blender/source/gameengine/Ketsji/KX_BlenderMaterial.cpp

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2011-02-25 13:35:59 +00:00
/** \file gameengine/Ketsji/KX_BlenderMaterial.cpp
* \ingroup ketsji
*/
// ------------------------------------
// ...
// ------------------------------------
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
#include "GL/glew.h"
#include "KX_BlenderMaterial.h"
#include "BL_Material.h"
#include "KX_Scene.h"
#include "KX_Light.h"
#include "KX_GameObject.h"
#include "KX_MeshProxy.h"
#include "MT_Vector3.h"
#include "MT_Vector4.h"
#include "MT_Matrix4x4.h"
#include "RAS_BucketManager.h"
#include "RAS_MeshObject.h"
#include "RAS_IRasterizer.h"
#include "RAS_OpenGLRasterizer/RAS_GLExtensionManager.h"
#include "GPU_draw.h"
#include "STR_HashedString.h"
// ------------------------------------
#include "DNA_object_types.h"
#include "DNA_material_types.h"
#include "DNA_image_types.h"
Added custom vertex/edge/face data for meshes: All data layers, including MVert/MEdge/MFace, are now managed as custom data layers. The pointers like Mesh.mvert, Mesh.dvert or Mesh.mcol are still used of course, but allocating, copying or freeing these arrays should be done through the CustomData API. Work in progress documentation on this is here: http://mediawiki.blender.org/index.php/BlenderDev/BlenderArchitecture/CustomData Replaced TFace by MTFace: This is the same struct, except that it does not contain color, that now always stays separated in MCol. This was not a good design decision to begin with, and it is needed for adding multiple color layers later. Note that this does mean older Blender versions will not be able to read UV coordinates from the next release, due to an SDNA limitation. Removed DispListMesh: This now fully replaced by DerivedMesh. To provide access to arrays of vertices, edges and faces, like DispListMesh does. The semantics of the DerivedMesh.getVertArray() and similar functions were changed to return a pointer to an array if one exists, or otherwise allocate a temporary one. On releasing the DerivedMesh, this temporary array will be removed automatically. Removed ssDM and meshDM DerivedMesh backends: The ssDM backend was for DispListMesh, so that became obsolete automatically. The meshDM backend was replaced by the custom data backend, that now figures out which layers need to be modified, and only duplicates those. This changes code in many places, and overall removes 2514 lines of code. So, there's a good chance this might break some stuff, although I've been testing it for a few days now. The good news is, adding multiple color and uv layers should now become easy.
2006-11-20 04:28:02 +00:00
#include "DNA_meshdata_types.h"
#include "BKE_mesh.h"
// ------------------------------------
TexFace to Material Settings big patch Summary: ======== The idea here is to move the texface options into the material panel. For images with the change please visit: http://code.blender.org/index.php/2011/09/bge-material-texface-changes 1 - Some of the legacy problems 2.49 and 2.5x has with the texface system: ========================================================================== 1.1) Shadow, Bilboard and Halo are mutual exclusive (in the code), yet you can select a face to be more than one mode. 1.2) Sort only works for blend Alpha yet it's an option regardless of the Transparency Blend you pick. 1.3) Shared doesn't affect anything in BGE. 1.4) ObColor only works for Text objects (old bitmap texts) when using Texture Face Materials. (not address yet, I so far ignored obcolor) 2 - Notes: ============ 2.1) Now "Use Face Textures" in material Option panel will work in Multitexture even if there is no texture channel. 2.2) In FaceTexture mode it will use TexFace all the time, even if you don't check the "Use Texture Face" option in the UI. It's a matter of decision, since the code for either way is there. I decided by the solution that makes the creation of a material fast - in this mode the user doesn't need to mess with textures or this "Use Texture Face" option at all. I'm not strong in my opinion here. But I think if we don't have this then what is the point of the Texture Face mode? 2.3) I kept references for tface only when we need the image, UV or the tiling setting. It should help later when/if we split the Image and UV layers from the tface struct (Campbell and Brecht proposal). 3 - Changes in a Nutshell: ========================== 3.1) "Texture Face" panel (in the Mesh/Object Data panel) no longer exists. Those settings are all part of the material properties, visible when Game Render is set. 3.2) "Texture Face" Shading mode (in the Render panel) is now called “Single Texture”, it needs a material for special settings (e.g. Billboard, Alpha Sort, …). 3.3) New options in the Material Panel * Shadeless option in the Material panel is now supported for all three Shading modes. * Physics is now toggleable, this is the old Collision option. * Two Side (on) is now called Back Culling (off). * Alpha Sort is one of the Alpha options, together (and mutually exclusive) to Alpha Blend, Alpha Clip, Add and Opaque (i.e. solid). * Shadow, Billboard and Halo are grouped in the “Face Orientation” property. * "Face Textures" and "Face Textures Alpha" (under Options) can be used for all but GLSL shading mode (to be supported in GLSL eventually). * The backend in the game engine is still the same as before. The only changes are in the interface and in the way you need to think your materials. The bottomline is: It’s no longer possible to share materials between faces that do not share the same game properties. 4 - Acknowledgment: ================== Mike Pan for the design discussions, and testing along the whole development process. Vitor Balbio for the first hands-on code with the interface changes. That helped me a lot to push me into work on that. Benoit Bolsee and Brecht van Lommel for patch review (* no one reviewed the whole patch, or the latest iteractions, so I still hold liability for any problems). Blender artists that gave feedback and helped testing the patch. Patch review and original documentation can be found here: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Dfelinto/TexFace http://codereview.appspot.com/4289041/
2011-09-19 19:55:59 +00:00
#include "BLI_utildefines.h"
#define spit(x) std::cout << x << std::endl;
BL_Shader *KX_BlenderMaterial::mLastShader = NULL;
BL_BlenderShader *KX_BlenderMaterial::mLastBlenderShader = NULL;
//static PyObject *gTextureDict = 0;
KX_BlenderMaterial::KX_BlenderMaterial()
: PyObjectPlus(),
RAS_IPolyMaterial(),
mMaterial(NULL),
mShader(0),
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
mBlenderShader(0),
mScene(NULL),
mUserDefBlend(0),
mModified(0),
mConstructed(false),
mPass(0)
{
}
void KX_BlenderMaterial::Initialize(
TexFace to Material Settings big patch Summary: ======== The idea here is to move the texface options into the material panel. For images with the change please visit: http://code.blender.org/index.php/2011/09/bge-material-texface-changes 1 - Some of the legacy problems 2.49 and 2.5x has with the texface system: ========================================================================== 1.1) Shadow, Bilboard and Halo are mutual exclusive (in the code), yet you can select a face to be more than one mode. 1.2) Sort only works for blend Alpha yet it's an option regardless of the Transparency Blend you pick. 1.3) Shared doesn't affect anything in BGE. 1.4) ObColor only works for Text objects (old bitmap texts) when using Texture Face Materials. (not address yet, I so far ignored obcolor) 2 - Notes: ============ 2.1) Now "Use Face Textures" in material Option panel will work in Multitexture even if there is no texture channel. 2.2) In FaceTexture mode it will use TexFace all the time, even if you don't check the "Use Texture Face" option in the UI. It's a matter of decision, since the code for either way is there. I decided by the solution that makes the creation of a material fast - in this mode the user doesn't need to mess with textures or this "Use Texture Face" option at all. I'm not strong in my opinion here. But I think if we don't have this then what is the point of the Texture Face mode? 2.3) I kept references for tface only when we need the image, UV or the tiling setting. It should help later when/if we split the Image and UV layers from the tface struct (Campbell and Brecht proposal). 3 - Changes in a Nutshell: ========================== 3.1) "Texture Face" panel (in the Mesh/Object Data panel) no longer exists. Those settings are all part of the material properties, visible when Game Render is set. 3.2) "Texture Face" Shading mode (in the Render panel) is now called “Single Texture”, it needs a material for special settings (e.g. Billboard, Alpha Sort, …). 3.3) New options in the Material Panel * Shadeless option in the Material panel is now supported for all three Shading modes. * Physics is now toggleable, this is the old Collision option. * Two Side (on) is now called Back Culling (off). * Alpha Sort is one of the Alpha options, together (and mutually exclusive) to Alpha Blend, Alpha Clip, Add and Opaque (i.e. solid). * Shadow, Billboard and Halo are grouped in the “Face Orientation” property. * "Face Textures" and "Face Textures Alpha" (under Options) can be used for all but GLSL shading mode (to be supported in GLSL eventually). * The backend in the game engine is still the same as before. The only changes are in the interface and in the way you need to think your materials. The bottomline is: It’s no longer possible to share materials between faces that do not share the same game properties. 4 - Acknowledgment: ================== Mike Pan for the design discussions, and testing along the whole development process. Vitor Balbio for the first hands-on code with the interface changes. That helped me a lot to push me into work on that. Benoit Bolsee and Brecht van Lommel for patch review (* no one reviewed the whole patch, or the latest iteractions, so I still hold liability for any problems). Blender artists that gave feedback and helped testing the patch. Patch review and original documentation can be found here: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Dfelinto/TexFace http://codereview.appspot.com/4289041/
2011-09-19 19:55:59 +00:00
KX_Scene *scene,
BL_Material *data,
GameSettings *game)
{
RAS_IPolyMaterial::Initialize(
TexFace to Material Settings big patch Summary: ======== The idea here is to move the texface options into the material panel. For images with the change please visit: http://code.blender.org/index.php/2011/09/bge-material-texface-changes 1 - Some of the legacy problems 2.49 and 2.5x has with the texface system: ========================================================================== 1.1) Shadow, Bilboard and Halo are mutual exclusive (in the code), yet you can select a face to be more than one mode. 1.2) Sort only works for blend Alpha yet it's an option regardless of the Transparency Blend you pick. 1.3) Shared doesn't affect anything in BGE. 1.4) ObColor only works for Text objects (old bitmap texts) when using Texture Face Materials. (not address yet, I so far ignored obcolor) 2 - Notes: ============ 2.1) Now "Use Face Textures" in material Option panel will work in Multitexture even if there is no texture channel. 2.2) In FaceTexture mode it will use TexFace all the time, even if you don't check the "Use Texture Face" option in the UI. It's a matter of decision, since the code for either way is there. I decided by the solution that makes the creation of a material fast - in this mode the user doesn't need to mess with textures or this "Use Texture Face" option at all. I'm not strong in my opinion here. But I think if we don't have this then what is the point of the Texture Face mode? 2.3) I kept references for tface only when we need the image, UV or the tiling setting. It should help later when/if we split the Image and UV layers from the tface struct (Campbell and Brecht proposal). 3 - Changes in a Nutshell: ========================== 3.1) "Texture Face" panel (in the Mesh/Object Data panel) no longer exists. Those settings are all part of the material properties, visible when Game Render is set. 3.2) "Texture Face" Shading mode (in the Render panel) is now called “Single Texture”, it needs a material for special settings (e.g. Billboard, Alpha Sort, …). 3.3) New options in the Material Panel * Shadeless option in the Material panel is now supported for all three Shading modes. * Physics is now toggleable, this is the old Collision option. * Two Side (on) is now called Back Culling (off). * Alpha Sort is one of the Alpha options, together (and mutually exclusive) to Alpha Blend, Alpha Clip, Add and Opaque (i.e. solid). * Shadow, Billboard and Halo are grouped in the “Face Orientation” property. * "Face Textures" and "Face Textures Alpha" (under Options) can be used for all but GLSL shading mode (to be supported in GLSL eventually). * The backend in the game engine is still the same as before. The only changes are in the interface and in the way you need to think your materials. The bottomline is: It’s no longer possible to share materials between faces that do not share the same game properties. 4 - Acknowledgment: ================== Mike Pan for the design discussions, and testing along the whole development process. Vitor Balbio for the first hands-on code with the interface changes. That helped me a lot to push me into work on that. Benoit Bolsee and Brecht van Lommel for patch review (* no one reviewed the whole patch, or the latest iteractions, so I still hold liability for any problems). Blender artists that gave feedback and helped testing the patch. Patch review and original documentation can be found here: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Dfelinto/TexFace http://codereview.appspot.com/4289041/
2011-09-19 19:55:59 +00:00
data->texname[0],
data->matname,
data->materialindex,
data->tile,
data->tilexrep[0],
data->tileyrep[0],
data->alphablend,
((data->ras_mode &ALPHA)!=0),
((data->ras_mode &ZSORT)!=0),
((data->ras_mode &USE_LIGHT)!=0),
((data->ras_mode &TEX)),
game
);
mMaterial = data;
mShader = 0;
mBlenderShader = 0;
mScene = scene;
mUserDefBlend = 0;
mModified = 0;
mConstructed = false;
mPass = 0;
// --------------------------------
2011-09-01 02:12:53 +00:00
// RAS_IPolyMaterial variables...
