Units as they have been implemented since Clutter 0.4 have always been
misdefined as "logical distance unit", while they were just pixels with
fractionary bits.
Units should be reworked to be opaque structures to hold a value and
its unit type, that can be then converted into pixels when Clutter needs
to paint or compute size requisitions and perform allocations.
The previous API should be completely removed to avoid collisions, and
a new type:
ClutterUnits
should be added; the ability to install GObject properties using
ClutterUnits should be maintained.
All the underlying implementation and the public entry points have
been switched to floats; the only missing bits are the Actor properties
that deal with positioning and sizing.
This usually means a major pain when dealing with GValues and varargs
functions. While GValue will warn you when dealing with the wrong
conversions, varags will simply die an horrible (and hard to debug)
death via segfault. Nothing much to do here, except warn people in the
release notes and hope for the best.
Setting up layer combine functions and blend modes is very awkward to do
programatically. This adds a parser for string based descriptions which are
more consise and readable.
E.g. a material layer combine function could now be given as:
"RGBA = ADD (TEXTURE[A], PREVIOUS[RGB])"
or
"RGB = REPLACE (PREVIOUS)"
"A = MODULATE (PREVIOUS, TEXTURE)"
The simple syntax and grammar are only designed to expose standard fixed
function hardware, more advanced combining must be done with shaders.
This includes standalone documentation of blend strings covering the aspects
that are common to blending and texture combining, and adds documentation
with examples specific to the new cogl_material_set_blend() and
cogl_material_layer_set_combine() functions.
Note: The hope is to remove the now redundant bits of the material API
before 1.0
The test now explicitly reads back from the framebuffer to sanity check that
texturing is happening as expected, and it now uses a fixed 2x2 texture instead
of redhand.png since redhand.png doesn't have a power of two size which can
cause the vertex buffer code to complain on hardware not supporting npot
textures.
test-vertex-buffer-configuous now needs redhand.png so it should be
copied in to the build directory. This is copied from similar code in
the tests/interactive Makefile.
ClutterModel has an interactive test but lacks a conformance
unit for automatic testing.
This is the beginning of that unit, which covers the population
and iteration over a ListModel.
The test simply creates an odd sized texture with different colors at
each of the four corners. It then renders the texture and verifies
that the colors are the expected values. This should help ensure that
the sliced texture rendering code is working properly.
Since we override the clean-generic target in order to remove
the shell scripts we create for each conformance test unit, we
cannot use CLEANFILES to remove the test reports.
The maintainer compiler flags we use trigger warnings and errors
in the autogenerated code that gtk-doc creates to scan the header
and source files. Since we cannot control that, and we must run
a distcheck with both --enable-gtk-doc and --enable-maintainer-flags
turned on, we need to use less-strict compiler flags when inside
the doc/reference subdirectories.
The way to do this is to split the maintainer compiler flags into
their own Makefile variable, called MAINTAINER_CFLAGS. The we
can use $(MAINTAINER_CFLAGS) in the INCLUDES or _CFLAGS sections
of each part of the source directories we wish to check with the
anal retentiveness suited for maintainers.
This better reflects the fact that the api manages sets of vertex attributes,
and the attributes really have no implied form. It is only when you use the
attributes to draw that they become mesh like; when you specify how they should
be interpreted, e.g. as triangle lists or fans etc. This rename frees up the
term "mesh", which can later be applied to a concept slightly more fitting.
E.g. at some point it would be nice to have a higher level abstraction that
sits on top of cogl vertex buffers that adds the concept of faces. (Somthing
like Blender's mesh objects.) There have also been some discussions over
particle engines, and these can be defined in terms of emitter faces; so some
other kind of mesh abstraction might be usefull here.
Merge branch 'text-actor'
* text-actor: (108 commits)
Re-align ClutterText header file
[text] Fix cursor sizing
Comments and whitespace fixes to ClutterText
[docs] Add newly added :single-line-mode accessors
Update the ignore file
[tests] Add text field interactive test
[text] Add single-line-mode to ClutterText
[text] Fix the deletion actions
[text] Use cached length when possible
[tests] Add unit for the ClutterText:password-char property
[docs] Update the Text section
[text] Coalesce text visibility and password character
Allow localizations to change the text direction
Clean up the update_pango_context() function
Pass the PangoContext, not the MainContext
Revert the logic of the PangoContext check
Remove the binding pool entry from the list
Remove BindingPool::list_actions()
Add ClutterActor::create_pango_context()
Rename the PangoContext creation functions
...
