was always flushed at the end of _cogl_rectangles_with_multitexture_coords, (i.e. the end of any cogl_rectangle* calls) but now we have broadened the potential for batching geometry. In ideal circumstances we will only flush once per scene. In summary the journal works like this: When you use any of the cogl_rectangle* APIs then nothing is emitted to the GPU at this point, we just log one or more quads into the journal. A journal entry consists of the quad coordinates, an associated material reference, and a modelview matrix. Ideally the journal only gets flushed once at the end of a scene, but in fact there are things to consider that may cause unwanted flushing, including: - modifying materials mid-scene This is because each quad in the journal has an associated material reference (i.e. not copy), so if you try and modify a material that is already referenced in the journal we force a flush first) NOTE: For now this means you should avoid using cogl_set_source_color() since that currently uses a single shared material. Later we should change it to use a pool of materials that is recycled when the journal is flushed. - modifying any state that isn't currently logged, such as depth, fog and backface culling enables. The first thing that happens when flushing, is to upload all the vertex data associated with the journal into a single VBO. We then go through a process of splitting up the journal into batches that have compatible state so they can be emitted to the GPU together. This is currently broken up into 3 levels so we can stagger the state changes: 1) we break the journal up according to changes in the number of material layers associated with logged quads. The number of layers in a material determines the stride of the associated vertices, so we have to update our vertex array offsets at this level. (i.e. calling gl{Vertex,Color},Pointer etc) 2) we further split batches up according to material compatability. (e.g. materials with different textures) We flush material state at this level. 3) Finally we split batches up according to modelview changes. At this level we update the modelview matrix and actually emit the actual draw command. This commit is largely about putting the initial design in-place; this will be followed by other changes that take advantage of the extended batching.
2009-06-17 13:46:42 -04:00
{
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
pipeline->journal_ref_count--;
cogl_object_unref (pipeline);
}
void
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
_cogl_pipeline_apply_legacy_state (CoglPipeline *pipeline)
{
_COGL_GET_CONTEXT (ctx, NO_RETVAL);
/* It was a mistake that we ever copied the OpenGL style API for
* associating these things directly with the context when we
* originally wrote Cogl. Until the corresponding deprecated APIs
* can be removed though we now shoehorn the state changes through
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
* the cogl_pipeline API instead.
*/
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
/* A program explicitly set on the pipeline has higher precedence than
* one associated with the context using cogl_program_use() */
if (ctx->current_program &&
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
cogl_pipeline_get_user_program (pipeline) == COGL_INVALID_HANDLE)
cogl_pipeline_set_user_program (pipeline, ctx->current_program);
if (ctx->legacy_depth_test_enabled)
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
cogl_pipeline_set_depth_test_enabled (pipeline, TRUE);
if (ctx->legacy_fog_state.enabled)
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
_cogl_pipeline_set_fog_state (pipeline, &ctx->legacy_fog_state);
}
void
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
_cogl_pipeline_set_static_breadcrumb (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
const char *breadcrumb)
{
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
pipeline->has_static_breadcrumb = TRUE;
pipeline->static_breadcrumb = breadcrumb;