m_flag |= RAS_BLENDERMAT;
m_flag |= (mMaterial->IdMode>=ONETEX)? RAS_MULTITEX: 0;
m_flag |= ((mMaterial->ras_mode & USE_LIGHT)!=0)? RAS_MULTILIGHT: 0;
m_flag |= (mMaterial->glslmat)? RAS_BLENDERGLSL: 0;
m_flag |= ((mMaterial->ras_mode & CAST_SHADOW)!=0)? RAS_CASTSHADOW: 0;
// figure max
int enabled = mMaterial->num_enabled;
int max = BL_Texture::GetMaxUnits();
mMaterial->num_enabled = enabled>=max?max:enabled;
// test the sum of the various modes for equality
2011-09-01 02:12:53 +00:00
// so we can ether accept or reject this material
// as being equal, this is rather important to
// prevent material bleeding
for (int i=0; i<mMaterial->num_enabled; i++) {
2011-09-01 02:12:53 +00:00
m_multimode += (mMaterial->flag[i] + mMaterial->blend_mode[i]);
}
TexFace to Material Settings big patch Summary: ======== The idea here is to move the texface options into the material panel. For images with the change please visit: http://code.blender.org/index.php/2011/09/bge-material-texface-changes 1 - Some of the legacy problems 2.49 and 2.5x has with the texface system: ========================================================================== 1.1) Shadow, Bilboard and Halo are mutual exclusive (in the code), yet you can select a face to be more than one mode. 1.2) Sort only works for blend Alpha yet it's an option regardless of the Transparency Blend you pick. 1.3) Shared doesn't affect anything in BGE. 1.4) ObColor only works for Text objects (old bitmap texts) when using Texture Face Materials. (not address yet, I so far ignored obcolor) 2 - Notes: ============ 2.1) Now "Use Face Textures" in material Option panel will work in Multitexture even if there is no texture channel. 2.2) In FaceTexture mode it will use TexFace all the time, even if you don't check the "Use Texture Face" option in the UI. It's a matter of decision, since the code for either way is there. I decided by the solution that makes the creation of a material fast - in this mode the user doesn't need to mess with textures or this "Use Texture Face" option at all. I'm not strong in my opinion here. But I think if we don't have this then what is the point of the Texture Face mode? 2.3) I kept references for tface only when we need the image, UV or the tiling setting. It should help later when/if we split the Image and UV layers from the tface struct (Campbell and Brecht proposal). 3 - Changes in a Nutshell: ========================== 3.1) "Texture Face" panel (in the Mesh/Object Data panel) no longer exists. Those settings are all part of the material properties, visible when Game Render is set. 3.2) "Texture Face" Shading mode (in the Render panel) is now called “Single Texture”, it needs a material for special settings (e.g. Billboard, Alpha Sort, …). 3.3) New options in the Material Panel * Shadeless option in the Material panel is now supported for all three Shading modes. * Physics is now toggleable, this is the old Collision option. * Two Side (on) is now called Back Culling (off). * Alpha Sort is one of the Alpha options, together (and mutually exclusive) to Alpha Blend, Alpha Clip, Add and Opaque (i.e. solid). * Shadow, Billboard and Halo are grouped in the “Face Orientation” property. * "Face Textures" and "Face Textures Alpha" (under Options) can be used for all but GLSL shading mode (to be supported in GLSL eventually). * The backend in the game engine is still the same as before. The only changes are in the interface and in the way you need to think your materials. The bottomline is: It’s no longer possible to share materials between faces that do not share the same game properties. 4 - Acknowledgment: ================== Mike Pan for the design discussions, and testing along the whole development process. Vitor Balbio for the first hands-on code with the interface changes. That helped me a lot to push me into work on that. Benoit Bolsee and Brecht van Lommel for patch review (* no one reviewed the whole patch, or the latest iteractions, so I still hold liability for any problems). Blender artists that gave feedback and helped testing the patch. Patch review and original documentation can be found here: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Dfelinto/TexFace http://codereview.appspot.com/4289041/
2011-09-19 19:55:59 +00:00
m_multimode += mMaterial->IdMode+ (mMaterial->ras_mode & ~(USE_LIGHT));
}
KX_BlenderMaterial::~KX_BlenderMaterial()
{
// cleanup work
if (mConstructed)
// clean only if material was actually used
OnExit();
}
Added custom vertex/edge/face data for meshes: All data layers, including MVert/MEdge/MFace, are now managed as custom data layers. The pointers like Mesh.mvert, Mesh.dvert or Mesh.mcol are still used of course, but allocating, copying or freeing these arrays should be done through the CustomData API. Work in progress documentation on this is here: http://mediawiki.blender.org/index.php/BlenderDev/BlenderArchitecture/CustomData Replaced TFace by MTFace: This is the same struct, except that it does not contain color, that now always stays separated in MCol. This was not a good design decision to begin with, and it is needed for adding multiple color layers later. Note that this does mean older Blender versions will not be able to read UV coordinates from the next release, due to an SDNA limitation. Removed DispListMesh: This now fully replaced by DerivedMesh. To provide access to arrays of vertices, edges and faces, like DispListMesh does. The semantics of the DerivedMesh.getVertArray() and similar functions were changed to return a pointer to an array if one exists, or otherwise allocate a temporary one. On releasing the DerivedMesh, this temporary array will be removed automatically. Removed ssDM and meshDM DerivedMesh backends: The ssDM backend was for DispListMesh, so that became obsolete automatically. The meshDM backend was replaced by the custom data backend, that now figures out which layers need to be modified, and only duplicates those. This changes code in many places, and overall removes 2514 lines of code. So, there's a good chance this might break some stuff, although I've been testing it for a few days now. The good news is, adding multiple color and uv layers should now become easy.
2006-11-20 04:28:02 +00:00
MTFace* KX_BlenderMaterial::GetMTFace(void) const
{
// fonts on polys
MT_assert(mMaterial->tface);
return mMaterial->tface;
}
Added custom vertex/edge/face data for meshes: All data layers, including MVert/MEdge/MFace, are now managed as custom data layers. The pointers like Mesh.mvert, Mesh.dvert or Mesh.mcol are still used of course, but allocating, copying or freeing these arrays should be done through the CustomData API. Work in progress documentation on this is here: http://mediawiki.blender.org/index.php/BlenderDev/BlenderArchitecture/CustomData Replaced TFace by MTFace: This is the same struct, except that it does not contain color, that now always stays separated in MCol. This was not a good design decision to begin with, and it is needed for adding multiple color layers later. Note that this does mean older Blender versions will not be able to read UV coordinates from the next release, due to an SDNA limitation. Removed DispListMesh: This now fully replaced by DerivedMesh. To provide access to arrays of vertices, edges and faces, like DispListMesh does. The semantics of the DerivedMesh.getVertArray() and similar functions were changed to return a pointer to an array if one exists, or otherwise allocate a temporary one. On releasing the DerivedMesh, this temporary array will be removed automatically. Removed ssDM and meshDM DerivedMesh backends: The ssDM backend was for DispListMesh, so that became obsolete automatically. The meshDM backend was replaced by the custom data backend, that now figures out which layers need to be modified, and only duplicates those. This changes code in many places, and overall removes 2514 lines of code. So, there's a good chance this might break some stuff, although I've been testing it for a few days now. The good news is, adding multiple color and uv layers should now become easy.
2006-11-20 04:28:02 +00:00
unsigned int* KX_BlenderMaterial::GetMCol(void) const
{
// fonts on polys
return mMaterial->rgb;
}
void KX_BlenderMaterial::GetMaterialRGBAColor(unsigned char *rgba) const
{
if (mMaterial) {
*rgba++ = (unsigned char) (mMaterial->matcolor[0]*255.0);
*rgba++ = (unsigned char) (mMaterial->matcolor[1]*255.0);
*rgba++ = (unsigned char) (mMaterial->matcolor[2]*255.0);
*rgba++ = (unsigned char) (mMaterial->matcolor[3]*255.0);
} else
RAS_IPolyMaterial::GetMaterialRGBAColor(rgba);
}
Material *KX_BlenderMaterial::GetBlenderMaterial() const
{
return mMaterial->material;
}
Scene* KX_BlenderMaterial::GetBlenderScene() const
{
return mScene->GetBlenderScene();
}
void KX_BlenderMaterial::ReleaseMaterial()
{
if (mBlenderShader)
mBlenderShader->ReloadMaterial();
}
void KX_BlenderMaterial::OnConstruction(int layer)
{
if (mConstructed)
// when material are reused between objects
return;
if (mMaterial->glslmat)
SetBlenderGLSLShader(layer);
// for each unique material...