When building out of tree the generated scripts for the unit tests
need to explicitly reference the original src dir to be able to find
test-launcher.sh, like this:
$(top_srcdir)/tests/conform/test-launcher.sh
Also test-launcher.sh now passes -m slow --verbose to gtester. Without
-m slow then the wrappers dont work for some of the timeline tests.
Currently, the conformance test suite creates symbolic links pointing
to a wrapper script that just parses the name used to invoke it and
calls the gtester with the correct path.
Unfortunately, this presents two issues:
- it does not really work on file systems that do not
support symbolic links
- it leaves behind the symbolic links, which cannot
be automatically cleaning by 'make clean'
Both can be solved by creating a small script that invokes the wrapper
one with the test unit path.
The Makefile will use test-conform to extract the unit test paths
and generate a list that will be iterated over to create the
executable name (using the "test-name" convention also used by the
interactive tests, instead of "test_name"); the executable is then
just a simple shell script that invokes the wrapper script passing
the unit test path on the command line. The wrapper script will
use the first argument to work correctly, so it could be simply
executed like:
./test-wrapper.sh /path/to/unit_test
Which is another improvement over the current implementation, where
the wrapper script does not work when invoked directly.
Instead of changing the unit for ClutterEntry, we add a new
test unit specifically for ClutterText so that we can later tweak
it specifically for the behaviour changes needed to make ClutterText
work better.
* clutter/Makefile.am:
* clutter/clutter.h: Add ClutterBindingPool to the build.
* clutter/clutter-binding-pool.c:
* clutter/clutter-binding-pool.h: Add ClutterBindingPool, a data
structure meant to hold (key symbol, modifiers) pairs and associate
them to a closure. The ClutterBindingPool can be used to install
key bindings for actors and then execute closures inside the
key-press-event signal handlers, removing the need for big
switch() or if() blocks for each key.
* clutter/clutter-event.c: Consistently use "key symbol" instead
of "key value".
* clutter/clutter-event.h: Add more modifier masks.
* clutter/clutter-marshal.list:
* tests/conform/Makefile.am:
* tests/conform/test-binding-pool.c:
* tests/conform/test-conform-main.c: Add ClutterBindingPool
conformance test.
* tests/interactive/Makefile.am:
* tests/interactive/test-binding-pool.c: Add interactive test (and
example code) for the ClutterBindingPool usage.
* clutter/clutter-path.h:
* clutter/clutter-path.c: Implementation of new ClutterPath object
to represent a path combining straight line and bezier curve
elements.
* clutter/clutter.h: Include clutter-path.h and remove
clutter-behaviour-bspline.h
* tests/interactive/test-threads.c (test_threads_main):
* tests/interactive/test-script.c:
* tests/interactive/test-behave.c (test_behave_main): Use new path
API
* clutter/clutter-effect.c: Use the new ClutterBehaviourPath API.
* clutter/clutter-bezier.h:
* clutter/clutter-bezier.c: Moved bezier curve handling code out
from clutter-behaviour-bspline.c to a separate file.
* clutter/clutter-behaviour-path.h:
* clutter/clutter-behaviour-path.c: Reimplemented to work with a
ClutterPath
* clutter/clutter-behaviour-bspline.h:
* clutter/clutter-behaviour-bspline.c: Removed
* clutter/Makefile.am: Add clutter-path and clutter-bezier, remove
clutter-behaviour-bspline.
* tests/conform/test-path.c: New automatic test for ClutterPath
consistency
* tests/conform/test-conform-main.c (main): Add test_path
* tests/conform/Makefile.am (test_conformance_SOURCES): Add
test-path.c
* clutter/clutter-sections.txt: Add ClutterPath docs
* clutter/clutter.types:
* clutter/clutter-docs.xml:
* doc/reference/clutter/clutter-animation-tutorial.xml: Remove
mention of ClutterBehaviourBspline
* clutter/clutter-marshal.list: Add VOID:UINT
* tests/tools/Makefile.am: Optionally build the
libdisable-npots.la library depending on whether libdl was
detected in the configure script. A helper script is also
generated to setup the LD_PRELOAD.
* tests/conform/Makefile.am: There are now two versions of the
test-report and full-report rules. test-report-normal is the same
as before and test-report-disable-npots runs the tests with the
disable-npots wrapper script. The full-report rule runs both of
them and displays two separate HTML files. The test-report rule
just runs the normal version as before.