}
typedef struct _HashState
{
unsigned long layer_differences;
CoglPipelineEvalFlags flags;
unsigned int hash;
} HashState;
static void
_cogl_pipeline_layer_hash_unit_state (CoglPipelineLayer *authority,
CoglPipelineLayer **authorities,
HashState *state)
{
int unit = authority->unit_index;
state->hash =
_cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (state->hash, &unit, sizeof (unit));
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_layer_hash_texture_target_state (CoglPipelineLayer *authority,
CoglPipelineLayer **authorities,
HashState *state)
{
GLenum gl_target = authority->target;
state->hash =
_cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (state->hash, &gl_target, sizeof (gl_target));
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_layer_hash_texture_data_state (CoglPipelineLayer *authority,
CoglPipelineLayer **authorities,
HashState *state)
{
GLuint gl_handle;
cogl_texture_get_gl_texture (authority->texture, &gl_handle, NULL);
state->hash =
_cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (state->hash, &gl_handle, sizeof (gl_handle));
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_layer_hash_filters_state (CoglPipelineLayer *authority,
CoglPipelineLayer **authorities,
HashState *state)
{
unsigned int hash = state->hash;
hash = _cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (hash, &authority->mag_filter,
sizeof (authority->mag_filter));
hash = _cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (hash, &authority->min_filter,
sizeof (authority->min_filter));
state->hash = hash;
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_layer_hash_wrap_modes_state (CoglPipelineLayer *authority,
CoglPipelineLayer **authorities,
HashState *state)
{
unsigned int hash = state->hash;
hash = _cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (hash, &authority->wrap_mode_s,
sizeof (authority->wrap_mode_s));
hash = _cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (hash, &authority->wrap_mode_t,
sizeof (authority->wrap_mode_t));
hash = _cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (hash, &authority->wrap_mode_p,
sizeof (authority->wrap_mode_p));
state->hash = hash;
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_layer_hash_combine_state (CoglPipelineLayer *authority,
CoglPipelineLayer **authorities,
HashState *state)
{
unsigned int hash = state->hash;
CoglPipelineLayerBigState *b = authority->big_state;
int n_args;
int i;
hash = _cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (hash, &b->texture_combine_rgb_func,
sizeof (b->texture_combine_rgb_func));
n_args = _cogl_get_n_args_for_combine_func (b->texture_combine_rgb_func);
for (i = 0; i < n_args; i++)
{
hash =
_cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (hash, &b->texture_combine_rgb_src[i],
sizeof (b->texture_combine_rgb_src[i]));
hash =
_cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (hash, &b->texture_combine_rgb_op[i],
sizeof (b->texture_combine_rgb_op[i]));
}
hash = _cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (hash, &b->texture_combine_alpha_func,
sizeof (b->texture_combine_alpha_func));
n_args = _cogl_get_n_args_for_combine_func (b->texture_combine_alpha_func);
for (i = 0; i < n_args; i++)
{
hash =
_cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (hash, &b->texture_combine_alpha_src[i],
sizeof (b->texture_combine_alpha_src[i]));
hash =
_cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (hash, &b->texture_combine_alpha_op[i],
sizeof (b->texture_combine_alpha_op[i]));
}
state->hash = hash;
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_layer_hash_combine_constant_state (CoglPipelineLayer *authority,
CoglPipelineLayer **authorities,
HashState *state)
{
CoglPipelineLayerBigState *b = authority->big_state;
gboolean need_hash = FALSE;
int n_args;
int i;
/* XXX: If the user also asked to hash the ALPHA_FUNC_STATE then it
* would be nice if we could combine the n_args loops in this
* function and _cogl_pipeline_layer_hash_combine_state.