int i;
for (i=0; i<mMaterial->num_enabled; i++) {
if ( mMaterial->mapping[i].mapping & USEENV ) {
if (!GLEW_ARB_texture_cube_map) {
spit("CubeMap textures not supported");
continue;
}
if (!mTextures[i].InitCubeMap(i, mMaterial->cubemap[i] ) )
spit("unable to initialize image("<<i<<") in "<<
mMaterial->matname<< ", image will not be available");
}
else {
if ( mMaterial->img[i] ) {
if ( ! mTextures[i].InitFromImage(i, mMaterial->img[i], (mMaterial->flag[i] &MIPMAP)!=0 ))
spit("unable to initialize image("<<i<<") in "<<
mMaterial->matname<< ", image will not be available");
}
}
}
mBlendFunc[0] =0;
mBlendFunc[1] =0;
mConstructed = true;
}
void KX_BlenderMaterial::EndFrame()
{
if (mLastBlenderShader) {
mLastBlenderShader->SetProg(false);
mLastBlenderShader = NULL;
}
if (mLastShader) {
mLastShader->SetProg(false);
mLastShader = NULL;
}
}
void KX_BlenderMaterial::OnExit()
{
if ( mShader ) {
//note, the shader here is allocated, per unique material
//and this function is called per face
if (mShader == mLastShader) {
mShader->SetProg(false);
mLastShader = NULL;
}
delete mShader;
mShader = 0;
}
if ( mBlenderShader ) {
if (mBlenderShader == mLastBlenderShader) {
mBlenderShader->SetProg(false);
mLastBlenderShader = NULL;
}
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
delete mBlenderShader;
mBlenderShader = 0;
}
BL_Texture::ActivateFirst();
for (int i=0; i<mMaterial->num_enabled; i++) {
BL_Texture::ActivateUnit(i);
mTextures[i].DeleteTex();
mTextures[i].DisableUnit();
}
/* used to call with 'mMaterial->tface' but this can be a freed array,
* see: [#30493], so just call with NULL, this is best since it clears
* the 'lastface' pointer in GPU too - campbell */
if (mMaterial->tface) {
GPU_set_tpage(NULL, 1, mMaterial->alphablend);
}
}
void KX_BlenderMaterial::setShaderData( bool enable, RAS_IRasterizer *ras)
{
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
MT_assert(GLEW_ARB_shader_objects && mShader);
int i;
if ( !enable || !mShader->Ok() ) {
// frame cleanup.
if (mShader == mLastShader) {
mShader->SetProg(false);
mLastShader = NULL;
}
TexFace to Material Settings big patch Summary: ======== The idea here is to move the texface options into the material panel. For images with the change please visit: http://code.blender.org/index.php/2011/09/bge-material-texface-changes 1 - Some of the legacy problems 2.49 and 2.5x has with the texface system: ========================================================================== 1.1) Shadow, Bilboard and Halo are mutual exclusive (in the code), yet you can select a face to be more than one mode. 1.2) Sort only works for blend Alpha yet it's an option regardless of the Transparency Blend you pick. 1.3) Shared doesn't affect anything in BGE. 1.4) ObColor only works for Text objects (old bitmap texts) when using Texture Face Materials. (not address yet, I so far ignored obcolor) 2 - Notes: ============ 2.1) Now "Use Face Textures" in material Option panel will work in Multitexture even if there is no texture channel. 2.2) In FaceTexture mode it will use TexFace all the time, even if you don't check the "Use Texture Face" option in the UI. It's a matter of decision, since the code for either way is there. I decided by the solution that makes the creation of a material fast - in this mode the user doesn't need to mess with textures or this "Use Texture Face" option at all. I'm not strong in my opinion here. But I think if we don't have this then what is the point of the Texture Face mode? 2.3) I kept references for tface only when we need the image, UV or the tiling setting. It should help later when/if we split the Image and UV layers from the tface struct (Campbell and Brecht proposal). 3 - Changes in a Nutshell: ========================== 3.1) "Texture Face" panel (in the Mesh/Object Data panel) no longer exists. Those settings are all part of the material properties, visible when Game Render is set. 3.2) "Texture Face" Shading mode (in the Render panel) is now called “Single Texture”, it needs a material for special settings (e.g. Billboard, Alpha Sort, …). 3.3) New options in the Material Panel * Shadeless option in the Material panel is now supported for all three Shading modes. * Physics is now toggleable, this is the old Collision option. * Two Side (on) is now called Back Culling (off). * Alpha Sort is one of the Alpha options, together (and mutually exclusive) to Alpha Blend, Alpha Clip, Add and Opaque (i.e. solid). * Shadow, Billboard and Halo are grouped in the “Face Orientation” property. * "Face Textures" and "Face Textures Alpha" (under Options) can be used for all but GLSL shading mode (to be supported in GLSL eventually). * The backend in the game engine is still the same as before. The only changes are in the interface and in the way you need to think your materials. The bottomline is: It’s no longer possible to share materials between faces that do not share the same game properties. 4 - Acknowledgment: ================== Mike Pan for the design discussions, and testing along the whole development process. Vitor Balbio for the first hands-on code with the interface changes. That helped me a lot to push me into work on that. Benoit Bolsee and Brecht van Lommel for patch review (* no one reviewed the whole patch, or the latest iteractions, so I still hold liability for any problems). Blender artists that gave feedback and helped testing the patch. Patch review and original documentation can be found here: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Dfelinto/TexFace http://codereview.appspot.com/4289041/
2011-09-19 19:55:59 +00:00
ras->SetAlphaBlend(TF_SOLID);
BL_Texture::DisableAllTextures();
return;
}
BL_Texture::DisableAllTextures();
mShader->SetProg(true);
mLastShader = mShader;
BL_Texture::ActivateFirst();
mShader->ApplyShader();
// for each enabled unit
for (i=0; i<mMaterial->num_enabled; i++) {
if (!mTextures[i].Ok()) continue;
mTextures[i].ActivateTexture();
mTextures[0].SetMapping(mMaterial->mapping[i].mapping);
}
if (!mUserDefBlend) {
TexFace to Material Settings big patch Summary: ======== The idea here is to move the texface options into the material panel. For images with the change please visit: http://code.blender.org/index.php/2011/09/bge-material-texface-changes 1 - Some of the legacy problems 2.49 and 2.5x has with the texface system: ========================================================================== 1.1) Shadow, Bilboard and Halo are mutual exclusive (in the code), yet you can select a face to be more than one mode. 1.2) Sort only works for blend Alpha yet it's an option regardless of the Transparency Blend you pick. 1.3) Shared doesn't affect anything in BGE. 1.4) ObColor only works for Text objects (old bitmap texts) when using Texture Face Materials. (not address yet, I so far ignored obcolor) 2 - Notes: ============ 2.1) Now "Use Face Textures" in material Option panel will work in Multitexture even if there is no texture channel. 2.2) In FaceTexture mode it will use TexFace all the time, even if you don't check the "Use Texture Face" option in the UI. It's a matter of decision, since the code for either way is there. I decided by the solution that makes the creation of a material fast - in this mode the user doesn't need to mess with textures or this "Use Texture Face" option at all. I'm not strong in my opinion here. But I think if we don't have this then what is the point of the Texture Face mode? 2.3) I kept references for tface only when we need the image, UV or the tiling setting. It should help later when/if we split the Image and UV layers from the tface struct (Campbell and Brecht proposal). 3 - Changes in a Nutshell: ========================== 3.1) "Texture Face" panel (in the Mesh/Object Data panel) no longer exists. Those settings are all part of the material properties, visible when Game Render is set. 3.2) "Texture Face" Shading mode (in the Render panel) is now called “Single Texture”, it needs a material for special settings (e.g. Billboard, Alpha Sort, …). 3.3) New options in the Material Panel * Shadeless option in the Material panel is now supported for all three Shading modes. * Physics is now toggleable, this is the old Collision option. * Two Side (on) is now called Back Culling (off). * Alpha Sort is one of the Alpha options, together (and mutually exclusive) to Alpha Blend, Alpha Clip, Add and Opaque (i.e. solid). * Shadow, Billboard and Halo are grouped in the “Face Orientation” property. * "Face Textures" and "Face Textures Alpha" (under Options) can be used for all but GLSL shading mode (to be supported in GLSL eventually). * The backend in the game engine is still the same as before. The only changes are in the interface and in the way you need to think your materials. The bottomline is: It’s no longer possible to share materials between faces that do not share the same game properties. 4 - Acknowledgment: ================== Mike Pan for the design discussions, and testing along the whole development process. Vitor Balbio for the first hands-on code with the interface changes. That helped me a lot to push me into work on that. Benoit Bolsee and Brecht van Lommel for patch review (* no one reviewed the whole patch, or the latest iteractions, so I still hold liability for any problems). Blender artists that gave feedback and helped testing the patch. Patch review and original documentation can be found here: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Dfelinto/TexFace http://codereview.appspot.com/4289041/
2011-09-19 19:55:59 +00:00
ras->SetAlphaBlend(mMaterial->alphablend);
}
else {
TexFace to Material Settings big patch Summary: ======== The idea here is to move the texface options into the material panel. For images with the change please visit: http://code.blender.org/index.php/2011/09/bge-material-texface-changes 1 - Some of the legacy problems 2.49 and 2.5x has with the texface system: ========================================================================== 1.1) Shadow, Bilboard and Halo are mutual exclusive (in the code), yet you can select a face to be more than one mode. 1.2) Sort only works for blend Alpha yet it's an option regardless of the Transparency Blend you pick. 1.3) Shared doesn't affect anything in BGE. 1.4) ObColor only works for Text objects (old bitmap texts) when using Texture Face Materials. (not address yet, I so far ignored obcolor) 2 - Notes: ============ 2.1) Now "Use Face Textures" in material Option panel will work in Multitexture even if there is no texture channel. 2.2) In FaceTexture mode it will use TexFace all the time, even if you don't check the "Use Texture Face" option in the UI. It's a matter of decision, since the code for either way is there. I decided by the solution that makes the creation of a material fast - in this mode the user doesn't need to mess with textures or this "Use Texture Face" option at all. I'm not strong in my opinion here. But I think if we don't have this then what is the point of the Texture Face mode? 2.3) I kept references for tface only when we need the image, UV or the tiling setting. It should help later when/if we split the Image and UV layers from the tface struct (Campbell and Brecht proposal). 3 - Changes in a Nutshell: ========================== 3.1) "Texture Face" panel (in the Mesh/Object Data panel) no longer exists. Those settings are all part of the material properties, visible when Game Render is set. 3.2) "Texture Face" Shading mode (in the Render panel) is now called “Single Texture”, it needs a material for special settings (e.g. Billboard, Alpha Sort, …). 3.3) New options in the Material Panel * Shadeless option in the Material panel is now supported for all three Shading modes. * Physics is now toggleable, this is the old Collision option. * Two Side (on) is now called Back Culling (off). * Alpha Sort is one of the Alpha options, together (and mutually exclusive) to Alpha Blend, Alpha Clip, Add and Opaque (i.e. solid). * Shadow, Billboard and Halo are grouped in the “Face Orientation” property. * "Face Textures" and "Face Textures Alpha" (under Options) can be used for all but GLSL shading mode (to be supported in GLSL eventually). * The backend in the game engine is still the same as before. The only changes are in the interface and in the way you need to think your materials. The bottomline is: It’s no longer possible to share materials between faces that do not share the same game properties. 4 - Acknowledgment: ================== Mike Pan for the design discussions, and testing along the whole development process. Vitor Balbio for the first hands-on code with the interface changes. That helped me a lot to push me into work on that. Benoit Bolsee and Brecht van Lommel for patch review (* no one reviewed the whole patch, or the latest iteractions, so I still hold liability for any problems). Blender artists that gave feedback and helped testing the patch. Patch review and original documentation can be found here: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Dfelinto/TexFace http://codereview.appspot.com/4289041/
2011-09-19 19:55:59 +00:00
ras->SetAlphaBlend(TF_SOLID);
ras->SetAlphaBlend(-1); // indicates custom mode
// tested to be valid enums
glEnable(GL_BLEND);
glBlendFunc(mBlendFunc[0], mBlendFunc[1]);
}
}
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
