It's the conformance test suite: there's no need to namespace the files,
just like there's no need to namespace the units.
This commit does not change the Cogl tests: they will be moved to Cogl
over time, and it's easier to do if we leave them as they are.
A lot of the conformance tests that were just testing Cogl
functionality have been ported to be standalone Cogl tests in the Cogl
source tree. This patch removes those from Clutter so we don't have to
maintain them in two places.
Reviewed-by: Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@linux.intel.com>
Iterating over children and ancestors of an actor is a relatively common
operation. Currently, you only have one option: start a for() loop, get
the first child of the actor, and advance to the next sibling for the
list of children; or start a for() loop and advance to the parent of the
actor.
These operations can be easily done through the ClutterActor API, but
they all require going through the public API, and performing multiple
type checks on the arguments.
Along with the DOM API, it would be nice to have an ancillary, utility
API that uses an iterator structure to hold the state, and can be
advanced in a loop.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=668669
Verify that insertion and removal maintain a stable graph, with pointers
to the various children. This should help out tracking regressions in
the scene graph API.
The Clutter backend split is opaque enough that should allow us to just
build all possible backends inside the same shared object, and select
the wanted backend at initialization time.
This requires some work in the build system, as well as the
initialization code, to remove duplicate functions that might cause
conflicts at build and link time. We also need to defer all the checks
of the internal state of the platform-specific API to run-time type
checks.
This adds a simple conformance test which sets up a few shader effects
using both the old style with clutter_shader_effect_set_source and the
new style by overriding get_static_shader_source. The effects are then
verified to confirm that they drew the right pixel colour.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=660512
Reviewed-by: Emmanuele Bassi <ebassi@linux.intel.com>
This adds a conformance test for redirecting offscreen. It verifies
that the redirected actor has the right paint opacity, that it gets
redrawn only when the image cache needs to be invalidated and that it
ends up with the right appearance.
On win32, test scripts are created with a .exe extension.
Under mingw, a .exe script is launched in 16 bit compatibility mode (through
ntvdm), and so it just does not run.
http://bugzilla.clutter-project.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2619
This adds a conformance test which creates a lot of textures with
increasing size and destroys them again a number of times in order to
cause a few atlas migrations. The last time the textures are created
they are all read back and the data is verified to confirm that the
atlas migration successfully preserved the data.
This adds a conformance test which paints using a pipeline that has
two layers containing textures. Each layer has a different user
matrix. When the two layers are combined with the right matrices then
all of the colors end up white. The test then verifies this by reading
back the pixels.
This creates a material which users a layer to override the color of
the rectangle. A simple vertex shader is then created which just
emulates the fixed function pipeline. No fragment shader is
added. This demonstrates a bug where the layer state is getting
ignored when a vertex shader is in use.
http://bugzilla.clutter-project.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2221
Previously in the tests/tools directory we build a disable-npots
library which was used as an LD_PRELOAD to trick Cogl in to thinking
there is no NPOT texture extension. This is a little awkward to use so
it seems much simpler to just define a COGL_DEBUG option to disable
npot textures.
They are generated at configure time, so it's a good idea to have them
in the main ignore file instead of adding them to the built ignore files
under tests.
The TODO() macro for adding new tests to the test suite has always meant
to be implemented like the TODO block in Test::More, i.e. a test that is
assumed to fail, and which warns if it unexpectedly succeeds.
Since GTest lacks the expressivity of Test::More, the implementation
just verifies that the tests marked as TODO actually fail, and will fail
if they happen to succeed - at which point the developer will have to
change the macro to SIMPLE or SKIP.
Even if gtester-report doesn't use that information (yet), we should
store the revision of Clutter that generated the report, and the date in
which the test suite was ran.
Instead of trying to run ./test-conformance with the -l option to
generate a list of available tests it now runs sed on the
test-conform-main.c file instead. Running the generated executable is
a pain for cross-compiling so it would be nice to avoid it unless it's
absolutely necessary. Although you could tell people who are cross
compiling to just disable the conformance tests, this seems a shame
because they could still be useful along with the wrappers for example
if the cross compile is built to a shared network folder where the
tests can be run on the actual device.
The sed script is a little more ugly than it could be because it tries
to avoid using the GNU extensions '\+' and '\|'.
The script ends up placing restrictions on the format of the C file
because the tests must all be listed on one line each. There is now a
comment to explain this. Hopefully the trade off is worth it.
http://bugzilla.clutter-project.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2363
This creates a 3D texture with different colors on all of the images
and renders it using a VBO to verify that the texture coordinates can
select all of the images.
This verifies that calling cogl_texture_get_data returns the same data
uploaded to the texture. The bottom quarter of the texture is replaced
using cogl_texture_set_region. It tries creating the texture with
different sizes and flags in the hope that it will hit different
texture backends.
The report generation was broken by the split of the various test units;
also, we were using GTest in a way that's not really sanctioned by
upstream.
This commit tries to re-use the targets from GLib's Makefile rules while
compensating for our own set up.
I was fed up to cd into the tests/conform or tests/interactive directories
to launch a specific test. Now, with the power the abs_ variants of
builddir and srcdir we can run specific test from any directory.
http://bugzilla.clutter-project.org/show_bug.cgi?id=2159
The -rdynamic linker option is specific to ELF so it was breaking
builds on systems with other object formats such as Windows and
Solaris. This patch replaces that option with -export-dynamic which is
a portable libtool option which should do the right thing on each
platform.
http://bugzilla.clutter-project.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1930