*/
n_args = _cogl_get_n_args_for_combine_func (b->texture_combine_rgb_func);
for (i = 0; i < n_args; i++)
{
if (b->texture_combine_rgb_src[i] ==
COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_SOURCE_CONSTANT)
{
/* XXX: should we be careful to only hash the alpha
* component in the COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_OP_SRC_ALPHA case? */
need_hash = TRUE;
goto done;
}
}
n_args = _cogl_get_n_args_for_combine_func (b->texture_combine_alpha_func);
for (i = 0; i < n_args; i++)
{
if (b->texture_combine_alpha_src[i] ==
COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_SOURCE_CONSTANT)
{
/* XXX: should we be careful to only hash the alpha
* component in the COGL_PIPELINE_COMBINE_OP_SRC_ALPHA case? */
need_hash = TRUE;
goto done;
}
}
done:
if (need_hash)
{
float *constant = b->texture_combine_constant;
state->hash = _cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (state->hash, constant,
sizeof (float) * 4);
}
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_layer_hash_user_matrix_state (CoglPipelineLayer *authority,
CoglPipelineLayer **authorities,
HashState *state)
{
CoglPipelineLayerBigState *big_state = authority->big_state;
state->hash = _cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (state->hash, &big_state->matrix,
sizeof (float) * 16);
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_layer_hash_point_sprite_state (CoglPipelineLayer *authority,
CoglPipelineLayer **authorities,
HashState *state)
{
CoglPipelineLayerBigState *big_state = authority->big_state;
state->hash =
_cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (state->hash, &big_state->point_sprite_coords,
sizeof (big_state->point_sprite_coords));
}
typedef void (*LayerStateHashFunction) (CoglPipelineLayer *authority,
CoglPipelineLayer **authorities,
HashState *state);
static LayerStateHashFunction
layer_state_hash_functions[COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_SPARSE_COUNT];
/* XXX: We don't statically initialize the array of hash functions, so
* we won't get caught out by later re-indexing the groups for some
* reason. */
void
_cogl_pipeline_init_layer_state_hash_functions (void)
{
CoglPipelineLayerStateIndex _index;
layer_state_hash_functions[COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_UNIT_INDEX] =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_hash_unit_state;
layer_state_hash_functions[COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_TEXTURE_TARGET_INDEX] =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_hash_texture_target_state;
layer_state_hash_functions[COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_TEXTURE_DATA_INDEX] =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_hash_texture_data_state;
layer_state_hash_functions[COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_FILTERS_INDEX] =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_hash_filters_state;
layer_state_hash_functions[COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_WRAP_MODES_INDEX] =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_hash_wrap_modes_state;
layer_state_hash_functions[COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_COMBINE_INDEX] =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_hash_combine_state;
layer_state_hash_functions[COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_COMBINE_CONSTANT_INDEX] =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_hash_combine_constant_state;
layer_state_hash_functions[COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_USER_MATRIX_INDEX] =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_hash_user_matrix_state;
_index = COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_POINT_SPRITE_COORDS_INDEX;
layer_state_hash_functions[_index] =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_hash_point_sprite_state;
/* So we get a big error if we forget to update this code! */
g_assert (COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_SPARSE_COUNT == 9);
}
static gboolean
_cogl_pipeline_hash_layer_cb (CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
void *user_data)
{
HashState *state = user_data;
unsigned long differences = state->layer_differences;
CoglPipelineLayer *authorities[COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_COUNT];
unsigned long mask;
int i;
/* Theoretically we would hash non-sparse layer state here but
* currently layers don't have any. */
/* XXX: we resolve all the authorities here - not just those
* corresponding to hash_state->layer_differences - because
* the hashing of some state groups actually depends on the values
* in other groups. For example we don't hash layer combine
* constants if they are aren't referenced by the current layer
* combine function.