void KX_BlenderMaterial::setBlenderShaderData( bool enable, RAS_IRasterizer *ras)
{
if ( !enable || !mBlenderShader->Ok() ) {
TexFace to Material Settings big patch Summary: ======== The idea here is to move the texface options into the material panel. For images with the change please visit: http://code.blender.org/index.php/2011/09/bge-material-texface-changes 1 - Some of the legacy problems 2.49 and 2.5x has with the texface system: ========================================================================== 1.1) Shadow, Bilboard and Halo are mutual exclusive (in the code), yet you can select a face to be more than one mode. 1.2) Sort only works for blend Alpha yet it's an option regardless of the Transparency Blend you pick. 1.3) Shared doesn't affect anything in BGE. 1.4) ObColor only works for Text objects (old bitmap texts) when using Texture Face Materials. (not address yet, I so far ignored obcolor) 2 - Notes: ============ 2.1) Now "Use Face Textures" in material Option panel will work in Multitexture even if there is no texture channel. 2.2) In FaceTexture mode it will use TexFace all the time, even if you don't check the "Use Texture Face" option in the UI. It's a matter of decision, since the code for either way is there. I decided by the solution that makes the creation of a material fast - in this mode the user doesn't need to mess with textures or this "Use Texture Face" option at all. I'm not strong in my opinion here. But I think if we don't have this then what is the point of the Texture Face mode? 2.3) I kept references for tface only when we need the image, UV or the tiling setting. It should help later when/if we split the Image and UV layers from the tface struct (Campbell and Brecht proposal). 3 - Changes in a Nutshell: ========================== 3.1) "Texture Face" panel (in the Mesh/Object Data panel) no longer exists. Those settings are all part of the material properties, visible when Game Render is set. 3.2) "Texture Face" Shading mode (in the Render panel) is now called “Single Texture”, it needs a material for special settings (e.g. Billboard, Alpha Sort, …). 3.3) New options in the Material Panel * Shadeless option in the Material panel is now supported for all three Shading modes. * Physics is now toggleable, this is the old Collision option. * Two Side (on) is now called Back Culling (off). * Alpha Sort is one of the Alpha options, together (and mutually exclusive) to Alpha Blend, Alpha Clip, Add and Opaque (i.e. solid). * Shadow, Billboard and Halo are grouped in the “Face Orientation” property. * "Face Textures" and "Face Textures Alpha" (under Options) can be used for all but GLSL shading mode (to be supported in GLSL eventually). * The backend in the game engine is still the same as before. The only changes are in the interface and in the way you need to think your materials. The bottomline is: It’s no longer possible to share materials between faces that do not share the same game properties. 4 - Acknowledgment: ================== Mike Pan for the design discussions, and testing along the whole development process. Vitor Balbio for the first hands-on code with the interface changes. That helped me a lot to push me into work on that. Benoit Bolsee and Brecht van Lommel for patch review (* no one reviewed the whole patch, or the latest iteractions, so I still hold liability for any problems). Blender artists that gave feedback and helped testing the patch. Patch review and original documentation can be found here: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Dfelinto/TexFace http://codereview.appspot.com/4289041/
2011-09-19 19:55:59 +00:00
ras->SetAlphaBlend(TF_SOLID);
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
// frame cleanup.
if (mLastBlenderShader) {
mLastBlenderShader->SetProg(false);
mLastBlenderShader= NULL;
}
else
BL_Texture::DisableAllTextures();
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
return;
}
if (!mBlenderShader->Equals(mLastBlenderShader)) {
TexFace to Material Settings big patch Summary: ======== The idea here is to move the texface options into the material panel. For images with the change please visit: http://code.blender.org/index.php/2011/09/bge-material-texface-changes 1 - Some of the legacy problems 2.49 and 2.5x has with the texface system: ========================================================================== 1.1) Shadow, Bilboard and Halo are mutual exclusive (in the code), yet you can select a face to be more than one mode. 1.2) Sort only works for blend Alpha yet it's an option regardless of the Transparency Blend you pick. 1.3) Shared doesn't affect anything in BGE. 1.4) ObColor only works for Text objects (old bitmap texts) when using Texture Face Materials. (not address yet, I so far ignored obcolor) 2 - Notes: ============ 2.1) Now "Use Face Textures" in material Option panel will work in Multitexture even if there is no texture channel. 2.2) In FaceTexture mode it will use TexFace all the time, even if you don't check the "Use Texture Face" option in the UI. It's a matter of decision, since the code for either way is there. I decided by the solution that makes the creation of a material fast - in this mode the user doesn't need to mess with textures or this "Use Texture Face" option at all. I'm not strong in my opinion here. But I think if we don't have this then what is the point of the Texture Face mode? 2.3) I kept references for tface only when we need the image, UV or the tiling setting. It should help later when/if we split the Image and UV layers from the tface struct (Campbell and Brecht proposal). 3 - Changes in a Nutshell: ========================== 3.1) "Texture Face" panel (in the Mesh/Object Data panel) no longer exists. Those settings are all part of the material properties, visible when Game Render is set. 3.2) "Texture Face" Shading mode (in the Render panel) is now called “Single Texture”, it needs a material for special settings (e.g. Billboard, Alpha Sort, …). 3.3) New options in the Material Panel * Shadeless option in the Material panel is now supported for all three Shading modes. * Physics is now toggleable, this is the old Collision option. * Two Side (on) is now called Back Culling (off). * Alpha Sort is one of the Alpha options, together (and mutually exclusive) to Alpha Blend, Alpha Clip, Add and Opaque (i.e. solid). * Shadow, Billboard and Halo are grouped in the “Face Orientation” property. * "Face Textures" and "Face Textures Alpha" (under Options) can be used for all but GLSL shading mode (to be supported in GLSL eventually). * The backend in the game engine is still the same as before. The only changes are in the interface and in the way you need to think your materials. The bottomline is: It’s no longer possible to share materials between faces that do not share the same game properties. 4 - Acknowledgment: ================== Mike Pan for the design discussions, and testing along the whole development process. Vitor Balbio for the first hands-on code with the interface changes. That helped me a lot to push me into work on that. Benoit Bolsee and Brecht van Lommel for patch review (* no one reviewed the whole patch, or the latest iteractions, so I still hold liability for any problems). Blender artists that gave feedback and helped testing the patch. Patch review and original documentation can be found here: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Dfelinto/TexFace http://codereview.appspot.com/4289041/
2011-09-19 19:55:59 +00:00
ras->SetAlphaBlend(mMaterial->alphablend);
if (mLastBlenderShader)
mLastBlenderShader->SetProg(false);
else
BL_Texture::DisableAllTextures();
mBlenderShader->SetProg(true, ras->GetTime());
mLastBlenderShader= mBlenderShader;
}
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
}
void KX_BlenderMaterial::setTexData( bool enable, RAS_IRasterizer *ras)
{
BL_Texture::DisableAllTextures();
if ( !enable ) {
TexFace to Material Settings big patch Summary: ======== The idea here is to move the texface options into the material panel. For images with the change please visit: http://code.blender.org/index.php/2011/09/bge-material-texface-changes 1 - Some of the legacy problems 2.49 and 2.5x has with the texface system: ========================================================================== 1.1) Shadow, Bilboard and Halo are mutual exclusive (in the code), yet you can select a face to be more than one mode. 1.2) Sort only works for blend Alpha yet it's an option regardless of the Transparency Blend you pick. 1.3) Shared doesn't affect anything in BGE. 1.4) ObColor only works for Text objects (old bitmap texts) when using Texture Face Materials. (not address yet, I so far ignored obcolor) 2 - Notes: ============ 2.1) Now "Use Face Textures" in material Option panel will work in Multitexture even if there is no texture channel. 2.2) In FaceTexture mode it will use TexFace all the time, even if you don't check the "Use Texture Face" option in the UI. It's a matter of decision, since the code for either way is there. I decided by the solution that makes the creation of a material fast - in this mode the user doesn't need to mess with textures or this "Use Texture Face" option at all. I'm not strong in my opinion here. But I think if we don't have this then what is the point of the Texture Face mode? 2.3) I kept references for tface only when we need the image, UV or the tiling setting. It should help later when/if we split the Image and UV layers from the tface struct (Campbell and Brecht proposal). 3 - Changes in a Nutshell: ========================== 3.1) "Texture Face" panel (in the Mesh/Object Data panel) no longer exists. Those settings are all part of the material properties, visible when Game Render is set. 3.2) "Texture Face" Shading mode (in the Render panel) is now called “Single Texture”, it needs a material for special settings (e.g. Billboard, Alpha Sort, …). 3.3) New options in the Material Panel * Shadeless option in the Material panel is now supported for all three Shading modes. * Physics is now toggleable, this is the old Collision option. * Two Side (on) is now called Back Culling (off). * Alpha Sort is one of the Alpha options, together (and mutually exclusive) to Alpha Blend, Alpha Clip, Add and Opaque (i.e. solid). * Shadow, Billboard and Halo are grouped in the “Face Orientation” property. * "Face Textures" and "Face Textures Alpha" (under Options) can be used for all but GLSL shading mode (to be supported in GLSL eventually). * The backend in the game engine is still the same as before. The only changes are in the interface and in the way you need to think your materials. The bottomline is: It’s no longer possible to share materials between faces that do not share the same game properties. 4 - Acknowledgment: ================== Mike Pan for the design discussions, and testing along the whole development process. Vitor Balbio for the first hands-on code with the interface changes. That helped me a lot to push me into work on that. Benoit Bolsee and Brecht van Lommel for patch review (* no one reviewed the whole patch, or the latest iteractions, so I still hold liability for any problems). Blender artists that gave feedback and helped testing the patch. Patch review and original documentation can be found here: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Dfelinto/TexFace http://codereview.appspot.com/4289041/
2011-09-19 19:55:59 +00:00
ras->SetAlphaBlend(TF_SOLID);
return;
}
BL_Texture::ActivateFirst();
if ( mMaterial->IdMode == DEFAULT_BLENDER ) {
TexFace to Material Settings big patch Summary: ======== The idea here is to move the texface options into the material panel. For images with the change please visit: http://code.blender.org/index.php/2011/09/bge-material-texface-changes 1 - Some of the legacy problems 2.49 and 2.5x has with the texface system: ========================================================================== 1.1) Shadow, Bilboard and Halo are mutual exclusive (in the code), yet you can select a face to be more than one mode. 1.2) Sort only works for blend Alpha yet it's an option regardless of the Transparency Blend you pick. 1.3) Shared doesn't affect anything in BGE. 1.4) ObColor only works for Text objects (old bitmap texts) when using Texture Face Materials. (not address yet, I so far ignored obcolor) 2 - Notes: ============ 2.1) Now "Use Face Textures" in material Option panel will work in Multitexture even if there is no texture channel. 2.2) In FaceTexture mode it will use TexFace all the time, even if you don't check the "Use Texture Face" option in the UI. It's a matter of decision, since the code for either way is there. I decided by the solution that makes the creation of a material fast - in this mode the user doesn't need to mess with textures or this "Use Texture Face" option at all. I'm not strong in my opinion here. But I think if we don't have this then what is the point of the Texture Face mode? 2.3) I kept references for tface only when we need the image, UV or the tiling setting. It should help later when/if we split the Image and UV layers from the tface struct (Campbell and Brecht proposal). 3 - Changes in a Nutshell: ========================== 3.1) "Texture Face" panel (in the Mesh/Object Data panel) no longer exists. Those settings are all part of the material properties, visible when Game Render is set. 3.2) "Texture Face" Shading mode (in the Render panel) is now called “Single Texture”, it needs a material for special settings (e.g. Billboard, Alpha Sort, …). 3.3) New options in the Material Panel * Shadeless option in the Material panel is now supported for all three Shading modes. * Physics is now toggleable, this is the old Collision option. * Two Side (on) is now called Back Culling (off). * Alpha Sort is one of the Alpha options, together (and mutually exclusive) to Alpha Blend, Alpha Clip, Add and Opaque (i.e. solid). * Shadow, Billboard and Halo are grouped in the “Face Orientation” property. * "Face Textures" and "Face Textures Alpha" (under Options) can be used for all but GLSL shading mode (to be supported in GLSL eventually). * The backend in the game engine is still the same as before. The only changes are in the interface and in the way you need to think your materials. The bottomline is: It’s no longer possible to share materials between faces that do not share the same game properties. 4 - Acknowledgment: ================== Mike Pan for the design discussions, and testing along the whole development process. Vitor Balbio for the first hands-on code with the interface changes. That helped me a lot to push me into work on that. Benoit Bolsee and Brecht van Lommel for patch review (* no one reviewed the whole patch, or the latest iteractions, so I still hold liability for any problems). Blender artists that gave feedback and helped testing the patch. Patch review and original documentation can be found here: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Dfelinto/TexFace http://codereview.appspot.com/4289041/