* configure.ac: Add a test for libdl
* tests/tools/disable-npots.sh.in: New file. Template for the
helper script
* tests/tools/disable-npots.c: New file
* clutter/cogl/common/cogl-mesh.c:
Make sure we use the appropriate cogl_wrap_gl* funcs as appropriate
* clutter/cogl/gles/cogl-gles2-wrapper.c
* clutter/cogl/gles/cogl-gles2-wrapper.h:
In our glColorPointer wrapper we needed to mark our color attribute
as normalized.
* tests/conform/Makefile.am:
When creating unit test symlinks we use the -l gtester option to
list tests, but when using the PVR SDK the test binary also spews
out some extra info that caused lots of random symlinks to be
created. We now grep for lines starting with a '/'
* tests/conform/test-mesh-contiguous.c
* tests/conform/test-mesh-mutability.c:
Use cogl_set_source_color instead of directly calling glColor4ub
* tests/conform/Makefile.am:
* tests/conform/test-conform-main.c:
* tests/conform/test-paint-opacity.c: Add test unit for label,
rectangle and paint opacity.
* clutter/cogl/cogl-mesh.h
* clutter/cogl/cogl-types.h
* clutter/cogl/cogl.h.in
* clutter/cogl/common/Makefile.am
* clutter/cogl/common/cogl-mesh-private.h
* clutter/cogl/common/cogl-mesh.c
* clutter/cogl/gl/cogl-context.c
* clutter/cogl/gl/cogl-context.h
* clutter/cogl/gl/cogl-defines.h.in
* clutter/cogl/gl/cogl.c
* clutter/cogl/gles/cogl-context.c
* clutter/cogl/gles/cogl-context.h
* doc/reference/cogl/cogl-docs.sgml
* doc/reference/cogl/cogl-sections.txt:
The Mesh API provides a means for submitting an extensible number of
per vertex attributes to OpenGL in a way that doesn't require format
conversions and so that the data can be mapped into the GPU (in vertex
buffer objects) for - hopefully - fast re-use.
There are a number of things we can potentially use this API for, but
right now this just provides a foundation to build on. Please read
the extensive list of TODO items in cogl-mesh.c for examples.
Please refer to the cogl-mesh section in the reference manual for
documentation of the API.
* tests/conform/Makefile.am
* tests/conform/test-conform-main.c
* tests/conform/test-mesh-contiguous.c
* tests/conform/test-mesh-interleved.c
* tests/conform/test-mesh-mutability.c:
Privides basic coverage testing for the mesh API.
* tests/conform/wrapper.sh:
* tests/conform/test-conform-main.c:
* tests/conform/test-timeline.c:
Adds Neil's updates to test-timeline.c so it now works with the new unit
testing infrastructure.
Also some fixes to ensure wrappers get setup correctly for the timeline
tests.
* tests/interactive/test-main.c:
cast the symbol return pointer as (gpointer *) to avoid warning
* tests/conform/test-pick.c:
g_assert that the test passes, instead of using exit()
* test/conform/ADDING_NEW_TESTS:
Fixes a silly typo
* tests/conform/Makefile.am:
* tests/conform/test-actor-invariants.c:
* tests/conform/test-conform-main.c: Move the actor invariants
unit to the conform section of the test suite.
* tests/interactive/Makefile.am:
* tests/interactive/test-entry-auto.c:
* tests/interactive/test-invariants.c: Remove the entry-auto
and invariants test, since those two belong to the conform
section.
framework
* configure.ac:
* tests/*:
The tests have been reorganised into different categories: conformance,
interactive and micro benchmarks.
- conformance tests can be run as part of automated tests
- interactive tests are basically all the existing tests
- micro benchmarks focus on a single performance metric
I converted the timeline tests to conformance tests and also added some
tests from Neil Roberts and Ebassi.
Note: currently only the conformance tests use the glib test APIs,
though the micro benchmarks should too.
The other change is to make the unit tests link into monolithic binaries
which makes the build time for unit tests considerably faster. To deal
with the extra complexity this adds to debugging individual tests I
have added some sugar to the makefiles so all the tests can be run
directly via a symlink and when an individual test is run this way,
then a note is printed to the terminal explaining exactly how that test
may be debugged using GDB.
There is a convenience make rule: 'make test-report', that will run all
the conformance tests and hopefully even open the results in your web
browser. It skips some of the slower timeline tests, but you can run
those using 'make full-report'