*/
mask = COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_ALL_SPARSE;
_cogl_pipeline_layer_resolve_authorities (layer,
mask,
authorities);
/* So we go right ahead and hash the sparse state... */
for (i = 0; i < COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_COUNT; i++)
{
unsigned long current_state = (1L<<i);
/* XXX: we are hashing the un-mixed hash values of all the
* individual state groups; we should provide a means to test
* the quality of the final hash values we are getting with this
* approach... */
if (differences & current_state)
{
CoglPipelineLayer *authority = authorities[i];
layer_state_hash_functions[i] (authority, authorities, state);
}
if (current_state > differences)
break;
}
return TRUE;
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_hash_color_state (CoglPipeline *authority,
HashState *state)
{
state->hash = _cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (state->hash, &authority->color,
_COGL_COLOR_DATA_SIZE);
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_hash_blend_enable_state (CoglPipeline *authority,
HashState *state)
{
guint8 blend_enable = authority->blend_enable;
state->hash = _cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (state->hash, &blend_enable, 1);
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_hash_layers_state (CoglPipeline *authority,
HashState *state)
{
state->hash =
_cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (state->hash, &authority->n_layers,
sizeof (authority->n_layers));
_cogl_pipeline_foreach_layer_internal (authority,
_cogl_pipeline_hash_layer_cb,
state);
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_hash_lighting_state (CoglPipeline *authority,
HashState *state)
{
CoglPipelineLightingState *lighting_state =
&authority->big_state->lighting_state;
state->hash =
_cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (state->hash, lighting_state,
sizeof (CoglPipelineLightingState));
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_hash_alpha_func_state (CoglPipeline *authority,
HashState *state)
{
CoglPipelineAlphaFuncState *alpha_state = &authority->big_state->alpha_state;
state->hash =
_cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (state->hash, &alpha_state->alpha_func,
sizeof (alpha_state->alpha_func));
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_hash_alpha_func_reference_state (CoglPipeline *authority,
HashState *state)
{
CoglPipelineAlphaFuncState *alpha_state = &authority->big_state->alpha_state;
float ref = alpha_state->alpha_func_reference;
state->hash =
_cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (state->hash, &ref, sizeof (float));
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_hash_blend_state (CoglPipeline *authority,
HashState *state)
{
CoglPipelineBlendState *blend_state = &authority->big_state->blend_state;
unsigned int hash;
if (!authority->real_blend_enable)
return;
hash = state->hash;
#ifndef HAVE_COGL_GLES
hash =
_cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (hash, &blend_state->blend_equation_rgb,
sizeof (blend_state->blend_equation_rgb));
hash =
_cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (hash, &blend_state->blend_equation_alpha,
sizeof (blend_state->blend_equation_alpha));
hash =
_cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (hash, &blend_state->blend_src_factor_alpha,
sizeof (blend_state->blend_src_factor_alpha));
hash =
_cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (hash, &blend_state->blend_dst_factor_alpha,
sizeof (blend_state->blend_dst_factor_alpha));
if (blend_state->blend_src_factor_rgb == GL_ONE_MINUS_CONSTANT_COLOR ||
blend_state->blend_src_factor_rgb == GL_CONSTANT_COLOR ||
blend_state->blend_dst_factor_rgb == GL_ONE_MINUS_CONSTANT_COLOR ||
blend_state->blend_dst_factor_rgb == GL_CONSTANT_COLOR)
{
hash =
_cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (hash, &blend_state->blend_constant,
sizeof (blend_state->blend_constant));
}
#endif
hash =
_cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (hash, &blend_state->blend_src_factor_rgb,
sizeof (blend_state->blend_src_factor_rgb));
hash =
_cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (hash, &blend_state->blend_dst_factor_rgb,
sizeof (blend_state->blend_dst_factor_rgb));
state->hash = hash;
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_hash_user_shader_state (CoglPipeline *authority,
HashState *state)
{
CoglHandle user_program = authority->big_state->user_program;