2011-09-19 19:55:59 +00:00
ras->SetAlphaBlend(mMaterial->alphablend);
return;
}
if ( mMaterial->IdMode == TEXFACE ) {
// no material connected to the object
if ( mTextures[0].Ok() ) {
mTextures[0].ActivateTexture();
mTextures[0].setTexEnv(0, true);
mTextures[0].SetMapping(mMaterial->mapping[0].mapping);
TexFace to Material Settings big patch Summary: ======== The idea here is to move the texface options into the material panel. For images with the change please visit: http://code.blender.org/index.php/2011/09/bge-material-texface-changes 1 - Some of the legacy problems 2.49 and 2.5x has with the texface system: ========================================================================== 1.1) Shadow, Bilboard and Halo are mutual exclusive (in the code), yet you can select a face to be more than one mode. 1.2) Sort only works for blend Alpha yet it's an option regardless of the Transparency Blend you pick. 1.3) Shared doesn't affect anything in BGE. 1.4) ObColor only works for Text objects (old bitmap texts) when using Texture Face Materials. (not address yet, I so far ignored obcolor) 2 - Notes: ============ 2.1) Now "Use Face Textures" in material Option panel will work in Multitexture even if there is no texture channel. 2.2) In FaceTexture mode it will use TexFace all the time, even if you don't check the "Use Texture Face" option in the UI. It's a matter of decision, since the code for either way is there. I decided by the solution that makes the creation of a material fast - in this mode the user doesn't need to mess with textures or this "Use Texture Face" option at all. I'm not strong in my opinion here. But I think if we don't have this then what is the point of the Texture Face mode? 2.3) I kept references for tface only when we need the image, UV or the tiling setting. It should help later when/if we split the Image and UV layers from the tface struct (Campbell and Brecht proposal). 3 - Changes in a Nutshell: ========================== 3.1) "Texture Face" panel (in the Mesh/Object Data panel) no longer exists. Those settings are all part of the material properties, visible when Game Render is set. 3.2) "Texture Face" Shading mode (in the Render panel) is now called “Single Texture”, it needs a material for special settings (e.g. Billboard, Alpha Sort, …). 3.3) New options in the Material Panel * Shadeless option in the Material panel is now supported for all three Shading modes. * Physics is now toggleable, this is the old Collision option. * Two Side (on) is now called Back Culling (off). * Alpha Sort is one of the Alpha options, together (and mutually exclusive) to Alpha Blend, Alpha Clip, Add and Opaque (i.e. solid). * Shadow, Billboard and Halo are grouped in the “Face Orientation” property. * "Face Textures" and "Face Textures Alpha" (under Options) can be used for all but GLSL shading mode (to be supported in GLSL eventually). * The backend in the game engine is still the same as before. The only changes are in the interface and in the way you need to think your materials. The bottomline is: It’s no longer possible to share materials between faces that do not share the same game properties. 4 - Acknowledgment: ================== Mike Pan for the design discussions, and testing along the whole development process. Vitor Balbio for the first hands-on code with the interface changes. That helped me a lot to push me into work on that. Benoit Bolsee and Brecht van Lommel for patch review (* no one reviewed the whole patch, or the latest iteractions, so I still hold liability for any problems). Blender artists that gave feedback and helped testing the patch. Patch review and original documentation can be found here: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Dfelinto/TexFace http://codereview.appspot.com/4289041/
2011-09-19 19:55:59 +00:00
ras->SetAlphaBlend(mMaterial->alphablend);
}
return;
}
int mode = 0,i=0;
for (i=0; (i<mMaterial->num_enabled && i<MAXTEX); i++) {
if ( !mTextures[i].Ok() ) continue;
mTextures[i].ActivateTexture();
mTextures[i].setTexEnv(mMaterial);
mode = mMaterial->mapping[i].mapping;
if (mode &USEOBJ)
setObjectMatrixData(i, ras);
else
mTextures[i].SetMapping(mode);
if (!(mode &USEOBJ))
setTexMatrixData( i );
}
if (!mUserDefBlend) {
TexFace to Material Settings big patch Summary: ======== The idea here is to move the texface options into the material panel. For images with the change please visit: http://code.blender.org/index.php/2011/09/bge-material-texface-changes 1 - Some of the legacy problems 2.49 and 2.5x has with the texface system: ========================================================================== 1.1) Shadow, Bilboard and Halo are mutual exclusive (in the code), yet you can select a face to be more than one mode. 1.2) Sort only works for blend Alpha yet it's an option regardless of the Transparency Blend you pick. 1.3) Shared doesn't affect anything in BGE. 1.4) ObColor only works for Text objects (old bitmap texts) when using Texture Face Materials. (not address yet, I so far ignored obcolor) 2 - Notes: ============ 2.1) Now "Use Face Textures" in material Option panel will work in Multitexture even if there is no texture channel. 2.2) In FaceTexture mode it will use TexFace all the time, even if you don't check the "Use Texture Face" option in the UI. It's a matter of decision, since the code for either way is there. I decided by the solution that makes the creation of a material fast - in this mode the user doesn't need to mess with textures or this "Use Texture Face" option at all. I'm not strong in my opinion here. But I think if we don't have this then what is the point of the Texture Face mode? 2.3) I kept references for tface only when we need the image, UV or the tiling setting. It should help later when/if we split the Image and UV layers from the tface struct (Campbell and Brecht proposal). 3 - Changes in a Nutshell: ========================== 3.1) "Texture Face" panel (in the Mesh/Object Data panel) no longer exists. Those settings are all part of the material properties, visible when Game Render is set. 3.2) "Texture Face" Shading mode (in the Render panel) is now called “Single Texture”, it needs a material for special settings (e.g. Billboard, Alpha Sort, …). 3.3) New options in the Material Panel * Shadeless option in the Material panel is now supported for all three Shading modes. * Physics is now toggleable, this is the old Collision option. * Two Side (on) is now called Back Culling (off). * Alpha Sort is one of the Alpha options, together (and mutually exclusive) to Alpha Blend, Alpha Clip, Add and Opaque (i.e. solid). * Shadow, Billboard and Halo are grouped in the “Face Orientation” property. * "Face Textures" and "Face Textures Alpha" (under Options) can be used for all but GLSL shading mode (to be supported in GLSL eventually). * The backend in the game engine is still the same as before. The only changes are in the interface and in the way you need to think your materials. The bottomline is: It’s no longer possible to share materials between faces that do not share the same game properties. 4 - Acknowledgment: ================== Mike Pan for the design discussions, and testing along the whole development process. Vitor Balbio for the first hands-on code with the interface changes. That helped me a lot to push me into work on that. Benoit Bolsee and Brecht van Lommel for patch review (* no one reviewed the whole patch, or the latest iteractions, so I still hold liability for any problems). Blender artists that gave feedback and helped testing the patch. Patch review and original documentation can be found here: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Dfelinto/TexFace http://codereview.appspot.com/4289041/
2011-09-19 19:55:59 +00:00
ras->SetAlphaBlend(mMaterial->alphablend);
}
else {
TexFace to Material Settings big patch Summary: ======== The idea here is to move the texface options into the material panel. For images with the change please visit: http://code.blender.org/index.php/2011/09/bge-material-texface-changes 1 - Some of the legacy problems 2.49 and 2.5x has with the texface system: ========================================================================== 1.1) Shadow, Bilboard and Halo are mutual exclusive (in the code), yet you can select a face to be more than one mode. 1.2) Sort only works for blend Alpha yet it's an option regardless of the Transparency Blend you pick. 1.3) Shared doesn't affect anything in BGE. 1.4) ObColor only works for Text objects (old bitmap texts) when using Texture Face Materials. (not address yet, I so far ignored obcolor) 2 - Notes: ============ 2.1) Now "Use Face Textures" in material Option panel will work in Multitexture even if there is no texture channel. 2.2) In FaceTexture mode it will use TexFace all the time, even if you don't check the "Use Texture Face" option in the UI. It's a matter of decision, since the code for either way is there. I decided by the solution that makes the creation of a material fast - in this mode the user doesn't need to mess with textures or this "Use Texture Face" option at all. I'm not strong in my opinion here. But I think if we don't have this then what is the point of the Texture Face mode? 2.3) I kept references for tface only when we need the image, UV or the tiling setting. It should help later when/if we split the Image and UV layers from the tface struct (Campbell and Brecht proposal). 3 - Changes in a Nutshell: ========================== 3.1) "Texture Face" panel (in the Mesh/Object Data panel) no longer exists. Those settings are all part of the material properties, visible when Game Render is set. 3.2) "Texture Face" Shading mode (in the Render panel) is now called “Single Texture”, it needs a material for special settings (e.g. Billboard, Alpha Sort, …). 3.3) New options in the Material Panel * Shadeless option in the Material panel is now supported for all three Shading modes. * Physics is now toggleable, this is the old Collision option. * Two Side (on) is now called Back Culling (off). * Alpha Sort is one of the Alpha options, together (and mutually exclusive) to Alpha Blend, Alpha Clip, Add and Opaque (i.e. solid). * Shadow, Billboard and Halo are grouped in the “Face Orientation” property. * "Face Textures" and "Face Textures Alpha" (under Options) can be used for all but GLSL shading mode (to be supported in GLSL eventually). * The backend in the game engine is still the same as before. The only changes are in the interface and in the way you need to think your materials. The bottomline is: It’s no longer possible to share materials between faces that do not share the same game properties. 4 - Acknowledgment: ================== Mike Pan for the design discussions, and testing along the whole development process. Vitor Balbio for the first hands-on code with the interface changes. That helped me a lot to push me into work on that. Benoit Bolsee and Brecht van Lommel for patch review (* no one reviewed the whole patch, or the latest iteractions, so I still hold liability for any problems). Blender artists that gave feedback and helped testing the patch. Patch review and original documentation can be found here: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Dfelinto/TexFace http://codereview.appspot.com/4289041/
2011-09-19 19:55:59 +00:00
ras->SetAlphaBlend(TF_SOLID);
ras->SetAlphaBlend(-1); // indicates custom mode
glEnable(GL_BLEND);
glBlendFunc(mBlendFunc[0], mBlendFunc[1]);
}
}
void
KX_BlenderMaterial::ActivatShaders(
RAS_IRasterizer* rasty,
TCachingInfo& cachingInfo)const
{
KX_BlenderMaterial *tmp = const_cast<KX_BlenderMaterial*>(this);
// reset...
