The glVersion was not set at all for gles causing any code doing a
hasGLVersion check to fail which means that the compositor doesn't
start at all, because it has a hasGLVersion(2, 0) check.
The complete ifdef is no longer needed. The used additional glGetStringi
is also available in gles 3.0, thus epoxy can handle it quite well
without a need for ifdef.
Unfortunately the version string can be "strange" on GLES. On desktop
it looks like: "3.0 some driver foo", on GLES it could also be:
"OpenGL ES 3.0 some driver bar". Thus to make the logic work we are
first removing any leading "OpenGL ES " and hope that then the version
is encoded just like on GL.
This adds new API in ShaderManager that makes it possible to request a
shader based on a set of traits. ShaderManager generates these shaders
on demand and caches them in a hash table.
Instead of getting size from displayWidth() and displayHeight() use
the information we have from Screens. This means there is only one
place to have the information and by that we can ensure that all
components use the same data to rely on. displayWidth/displayHeight
seem to provide the wrong information when unplugging an output
without disabling the output. This results in rendering artefacts.
But KWin::Screens has the correct information available.
It doesn't make sense to convert the extension names to QStrings.
This also replaces the QString parameter in hasGLExtension() with
a QByteArray and adjusts all callers.
Remove the manually written GL dispatch code, and use libepoxy
to resolve functions.
The only exceptions are GLX_MESA_swap_control, which is not in
the XML API registry, and GL_ARB_robustness/GL_EXT_robustness.
For the latter we want to resolve the functions to the same names
on both GLES and desktop GL, and plug in our own implementations
when the extension is not supported.
* add static cleanup handlers to GLTexturePrivate and GLRenderTarget
* revert the runtime resolved features (e.g. RenderTargets are not
supported once we run the cleanup code)
* clear the extension lists
* reset the version variables
REVIEW: 117484
Adds a cleanup() method to GLPLatform which deletes the static instance.
It gets invoked from cleanupGL() in kwinglutils on tear-down of the
OpenGL backend. Thus the backend doesn't leave incorrect GL info around.
E.g. if KWin starts with llvmpipe the recommended compositor is XRender.
So the backend and the platform is created. Now KWin starts the XRender
Compositor and the GLPlatform is still valid and when trying to load the
Blur or Contrast effect this will succeed as the GLPlatform data would
allow it. But on first try to use the Effect it will fail due to no
valid OpenGL context and even crash.
REVIEW: 117480
KWin already has a de facto OpenGL 2 dependency through QML. Combined
with the fact that the OpenGL 1 backend is basically unmaintained and
also unused, it's better to remove it for the new major release.
This change includes:
* Removal of cmake option KWIN_BUILD_OPENGL_1_COMPOSITING
* Removal of KWIN_HAVE_OPENGL_1 compile option and all code
ifdef'ed with it (partially removal of if-else constructs)
* Removal of CompositingType::OpenGL1Compositing (flags are kept
as a core flag should get introduced)
* Driver recommendation for OpenGL1Compositing changed to XRender
(should be evaluated whether the drivers can provide GL2)
* Removal of configuration option "GLLegacy"
* Removal of fooMatrix function in kwinglutils
* Removal of ARBBlurShader
* Removal of legacy code path in GLVertexBuffer
* Removal of GLShaderManager::disable
* if-blocks with ShaderManager::instance()->isValid() removed
REVIEW: 116042
Completing the task of replacing all NULL to nullptr in all the files in
libkwineffects folder.
(also substituting some "0" used as nullptr with nullptr)
REVIEW: 114823
* "" needs to be wrapped in QStringLiteral
* QString::fromUtf8 needed for const char* and QByteArray
* QByteArray::constData() needed to get to the const char*
Assume that the default framebuffer has the same dimensions as the screen.
By not quering the dimensions of the viewport we don't risk serialization
in drivers that use threaded dispatch.
This reduces the size of the geometry that needs to be uploaded by
one-third, and allows kwin to take advantage of the post-transform
cache in the GPU.
Expose bindArrays(), unbindArrays() and add a draw() method that takes
an offset and a count. This makes it possible to upload geometry, call
bindArrays(), and then call draw() multiple times to draw different
subsets of the uploaded geometry.
KWin always updates the array buffer binding before it calls GL functions
that reference it, so there is never any need to reset it.
This should eliminate half the calls to glBindBuffer() while painting
the scene.
These methods make it possible to write directly into the buffer object
when building vertex arrays.
If the buffer object cannot be mapped, the map() method will return
a pointer to local memory which will be submitted to the buffer object
with glBufferData() when unmap() is called.
This overload makes it possible to upload data of an arbitrary size and
type into the buffer object. The intent is for this method to be used
to upload interleaved vertex data.
This commit also adds setVertexCount() and setAttribLayout().
The rationale for decoupling attribute specification from data uploading
is that the attribute formats and layout change less frequently than
the vertex data.
The vertex count is also specified using a separate function to enable
the caller to upload data for multiple draw calls at the same time.
Store the formats as an array in GLVertexBufferPrivate.
This simplifies the code for enabling the generic vertex arrays,
and also makes it easier to add new arrays.
Consolidate the code for binding and unbinding the vertex arrays into
two new methods called bindArrays() and unbindArrays() respectively.
This patch also removes the three paint implementations, since the only
difference between them is the code that sets up the arrays. The actual
painting code is moved into GLVertexBuffer::render(), which uses the
new methods to bind and unbind the arrays.
In case OpenGL ES 3 is provided by the driver we can use the GLSL 1.40
shaders as GLSL 300 ES shaders. The #version declarative is rewritten in
such a case.
REVIEW: 110590
Allocate enough space to hold the geometry for multiple draw calls,
and use glMapBufferRange() to gradually fill the buffer. Once the
data store is full, it's orphaned and a new one is allocated.
Store the vertex positions and texture coordinates in the same buffer
object. This saves one buffer allocation in every setData() call.
The attributes are also interleaved as they are uploaded into the buffer
to maximize locality of reference.