state->hash = _cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (state->hash, &user_program,
sizeof (user_program));
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_hash_depth_state (CoglPipeline *authority,
HashState *state)
{
CoglPipelineDepthState *depth_state = &authority->big_state->depth_state;
unsigned int hash = state->hash;
if (depth_state->depth_test_enabled)
{
guint8 enabled = depth_state->depth_test_enabled;
CoglDepthTestFunction function = depth_state->depth_test_function;
hash = _cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (hash, &enabled, sizeof (enabled));
hash = _cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (hash, &function, sizeof (function));
}
if (depth_state->depth_writing_enabled)
{
guint8 enabled = depth_state->depth_writing_enabled;
float near_val = depth_state->depth_range_near;
float far_val = depth_state->depth_range_far;
hash = _cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (hash, &enabled, sizeof (enabled));
hash = _cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (hash, &near_val, sizeof (near_val));
hash = _cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (hash, &far_val, sizeof (far_val));
}
state->hash = hash;
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_hash_fog_state (CoglPipeline *authority,
HashState *state)
{
CoglPipelineFogState *fog_state = &authority->big_state->fog_state;
unsigned long hash = state->hash;
if (!fog_state->enabled)
hash = _cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (hash, &fog_state->enabled,
sizeof (fog_state->enabled));
else
hash = _cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (hash, &fog_state,
sizeof (CoglPipelineFogState));
state->hash = hash;
}
static void
_cogl_pipeline_hash_point_size_state (CoglPipeline *authority,
HashState *state)
{
float point_size = authority->big_state->point_size;
state->hash = _cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (state->hash, &point_size,
sizeof (point_size));
}
typedef void (*StateHashFunction) (CoglPipeline *authority, HashState *state);
static StateHashFunction
state_hash_functions[COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_SPARSE_COUNT];
/* We don't statically initialize the array of hash functions
* so we won't get caught out by later re-indexing the groups for
* some reason. */
void
_cogl_pipeline_init_state_hash_functions (void)
{
state_hash_functions[COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_COLOR_INDEX] =
_cogl_pipeline_hash_color_state;
state_hash_functions[COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_BLEND_ENABLE_INDEX] =
_cogl_pipeline_hash_blend_enable_state;
state_hash_functions[COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS_INDEX] =
_cogl_pipeline_hash_layers_state;
state_hash_functions[COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LIGHTING_INDEX] =
_cogl_pipeline_hash_lighting_state;
state_hash_functions[COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_ALPHA_FUNC_INDEX] =
_cogl_pipeline_hash_alpha_func_state;
state_hash_functions[COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_ALPHA_FUNC_REFERENCE_INDEX] =
_cogl_pipeline_hash_alpha_func_reference_state;
state_hash_functions[COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_BLEND_INDEX] =
_cogl_pipeline_hash_blend_state;
state_hash_functions[COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_USER_SHADER_INDEX] =
_cogl_pipeline_hash_user_shader_state;
state_hash_functions[COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_DEPTH_INDEX] =
_cogl_pipeline_hash_depth_state;
state_hash_functions[COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_FOG_INDEX] =
_cogl_pipeline_hash_fog_state;
state_hash_functions[COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_POINT_SIZE_INDEX] =
_cogl_pipeline_hash_point_size_state;
/* So we get a big error if we forget to update this code! */
g_assert (COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_SPARSE_COUNT == 11);
}
unsigned int
_cogl_pipeline_hash (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
unsigned long differences,
unsigned long layer_differences,
CoglPipelineEvalFlags flags)
{
CoglPipeline *authorities[COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_SPARSE_COUNT];
unsigned long mask;
int i;
HashState state;
unsigned int final_hash = 0;
state.hash = 0;
state.layer_differences = layer_differences;
state.flags = flags;
/* hash non-sparse state */
if (differences & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_REAL_BLEND_ENABLE)
{