if (tmp->mMaterial->IsShared())
cachingInfo =0;
if (mLastBlenderShader) {
mLastBlenderShader->SetProg(false);
mLastBlenderShader= NULL;
}
if (GetCachingInfo() != cachingInfo) {
if (!cachingInfo)
tmp->setShaderData(false, rasty);
cachingInfo = GetCachingInfo();
if (rasty->GetDrawingMode() == RAS_IRasterizer::KX_TEXTURED)
tmp->setShaderData(true, rasty);
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
else
tmp->setShaderData(false, rasty);
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
TexFace to Material Settings big patch Summary: ======== The idea here is to move the texface options into the material panel. For images with the change please visit: http://code.blender.org/index.php/2011/09/bge-material-texface-changes 1 - Some of the legacy problems 2.49 and 2.5x has with the texface system: ========================================================================== 1.1) Shadow, Bilboard and Halo are mutual exclusive (in the code), yet you can select a face to be more than one mode. 1.2) Sort only works for blend Alpha yet it's an option regardless of the Transparency Blend you pick. 1.3) Shared doesn't affect anything in BGE. 1.4) ObColor only works for Text objects (old bitmap texts) when using Texture Face Materials. (not address yet, I so far ignored obcolor) 2 - Notes: ============ 2.1) Now "Use Face Textures" in material Option panel will work in Multitexture even if there is no texture channel. 2.2) In FaceTexture mode it will use TexFace all the time, even if you don't check the "Use Texture Face" option in the UI. It's a matter of decision, since the code for either way is there. I decided by the solution that makes the creation of a material fast - in this mode the user doesn't need to mess with textures or this "Use Texture Face" option at all. I'm not strong in my opinion here. But I think if we don't have this then what is the point of the Texture Face mode? 2.3) I kept references for tface only when we need the image, UV or the tiling setting. It should help later when/if we split the Image and UV layers from the tface struct (Campbell and Brecht proposal). 3 - Changes in a Nutshell: ========================== 3.1) "Texture Face" panel (in the Mesh/Object Data panel) no longer exists. Those settings are all part of the material properties, visible when Game Render is set. 3.2) "Texture Face" Shading mode (in the Render panel) is now called “Single Texture”, it needs a material for special settings (e.g. Billboard, Alpha Sort, …). 3.3) New options in the Material Panel * Shadeless option in the Material panel is now supported for all three Shading modes. * Physics is now toggleable, this is the old Collision option. * Two Side (on) is now called Back Culling (off). * Alpha Sort is one of the Alpha options, together (and mutually exclusive) to Alpha Blend, Alpha Clip, Add and Opaque (i.e. solid). * Shadow, Billboard and Halo are grouped in the “Face Orientation” property. * "Face Textures" and "Face Textures Alpha" (under Options) can be used for all but GLSL shading mode (to be supported in GLSL eventually). * The backend in the game engine is still the same as before. The only changes are in the interface and in the way you need to think your materials. The bottomline is: It’s no longer possible to share materials between faces that do not share the same game properties. 4 - Acknowledgment: ================== Mike Pan for the design discussions, and testing along the whole development process. Vitor Balbio for the first hands-on code with the interface changes. That helped me a lot to push me into work on that. Benoit Bolsee and Brecht van Lommel for patch review (* no one reviewed the whole patch, or the latest iteractions, so I still hold liability for any problems). Blender artists that gave feedback and helped testing the patch. Patch review and original documentation can be found here: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Dfelinto/TexFace http://codereview.appspot.com/4289041/
2011-09-19 19:55:59 +00:00
if (mMaterial->ras_mode &TWOSIDED)
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
rasty->SetCullFace(false);
else
rasty->SetCullFace(true);
TexFace to Material Settings big patch Summary: ======== The idea here is to move the texface options into the material panel. For images with the change please visit: http://code.blender.org/index.php/2011/09/bge-material-texface-changes 1 - Some of the legacy problems 2.49 and 2.5x has with the texface system: ========================================================================== 1.1) Shadow, Bilboard and Halo are mutual exclusive (in the code), yet you can select a face to be more than one mode. 1.2) Sort only works for blend Alpha yet it's an option regardless of the Transparency Blend you pick. 1.3) Shared doesn't affect anything in BGE. 1.4) ObColor only works for Text objects (old bitmap texts) when using Texture Face Materials. (not address yet, I so far ignored obcolor) 2 - Notes: ============ 2.1) Now "Use Face Textures" in material Option panel will work in Multitexture even if there is no texture channel. 2.2) In FaceTexture mode it will use TexFace all the time, even if you don't check the "Use Texture Face" option in the UI. It's a matter of decision, since the code for either way is there. I decided by the solution that makes the creation of a material fast - in this mode the user doesn't need to mess with textures or this "Use Texture Face" option at all. I'm not strong in my opinion here. But I think if we don't have this then what is the point of the Texture Face mode? 2.3) I kept references for tface only when we need the image, UV or the tiling setting. It should help later when/if we split the Image and UV layers from the tface struct (Campbell and Brecht proposal). 3 - Changes in a Nutshell: ========================== 3.1) "Texture Face" panel (in the Mesh/Object Data panel) no longer exists. Those settings are all part of the material properties, visible when Game Render is set. 3.2) "Texture Face" Shading mode (in the Render panel) is now called “Single Texture”, it needs a material for special settings (e.g. Billboard, Alpha Sort, …). 3.3) New options in the Material Panel * Shadeless option in the Material panel is now supported for all three Shading modes. * Physics is now toggleable, this is the old Collision option. * Two Side (on) is now called Back Culling (off). * Alpha Sort is one of the Alpha options, together (and mutually exclusive) to Alpha Blend, Alpha Clip, Add and Opaque (i.e. solid). * Shadow, Billboard and Halo are grouped in the “Face Orientation” property. * "Face Textures" and "Face Textures Alpha" (under Options) can be used for all but GLSL shading mode (to be supported in GLSL eventually). * The backend in the game engine is still the same as before. The only changes are in the interface and in the way you need to think your materials. The bottomline is: It’s no longer possible to share materials between faces that do not share the same game properties. 4 - Acknowledgment: ================== Mike Pan for the design discussions, and testing along the whole development process. Vitor Balbio for the first hands-on code with the interface changes. That helped me a lot to push me into work on that. Benoit Bolsee and Brecht van Lommel for patch review (* no one reviewed the whole patch, or the latest iteractions, so I still hold liability for any problems). Blender artists that gave feedback and helped testing the patch. Patch review and original documentation can be found here: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Dfelinto/TexFace http://codereview.appspot.com/4289041/
2011-09-19 19:55:59 +00:00
if ((mMaterial->ras_mode &WIRE) ||
(rasty->GetDrawingMode() <= RAS_IRasterizer::KX_WIREFRAME))
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
{
TexFace to Material Settings big patch Summary: ======== The idea here is to move the texface options into the material panel. For images with the change please visit: http://code.blender.org/index.php/2011/09/bge-material-texface-changes 1 - Some of the legacy problems 2.49 and 2.5x has with the texface system: ========================================================================== 1.1) Shadow, Bilboard and Halo are mutual exclusive (in the code), yet you can select a face to be more than one mode. 1.2) Sort only works for blend Alpha yet it's an option regardless of the Transparency Blend you pick. 1.3) Shared doesn't affect anything in BGE. 1.4) ObColor only works for Text objects (old bitmap texts) when using Texture Face Materials. (not address yet, I so far ignored obcolor) 2 - Notes: ============ 2.1) Now "Use Face Textures" in material Option panel will work in Multitexture even if there is no texture channel. 2.2) In FaceTexture mode it will use TexFace all the time, even if you don't check the "Use Texture Face" option in the UI. It's a matter of decision, since the code for either way is there. I decided by the solution that makes the creation of a material fast - in this mode the user doesn't need to mess with textures or this "Use Texture Face" option at all. I'm not strong in my opinion here. But I think if we don't have this then what is the point of the Texture Face mode? 2.3) I kept references for tface only when we need the image, UV or the tiling setting. It should help later when/if we split the Image and UV layers from the tface struct (Campbell and Brecht proposal). 3 - Changes in a Nutshell: ========================== 3.1) "Texture Face" panel (in the Mesh/Object Data panel) no longer exists. Those settings are all part of the material properties, visible when Game Render is set. 3.2) "Texture Face" Shading mode (in the Render panel) is now called “Single Texture”, it needs a material for special settings (e.g. Billboard, Alpha Sort, …). 3.3) New options in the Material Panel * Shadeless option in the Material panel is now supported for all three Shading modes. * Physics is now toggleable, this is the old Collision option. * Two Side (on) is now called Back Culling (off). * Alpha Sort is one of the Alpha options, together (and mutually exclusive) to Alpha Blend, Alpha Clip, Add and Opaque (i.e. solid). * Shadow, Billboard and Halo are grouped in the “Face Orientation” property. * "Face Textures" and "Face Textures Alpha" (under Options) can be used for all but GLSL shading mode (to be supported in GLSL eventually). * The backend in the game engine is still the same as before. The only changes are in the interface and in the way you need to think your materials. The bottomline is: It’s no longer possible to share materials between faces that do not share the same game properties. 4 - Acknowledgment: ================== Mike Pan for the design discussions, and testing along the whole development process. Vitor Balbio for the first hands-on code with the interface changes. That helped me a lot to push me into work on that. Benoit Bolsee and Brecht van Lommel for patch review (* no one reviewed the whole patch, or the latest iteractions, so I still hold liability for any problems). Blender artists that gave feedback and helped testing the patch. Patch review and original documentation can be found here: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Dfelinto/TexFace http://codereview.appspot.com/4289041/
2011-09-19 19:55:59 +00:00
if (mMaterial->ras_mode &WIRE)
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
rasty->SetCullFace(false);
rasty->SetLines(true);
}
else
rasty->SetLines(false);
ActivatGLMaterials(rasty);
ActivateTexGen(rasty);
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
}
//ActivatGLMaterials(rasty);
//ActivateTexGen(rasty);
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
}
void
KX_BlenderMaterial::ActivateBlenderShaders(
RAS_IRasterizer* rasty,
TCachingInfo& cachingInfo)const
{
KX_BlenderMaterial *tmp = const_cast<KX_BlenderMaterial*>(this);
if (mLastShader) {
mLastShader->SetProg(false);
mLastShader= NULL;
}
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
if (GetCachingInfo() != cachingInfo) {
