Commit Graph

5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Neil Roberts
2616ae0fa9 Add a GL 3 driver
This adds a new CoglDriver for GL 3 called COGL_DRIVER_GL3. When
requested, the GLX, EGL and SDL2 winsyss will set the necessary
attributes to request a forward-compatible core profile 3.1 context.
That means it will have no deprecated features.

To simplify the explosion of checks for specific combinations of
context->driver, many of these conditionals have now been replaced
with private feature flags that are checked instead. The GL and GLES
drivers now initialise these private feature flags depending on which
driver is used.

The fixed function backends now explicitly check whether the fixed
function private feature is available which means the GL3 driver will
fall back to always using the GLSL progend. Since Rob's latest patches
the GLSL progend no longer uses any fixed function API anyway so it
should just work.

The driver is currently lower priority than COGL_DRIVER_GL so it will
not be used unless it is specificly requested. We may want to change
this priority at some point because apparently Mesa can make some
memory savings if a core profile context is used.

In GL 3, getting the combined extensions string with glGetString is
deprecated so this patch changes it to use glGetStringi to build up an
array of extensions instead. _cogl_context_get_gl_extensions now
returns this array instead of trying to return a const string. The
caller is expected to free the array.

Some issues with this patch:

• GL 3 does not support GL_ALPHA format textures. We should probably
  make this a feature flag or something. Cogl uses this to render text
  which currently just throws a GL error and breaks so it's pretty
  important to do something about this before considering the GL3
  driver to be stable.

• GL 3 doesn't support client side vertex buffers. This probably
  doesn't matter because CoglBuffer won't normally use malloc'd
  buffers if VBOs are available, but it might but worth making
  malloc'd buffers a private feature and forcing it not to use them.

• GL 3 doesn't support the default vertex array object. This patch
  just makes it create and bind a single non-default vertex array
  object which gets used just like the normal default object. Ideally
  it would be good to use vertex array objects properly and attach
  them to a CoglPrimitive to cache the state.

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

(cherry picked from commit 66c9db993595b3a22e63f4c201ea468bc9b88cb6)
2013-01-22 17:48:01 +00:00
Robert Bragg
01937201e4 Unify a lot of gles2 vs gl glsl code
Since we used to support hybrid fixed-function + glsl pipelines when
running with OpenGL there were numerous differences in how we handled
codegen and uniform updates between GLES2 and full OpenGL. Now that we
only support end-to-end glsl pipelines this patch can largely unify how
we handle GLES2 and OpenGL.

Most notably we now never use the builtin attribute names. This should
also make it easy for us to support creating strict OpenGL 3.1 contexts
where the builtin names have been removed.

Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>

(cherry picked from commit 2701b93f159bf2d3387cedf2d06fe921ad5641f3)
2013-01-22 17:48:01 +00:00
Robert Bragg
8f3380adc3 Clearly define 3 progends that own the frag+vertends
This adds a new "fixed-arbfp" progend so we now have 3 distinct ways of
setting up the state of a pipeline:

  » fixed; where the vertex and fragment processing are implemented
    using fixed function opengl apis.
  » fixed-arbfp; where vertex processing is implemented using fixed
    function opengl apis but fragment processing is implemented
    using the ARB Fragment Processing language.
  » glsl; there vertex and fragment processing are both implemented
    using glsl.

This means we avoid unusual, combinations such as glsl for vertex
processing and arbfp for fragment processing, and also avoid pairing
fixed-function vertex processing with glsl fragment processing which we
happen to know hits some awkward code paths in Mesa that lead to poor
performance.

As part of this change, the progend now implies specific vertend and
fragend choices so instead of associating a vertend and fragend with a
pipeline we now just associate a progend choice.

When flushing a pipeline and choosing what progend to use, we now call a
progend->start() method that is able to determine if the vertend and
fragend together will be able to handle the given pipeline so the
vertend and fragend ->start() methods no longer need to return a boolean
status.

Since we now don't need to support glsl used in conjunction with fixed
function this will allow us to avoid ever using OpenGL builtin attribute
names, though this patch doesn't change that yet.

Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>

(cherry picked from commit cec381f50c7a2f2186bd4a8c5f38fecd5f099075)
2013-01-22 17:48:00 +00:00
Robert Bragg
8326c71b6b texture: rename texobj flush code as gl specific
This renames the set_filters and set_wrap_mode_parameters texture
virtual functions to gl_flush_legacy_texobj_filters and
gl_flush_legacy_texobj_wrap_modes respectively to clarify that they are
opengl driver specific and that they are only used to support the legacy
opengl apis for setting filters and wrap modes where the state is
associated with texture objects instead of being associated with sampler
objects.

This part of an effort to clearly delimit our abstraction over opengl so
that we can start to consider non-opengl backends for Cogl.

Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>

(cherry picked from commit 6f78b8a613340d7c6b736e51a16c625f52154430)
2013-01-22 17:47:58 +00:00
Robert Bragg
5d62185f1c Re-organize the source layout
As part of an effort towards being able to write non-opengl based
backends for Cogl this moves most of the opengl specific code under
drivers/gl. drivers/gl and drivers/gles have been moved to
drivers/gl/gl and drivers/gl/es respectively.

Reviewed-by: Neil Roberts <neil@linux.intel.com>

(cherry picked from commit 7dc482facb0a265c7f48660079e7e12dd7a2813e)
2013-01-22 17:47:19 +00:00