gboolean enable = pipeline->real_blend_enable;
state.hash =
_cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (state.hash, &enable, sizeof (enable));
}
/* hash sparse state */
mask = differences & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_ALL_SPARSE;
_cogl_pipeline_resolve_authorities (pipeline, mask, authorities);
for (i = 0; i < COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_SPARSE_COUNT; i++)
{
unsigned long current_state = (1L<<i);
/* XXX: we are hashing the un-mixed hash values of all the
* individual state groups; we should provide a means to test
* the quality of the final hash values we are getting with this
* approach... */
if (differences & current_state)
{
CoglPipeline *authority = authorities[i];
state_hash_functions[i] (authority, &state);
final_hash = _cogl_util_one_at_a_time_hash (final_hash, &state.hash,
sizeof (state.hash));
}
if (current_state > differences)
break;
}
return _cogl_util_one_at_a_time_mix (final_hash);
}
typedef struct
{
int parent_id;
int *node_id_ptr;
GString *graph;
int indent;
} PrintDebugState;
static gboolean
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
dump_layer_cb (CoglPipelineNode *node, void *user_data)
{
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
CoglPipelineLayer *layer = COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER (node);
PrintDebugState *state = user_data;
int layer_id = *state->node_id_ptr;
PrintDebugState state_out;
GString *changes_label;
gboolean changes = FALSE;
if (state->parent_id >= 0)
g_string_append_printf (state->graph, "%*slayer%p -> layer%p;\n",
state->indent, "",
layer->_parent.parent,
layer);
g_string_append_printf (state->graph,
"%*slayer%p [label=\"layer=0x%p\\n"
"ref count=%d\" "
"color=\"blue\"];\n",
state->indent, "",
layer,
layer,
COGL_OBJECT (layer)->ref_count);
changes_label = g_string_new ("");
g_string_append_printf (changes_label,
"%*slayer%p -> layer_state%d [weight=100];\n"
"%*slayer_state%d [shape=box label=\"",
state->indent, "",
layer,
layer_id,
state->indent, "",
layer_id);
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
if (layer->differences & COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_UNIT)
{
changes = TRUE;
g_string_append_printf (changes_label,
"\\lunit=%u\\n",
layer->unit_index);
}
if (layer->differences & COGL_PIPELINE_LAYER_STATE_TEXTURE_DATA)
{
changes = TRUE;
g_string_append_printf (changes_label,
"\\ltexture=%p\\n",
layer->texture);
}
if (changes)
{
g_string_append_printf (changes_label, "\"];\n");
g_string_append (state->graph, changes_label->str);
g_string_free (changes_label, TRUE);
}
state_out.parent_id = layer_id;
state_out.node_id_ptr = state->node_id_ptr;
(*state_out.node_id_ptr)++;
state_out.graph = state->graph;
state_out.indent = state->indent + 2;
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
_cogl_pipeline_node_foreach_child (COGL_PIPELINE_NODE (layer),
dump_layer_cb,
&state_out);
return TRUE;
}
static gboolean
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
dump_layer_ref_cb (CoglPipelineLayer *layer, void *data)
{
PrintDebugState *state = data;
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
int pipeline_id = *state->node_id_ptr;
g_string_append_printf (state->graph,
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
"%*spipeline_state%d -> layer%p;\n",
state->indent, "",
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
pipeline_id,
layer);
return TRUE;
}
static gboolean
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
dump_pipeline_cb (CoglPipelineNode *node, void *user_data)
{
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 *pipeline = COGL_PIPELINE (node);
PrintDebugState *state = user_data;
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
int pipeline_id = *state->node_id_ptr;
PrintDebugState state_out;
GString *changes_label;
gboolean changes = FALSE;
gboolean layers = FALSE;
if (state->parent_id >= 0)
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
g_string_append_printf (state->graph, "%*spipeline%d -> pipeline%d;\n",
state->indent, "",
state->parent_id,
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
pipeline_id);
g_string_append_printf (state->graph,
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
"%*spipeline%d [label=\"pipeline=0x%p\\n"
"ref count=%d\\n"
"breadcrumb=\\\"%s\\\"\" color=\"red\"];\n",
state->indent, "",
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
pipeline_id,
pipeline,
COGL_OBJECT (pipeline)->ref_count,
pipeline->has_static_breadcrumb ?