if (!cachingInfo)
tmp->setBlenderShaderData(false, rasty);
cachingInfo = GetCachingInfo();
if (rasty->GetDrawingMode() == RAS_IRasterizer::KX_TEXTURED)
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
tmp->setBlenderShaderData(true, rasty);
else
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
tmp->setBlenderShaderData(false, rasty);
TexFace to Material Settings big patch Summary: ======== The idea here is to move the texface options into the material panel. For images with the change please visit: http://code.blender.org/index.php/2011/09/bge-material-texface-changes 1 - Some of the legacy problems 2.49 and 2.5x has with the texface system: ========================================================================== 1.1) Shadow, Bilboard and Halo are mutual exclusive (in the code), yet you can select a face to be more than one mode. 1.2) Sort only works for blend Alpha yet it's an option regardless of the Transparency Blend you pick. 1.3) Shared doesn't affect anything in BGE. 1.4) ObColor only works for Text objects (old bitmap texts) when using Texture Face Materials. (not address yet, I so far ignored obcolor) 2 - Notes: ============ 2.1) Now "Use Face Textures" in material Option panel will work in Multitexture even if there is no texture channel. 2.2) In FaceTexture mode it will use TexFace all the time, even if you don't check the "Use Texture Face" option in the UI. It's a matter of decision, since the code for either way is there. I decided by the solution that makes the creation of a material fast - in this mode the user doesn't need to mess with textures or this "Use Texture Face" option at all. I'm not strong in my opinion here. But I think if we don't have this then what is the point of the Texture Face mode? 2.3) I kept references for tface only when we need the image, UV or the tiling setting. It should help later when/if we split the Image and UV layers from the tface struct (Campbell and Brecht proposal). 3 - Changes in a Nutshell: ========================== 3.1) "Texture Face" panel (in the Mesh/Object Data panel) no longer exists. Those settings are all part of the material properties, visible when Game Render is set. 3.2) "Texture Face" Shading mode (in the Render panel) is now called “Single Texture”, it needs a material for special settings (e.g. Billboard, Alpha Sort, …). 3.3) New options in the Material Panel * Shadeless option in the Material panel is now supported for all three Shading modes. * Physics is now toggleable, this is the old Collision option. * Two Side (on) is now called Back Culling (off). * Alpha Sort is one of the Alpha options, together (and mutually exclusive) to Alpha Blend, Alpha Clip, Add and Opaque (i.e. solid). * Shadow, Billboard and Halo are grouped in the “Face Orientation” property. * "Face Textures" and "Face Textures Alpha" (under Options) can be used for all but GLSL shading mode (to be supported in GLSL eventually). * The backend in the game engine is still the same as before. The only changes are in the interface and in the way you need to think your materials. The bottomline is: It’s no longer possible to share materials between faces that do not share the same game properties. 4 - Acknowledgment: ================== Mike Pan for the design discussions, and testing along the whole development process. Vitor Balbio for the first hands-on code with the interface changes. That helped me a lot to push me into work on that. Benoit Bolsee and Brecht van Lommel for patch review (* no one reviewed the whole patch, or the latest iteractions, so I still hold liability for any problems). Blender artists that gave feedback and helped testing the patch. Patch review and original documentation can be found here: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Dfelinto/TexFace http://codereview.appspot.com/4289041/
2011-09-19 19:55:59 +00:00
if (mMaterial->ras_mode &TWOSIDED)
rasty->SetCullFace(false);
else
rasty->SetCullFace(true);
TexFace to Material Settings big patch Summary: ======== The idea here is to move the texface options into the material panel. For images with the change please visit: http://code.blender.org/index.php/2011/09/bge-material-texface-changes 1 - Some of the legacy problems 2.49 and 2.5x has with the texface system: ========================================================================== 1.1) Shadow, Bilboard and Halo are mutual exclusive (in the code), yet you can select a face to be more than one mode. 1.2) Sort only works for blend Alpha yet it's an option regardless of the Transparency Blend you pick. 1.3) Shared doesn't affect anything in BGE. 1.4) ObColor only works for Text objects (old bitmap texts) when using Texture Face Materials. (not address yet, I so far ignored obcolor) 2 - Notes: ============ 2.1) Now "Use Face Textures" in material Option panel will work in Multitexture even if there is no texture channel. 2.2) In FaceTexture mode it will use TexFace all the time, even if you don't check the "Use Texture Face" option in the UI. It's a matter of decision, since the code for either way is there. I decided by the solution that makes the creation of a material fast - in this mode the user doesn't need to mess with textures or this "Use Texture Face" option at all. I'm not strong in my opinion here. But I think if we don't have this then what is the point of the Texture Face mode? 2.3) I kept references for tface only when we need the image, UV or the tiling setting. It should help later when/if we split the Image and UV layers from the tface struct (Campbell and Brecht proposal). 3 - Changes in a Nutshell: ========================== 3.1) "Texture Face" panel (in the Mesh/Object Data panel) no longer exists. Those settings are all part of the material properties, visible when Game Render is set. 3.2) "Texture Face" Shading mode (in the Render panel) is now called “Single Texture”, it needs a material for special settings (e.g. Billboard, Alpha Sort, …). 3.3) New options in the Material Panel * Shadeless option in the Material panel is now supported for all three Shading modes. * Physics is now toggleable, this is the old Collision option. * Two Side (on) is now called Back Culling (off). * Alpha Sort is one of the Alpha options, together (and mutually exclusive) to Alpha Blend, Alpha Clip, Add and Opaque (i.e. solid). * Shadow, Billboard and Halo are grouped in the “Face Orientation” property. * "Face Textures" and "Face Textures Alpha" (under Options) can be used for all but GLSL shading mode (to be supported in GLSL eventually). * The backend in the game engine is still the same as before. The only changes are in the interface and in the way you need to think your materials. The bottomline is: It’s no longer possible to share materials between faces that do not share the same game properties. 4 - Acknowledgment: ================== Mike Pan for the design discussions, and testing along the whole development process. Vitor Balbio for the first hands-on code with the interface changes. That helped me a lot to push me into work on that. Benoit Bolsee and Brecht van Lommel for patch review (* no one reviewed the whole patch, or the latest iteractions, so I still hold liability for any problems). Blender artists that gave feedback and helped testing the patch. Patch review and original documentation can be found here: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Dfelinto/TexFace http://codereview.appspot.com/4289041/
2011-09-19 19:55:59 +00:00
if ((mMaterial->ras_mode &WIRE) ||
(rasty->GetDrawingMode() <= RAS_IRasterizer::KX_WIREFRAME))
{
TexFace to Material Settings big patch Summary: ======== The idea here is to move the texface options into the material panel. For images with the change please visit: http://code.blender.org/index.php/2011/09/bge-material-texface-changes 1 - Some of the legacy problems 2.49 and 2.5x has with the texface system: ========================================================================== 1.1) Shadow, Bilboard and Halo are mutual exclusive (in the code), yet you can select a face to be more than one mode. 1.2) Sort only works for blend Alpha yet it's an option regardless of the Transparency Blend you pick. 1.3) Shared doesn't affect anything in BGE. 1.4) ObColor only works for Text objects (old bitmap texts) when using Texture Face Materials. (not address yet, I so far ignored obcolor) 2 - Notes: ============ 2.1) Now "Use Face Textures" in material Option panel will work in Multitexture even if there is no texture channel. 2.2) In FaceTexture mode it will use TexFace all the time, even if you don't check the "Use Texture Face" option in the UI. It's a matter of decision, since the code for either way is there. I decided by the solution that makes the creation of a material fast - in this mode the user doesn't need to mess with textures or this "Use Texture Face" option at all. I'm not strong in my opinion here. But I think if we don't have this then what is the point of the Texture Face mode? 2.3) I kept references for tface only when we need the image, UV or the tiling setting. It should help later when/if we split the Image and UV layers from the tface struct (Campbell and Brecht proposal). 3 - Changes in a Nutshell: ========================== 3.1) "Texture Face" panel (in the Mesh/Object Data panel) no longer exists. Those settings are all part of the material properties, visible when Game Render is set. 3.2) "Texture Face" Shading mode (in the Render panel) is now called “Single Texture”, it needs a material for special settings (e.g. Billboard, Alpha Sort, …). 3.3) New options in the Material Panel * Shadeless option in the Material panel is now supported for all three Shading modes. * Physics is now toggleable, this is the old Collision option. * Two Side (on) is now called Back Culling (off). * Alpha Sort is one of the Alpha options, together (and mutually exclusive) to Alpha Blend, Alpha Clip, Add and Opaque (i.e. solid). * Shadow, Billboard and Halo are grouped in the “Face Orientation” property. * "Face Textures" and "Face Textures Alpha" (under Options) can be used for all but GLSL shading mode (to be supported in GLSL eventually). * The backend in the game engine is still the same as before. The only changes are in the interface and in the way you need to think your materials. The bottomline is: It’s no longer possible to share materials between faces that do not share the same game properties. 4 - Acknowledgment: ================== Mike Pan for the design discussions, and testing along the whole development process. Vitor Balbio for the first hands-on code with the interface changes. That helped me a lot to push me into work on that. Benoit Bolsee and Brecht van Lommel for patch review (* no one reviewed the whole patch, or the latest iteractions, so I still hold liability for any problems). Blender artists that gave feedback and helped testing the patch. Patch review and original documentation can be found here: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Dfelinto/TexFace http://codereview.appspot.com/4289041/
2011-09-19 19:55:59 +00:00
if (mMaterial->ras_mode &WIRE)
rasty->SetCullFace(false);
rasty->SetLines(true);
}
else
rasty->SetLines(false);
ActivatGLMaterials(rasty);
mBlenderShader->SetAttribs(rasty, mMaterial);
}
}
void
KX_BlenderMaterial::ActivateMat(
RAS_IRasterizer* rasty,
TCachingInfo& cachingInfo
)const
{
KX_BlenderMaterial *tmp = const_cast<KX_BlenderMaterial*>(this);
if (mLastShader) {
mLastShader->SetProg(false);
mLastShader= NULL;
}
if (mLastBlenderShader) {
mLastBlenderShader->SetProg(false);
mLastBlenderShader= NULL;
}
if (GetCachingInfo() != cachingInfo) {
if (!cachingInfo)
tmp->setTexData( false,rasty );
cachingInfo = GetCachingInfo();
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
if (rasty->GetDrawingMode() == RAS_IRasterizer::KX_TEXTURED)
tmp->setTexData( true,rasty );
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
else
tmp->setTexData( false,rasty);