pipeline->static_breadcrumb : "NULL");
changes_label = g_string_new ("");
g_string_append_printf (changes_label,
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
"%*spipeline%d -> pipeline_state%d [weight=100];\n"
"%*spipeline_state%d [shape=box label=\"",
state->indent, "",
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
pipeline_id,
pipeline_id,
state->indent, "",
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
pipeline_id);
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
if (pipeline->differences & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_COLOR)
{
changes = TRUE;
g_string_append_printf (changes_label,
"\\lcolor=0x%02X%02X%02X%02X\\n",
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
cogl_color_get_red_byte (&pipeline->color),
cogl_color_get_green_byte (&pipeline->color),
cogl_color_get_blue_byte (&pipeline->color),
cogl_color_get_alpha_byte (&pipeline->color));
}
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
if (pipeline->differences & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_BLEND)
{
const char *blend_enable_name;
changes = TRUE;
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
switch (pipeline->blend_enable)
{
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
case COGL_PIPELINE_BLEND_ENABLE_AUTOMATIC:
blend_enable_name = "AUTO";
break;
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
case COGL_PIPELINE_BLEND_ENABLE_ENABLED:
blend_enable_name = "ENABLED";
break;
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
case COGL_PIPELINE_BLEND_ENABLE_DISABLED:
blend_enable_name = "DISABLED";
break;
default:
blend_enable_name = "UNKNOWN";
}
g_string_append_printf (changes_label,
"\\lblend=%s\\n",
blend_enable_name);
}
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
if (pipeline->differences & COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS)
{
changes = TRUE;
layers = TRUE;
g_string_append_printf (changes_label, "\\ln_layers=%d\\n",
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
pipeline->n_layers);
}
if (changes)
{
g_string_append_printf (changes_label, "\"];\n");
g_string_append (state->graph, changes_label->str);
g_string_free (changes_label, TRUE);
}
if (layers)
{
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
g_list_foreach (pipeline->layer_differences,
(GFunc)dump_layer_ref_cb,
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
state_out.parent_id = pipeline_id;
state_out.node_id_ptr = state->node_id_ptr;
(*state_out.node_id_ptr)++;
state_out.graph = state->graph;
state_out.indent = state->indent + 2;
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
_cogl_pipeline_node_foreach_child (COGL_PIPELINE_NODE (pipeline),
dump_pipeline_cb,
&state_out);
return TRUE;
}
void
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
_cogl_debug_dump_pipelines_dot_file (const char *filename)
{
GString *graph;
PrintDebugState layer_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
PrintDebugState pipeline_state;
int layer_id = 0;
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
int pipeline_id = 0;
_COGL_GET_CONTEXT (ctx, NO_RETVAL);
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
if (!ctx->default_pipeline)
return;
graph = g_string_new ("");
g_string_append_printf (graph, "digraph {\n");
layer_state.graph = graph;
layer_state.parent_id = -1;
layer_state.node_id_ptr = &layer_id;
layer_state.indent = 0;
dump_layer_cb (ctx->default_layer_0, &layer_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
pipeline_state.graph = graph;
pipeline_state.parent_id = -1;
pipeline_state.node_id_ptr = &pipeline_id;
pipeline_state.indent = 0;
dump_pipeline_cb (ctx->default_pipeline, &pipeline_state);
g_string_append_printf (graph, "}\n");
if (filename)
g_file_set_contents (filename, graph->str, -1, NULL);
else
g_print ("%s", graph->str);
g_string_free (graph, TRUE);
}
typedef struct
{
int i;
CoglPipelineLayer **layers;
} AddLayersToArrayState;
static gboolean
add_layer_to_array_cb (CoglPipelineLayer *layer,
void *user_data)
{
AddLayersToArrayState *state = user_data;
state->layers[state->i++] = layer;
return TRUE;
}
/* Determines if we need to handle the RGB and A texture combining
* separately or is the same function used for both channel masks and
* with the same arguments...
*/
gboolean
_cogl_pipeline_need_texture_combine_separate
(CoglPipelineLayer *combine_authority)
{
CoglPipelineLayerBigState *big_state = combine_authority->big_state;
int n_args;
int i;
if (big_state->texture_combine_rgb_func !=
big_state->texture_combine_alpha_func)
return TRUE;
n_args = _cogl_get_n_args_for_combine_func (big_state->texture_combine_rgb_func);
for (i = 0; i < n_args; i++)
{
if (big_state->texture_combine_rgb_src[i] !=
big_state->texture_combine_alpha_src[i])
return TRUE;
/*
* We can allow some variation of the source operands without
* needing a separation...
*
* "A = REPLACE (CONSTANT[A])" + either of the following...
* "RGB = REPLACE (CONSTANT[RGB])"
* "RGB = REPLACE (CONSTANT[A])"
*
* can be combined as:
* "RGBA = REPLACE (CONSTANT)" or
* "RGBA = REPLACE (CONSTANT[A])" or
*
* And "A = REPLACE (1-CONSTANT[A])" + either of the following...
* "RGB = REPLACE (1-CONSTANT)" or
* "RGB = REPLACE (1-CONSTANT[A])"
*
* can be combined as:
* "RGBA = REPLACE (1-CONSTANT)" or
* "RGBA = REPLACE (1-CONSTANT[A])"
*/
switch (big_state->texture_combine_alpha_op[i])
{
case GL_SRC_ALPHA:
switch (big_state->texture_combine_rgb_op[i])
{
case GL_SRC_COLOR:
case GL_SRC_ALPHA:
break;
default:
return FALSE;
}
break;
case GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA:
switch (big_state->texture_combine_rgb_op[i])
{
case GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_COLOR:
case GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA:
break;
default:
return FALSE;
}
break;
default:
return FALSE; /* impossible */
}
}
return FALSE;
}
/* This tries to find the oldest ancestor whose pipeline and layer
state matches the given flags. This is mostly used to detect code
gen authorities so that we can reduce the numer of programs
generated */
CoglPipeline *
_cogl_pipeline_find_equivalent_parent (CoglPipeline *pipeline,
CoglPipelineState pipeline_state,
CoglPipelineLayerState layer_state)
{
CoglPipeline *authority0;
CoglPipeline *authority1;
int n_layers;
CoglPipelineLayer **authority0_layers;
CoglPipelineLayer **authority1_layers;
/* Find the first pipeline that modifies state that affects the
* state or any layer state... */
authority0 = _cogl_pipeline_get_authority (pipeline,
pipeline_state |
COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS);
/* Find the next ancestor after that, that also modifies the
* state... */
if (_cogl_pipeline_get_parent (authority0))
{
authority1 =
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (_cogl_pipeline_get_parent (authority0),
pipeline_state |
COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS);
}
else
return authority0;
n_layers = cogl_pipeline_get_n_layers (authority0);
for (;;)
{
AddLayersToArrayState state;
int i;
if (n_layers != cogl_pipeline_get_n_layers (authority1))
return authority0;
/* If the programs differ by anything that isn't part of the
layer state then we can't continue */
if (pipeline_state &&
(_cogl_pipeline_compare_differences (authority0, authority1) &
pipeline_state))
return authority0;
authority0_layers =
g_alloca (sizeof (CoglPipelineLayer *) * n_layers);
state.i = 0;
state.layers = authority0_layers;
_cogl_pipeline_foreach_layer_internal (authority0,
add_layer_to_array_cb,
&state);
authority1_layers =
g_alloca (sizeof (CoglPipelineLayer *) * n_layers);
state.i = 0;
state.layers = authority1_layers;
_cogl_pipeline_foreach_layer_internal (authority1,
add_layer_to_array_cb,
&state);
for (i = 0; i < n_layers; i++)
{
unsigned long layer_differences;
if (authority0_layers[i] == authority1_layers[i])
continue;
layer_differences =
_cogl_pipeline_layer_compare_differences (authority0_layers[i],
authority1_layers[i]);
if (layer_differences & layer_state)
return authority0;
}
/* Find the next ancestor after that, that also modifies state
* affecting codegen... */
if (!_cogl_pipeline_get_parent (authority1))
break;
authority0 = authority1;
authority1 =
_cogl_pipeline_get_authority (_cogl_pipeline_get_parent (authority1),
pipeline_state |
COGL_PIPELINE_STATE_LAYERS);
if (authority1 == authority0)
break;
}
return authority1;
}