TexFace to Material Settings big patch Summary: ======== The idea here is to move the texface options into the material panel. For images with the change please visit: http://code.blender.org/index.php/2011/09/bge-material-texface-changes 1 - Some of the legacy problems 2.49 and 2.5x has with the texface system: ========================================================================== 1.1) Shadow, Bilboard and Halo are mutual exclusive (in the code), yet you can select a face to be more than one mode. 1.2) Sort only works for blend Alpha yet it's an option regardless of the Transparency Blend you pick. 1.3) Shared doesn't affect anything in BGE. 1.4) ObColor only works for Text objects (old bitmap texts) when using Texture Face Materials. (not address yet, I so far ignored obcolor) 2 - Notes: ============ 2.1) Now "Use Face Textures" in material Option panel will work in Multitexture even if there is no texture channel. 2.2) In FaceTexture mode it will use TexFace all the time, even if you don't check the "Use Texture Face" option in the UI. It's a matter of decision, since the code for either way is there. I decided by the solution that makes the creation of a material fast - in this mode the user doesn't need to mess with textures or this "Use Texture Face" option at all. I'm not strong in my opinion here. But I think if we don't have this then what is the point of the Texture Face mode? 2.3) I kept references for tface only when we need the image, UV or the tiling setting. It should help later when/if we split the Image and UV layers from the tface struct (Campbell and Brecht proposal). 3 - Changes in a Nutshell: ========================== 3.1) "Texture Face" panel (in the Mesh/Object Data panel) no longer exists. Those settings are all part of the material properties, visible when Game Render is set. 3.2) "Texture Face" Shading mode (in the Render panel) is now called “Single Texture”, it needs a material for special settings (e.g. Billboard, Alpha Sort, …). 3.3) New options in the Material Panel * Shadeless option in the Material panel is now supported for all three Shading modes. * Physics is now toggleable, this is the old Collision option. * Two Side (on) is now called Back Culling (off). * Alpha Sort is one of the Alpha options, together (and mutually exclusive) to Alpha Blend, Alpha Clip, Add and Opaque (i.e. solid). * Shadow, Billboard and Halo are grouped in the “Face Orientation” property. * "Face Textures" and "Face Textures Alpha" (under Options) can be used for all but GLSL shading mode (to be supported in GLSL eventually). * The backend in the game engine is still the same as before. The only changes are in the interface and in the way you need to think your materials. The bottomline is: It’s no longer possible to share materials between faces that do not share the same game properties. 4 - Acknowledgment: ================== Mike Pan for the design discussions, and testing along the whole development process. Vitor Balbio for the first hands-on code with the interface changes. That helped me a lot to push me into work on that. Benoit Bolsee and Brecht van Lommel for patch review (* no one reviewed the whole patch, or the latest iteractions, so I still hold liability for any problems). Blender artists that gave feedback and helped testing the patch. Patch review and original documentation can be found here: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Dfelinto/TexFace http://codereview.appspot.com/4289041/
2011-09-19 19:55:59 +00:00
if (mMaterial->ras_mode &TWOSIDED)
rasty->SetCullFace(false);
else
rasty->SetCullFace(true);
TexFace to Material Settings big patch Summary: ======== The idea here is to move the texface options into the material panel. For images with the change please visit: http://code.blender.org/index.php/2011/09/bge-material-texface-changes 1 - Some of the legacy problems 2.49 and 2.5x has with the texface system: ========================================================================== 1.1) Shadow, Bilboard and Halo are mutual exclusive (in the code), yet you can select a face to be more than one mode. 1.2) Sort only works for blend Alpha yet it's an option regardless of the Transparency Blend you pick. 1.3) Shared doesn't affect anything in BGE. 1.4) ObColor only works for Text objects (old bitmap texts) when using Texture Face Materials. (not address yet, I so far ignored obcolor) 2 - Notes: ============ 2.1) Now "Use Face Textures" in material Option panel will work in Multitexture even if there is no texture channel. 2.2) In FaceTexture mode it will use TexFace all the time, even if you don't check the "Use Texture Face" option in the UI. It's a matter of decision, since the code for either way is there. I decided by the solution that makes the creation of a material fast - in this mode the user doesn't need to mess with textures or this "Use Texture Face" option at all. I'm not strong in my opinion here. But I think if we don't have this then what is the point of the Texture Face mode? 2.3) I kept references for tface only when we need the image, UV or the tiling setting. It should help later when/if we split the Image and UV layers from the tface struct (Campbell and Brecht proposal). 3 - Changes in a Nutshell: ========================== 3.1) "Texture Face" panel (in the Mesh/Object Data panel) no longer exists. Those settings are all part of the material properties, visible when Game Render is set. 3.2) "Texture Face" Shading mode (in the Render panel) is now called “Single Texture”, it needs a material for special settings (e.g. Billboard, Alpha Sort, …). 3.3) New options in the Material Panel * Shadeless option in the Material panel is now supported for all three Shading modes. * Physics is now toggleable, this is the old Collision option. * Two Side (on) is now called Back Culling (off). * Alpha Sort is one of the Alpha options, together (and mutually exclusive) to Alpha Blend, Alpha Clip, Add and Opaque (i.e. solid). * Shadow, Billboard and Halo are grouped in the “Face Orientation” property. * "Face Textures" and "Face Textures Alpha" (under Options) can be used for all but GLSL shading mode (to be supported in GLSL eventually). * The backend in the game engine is still the same as before. The only changes are in the interface and in the way you need to think your materials. The bottomline is: It’s no longer possible to share materials between faces that do not share the same game properties. 4 - Acknowledgment: ================== Mike Pan for the design discussions, and testing along the whole development process. Vitor Balbio for the first hands-on code with the interface changes. That helped me a lot to push me into work on that. Benoit Bolsee and Brecht van Lommel for patch review (* no one reviewed the whole patch, or the latest iteractions, so I still hold liability for any problems). Blender artists that gave feedback and helped testing the patch. Patch review and original documentation can be found here: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Dfelinto/TexFace http://codereview.appspot.com/4289041/
2011-09-19 19:55:59 +00:00
if ((mMaterial->ras_mode &WIRE) ||
(rasty->GetDrawingMode() <= RAS_IRasterizer::KX_WIREFRAME))
{
TexFace to Material Settings big patch Summary: ======== The idea here is to move the texface options into the material panel. For images with the change please visit: http://code.blender.org/index.php/2011/09/bge-material-texface-changes 1 - Some of the legacy problems 2.49 and 2.5x has with the texface system: ========================================================================== 1.1) Shadow, Bilboard and Halo are mutual exclusive (in the code), yet you can select a face to be more than one mode. 1.2) Sort only works for blend Alpha yet it's an option regardless of the Transparency Blend you pick. 1.3) Shared doesn't affect anything in BGE. 1.4) ObColor only works for Text objects (old bitmap texts) when using Texture Face Materials. (not address yet, I so far ignored obcolor) 2 - Notes: ============ 2.1) Now "Use Face Textures" in material Option panel will work in Multitexture even if there is no texture channel. 2.2) In FaceTexture mode it will use TexFace all the time, even if you don't check the "Use Texture Face" option in the UI. It's a matter of decision, since the code for either way is there. I decided by the solution that makes the creation of a material fast - in this mode the user doesn't need to mess with textures or this "Use Texture Face" option at all. I'm not strong in my opinion here. But I think if we don't have this then what is the point of the Texture Face mode? 2.3) I kept references for tface only when we need the image, UV or the tiling setting. It should help later when/if we split the Image and UV layers from the tface struct (Campbell and Brecht proposal). 3 - Changes in a Nutshell: ========================== 3.1) "Texture Face" panel (in the Mesh/Object Data panel) no longer exists. Those settings are all part of the material properties, visible when Game Render is set. 3.2) "Texture Face" Shading mode (in the Render panel) is now called “Single Texture”, it needs a material for special settings (e.g. Billboard, Alpha Sort, …). 3.3) New options in the Material Panel * Shadeless option in the Material panel is now supported for all three Shading modes. * Physics is now toggleable, this is the old Collision option. * Two Side (on) is now called Back Culling (off). * Alpha Sort is one of the Alpha options, together (and mutually exclusive) to Alpha Blend, Alpha Clip, Add and Opaque (i.e. solid). * Shadow, Billboard and Halo are grouped in the “Face Orientation” property. * "Face Textures" and "Face Textures Alpha" (under Options) can be used for all but GLSL shading mode (to be supported in GLSL eventually). * The backend in the game engine is still the same as before. The only changes are in the interface and in the way you need to think your materials. The bottomline is: It’s no longer possible to share materials between faces that do not share the same game properties. 4 - Acknowledgment: ================== Mike Pan for the design discussions, and testing along the whole development process. Vitor Balbio for the first hands-on code with the interface changes. That helped me a lot to push me into work on that. Benoit Bolsee and Brecht van Lommel for patch review (* no one reviewed the whole patch, or the latest iteractions, so I still hold liability for any problems). Blender artists that gave feedback and helped testing the patch. Patch review and original documentation can be found here: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Dfelinto/TexFace http://codereview.appspot.com/4289041/
2011-09-19 19:55:59 +00:00
if (mMaterial->ras_mode &WIRE)
rasty->SetCullFace(false);
rasty->SetLines(true);
}
else
rasty->SetLines(false);
ActivatGLMaterials(rasty);
ActivateTexGen(rasty);
}
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
//ActivatGLMaterials(rasty);
//ActivateTexGen(rasty);
}
bool
KX_BlenderMaterial::Activate(
RAS_IRasterizer* rasty,
TCachingInfo& cachingInfo
)const
{
if (GLEW_ARB_shader_objects && (mShader && mShader->Ok())) {
if ((mPass++) < mShader->getNumPass() ) {
ActivatShaders(rasty, cachingInfo);
return true;
}
else {
if (mShader == mLastShader) {
mShader->SetProg(false);
mLastShader = NULL;
}
mPass = 0;
return false;
}
}
else if ( GLEW_ARB_shader_objects && (mBlenderShader && mBlenderShader->Ok() ) ) {
if (mPass++ == 0) {
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
ActivateBlenderShaders(rasty, cachingInfo);
return true;
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
}
else {
mPass = 0;
return false;
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
}
}
else {
if (mPass++ == 0) {
ActivateMat(rasty, cachingInfo);
return true;
}
else {
mPass = 0;
return false;
}
}
}
bool KX_BlenderMaterial::UsesLighting(RAS_IRasterizer *rasty) const
{
if (!RAS_IPolyMaterial::UsesLighting(rasty))
return false;
if (mShader && mShader->Ok())
return true;
else if (mBlenderShader && mBlenderShader->Ok())
return false;
else
return true;
}
void KX_BlenderMaterial::ActivateMeshSlot(const RAS_MeshSlot & ms, RAS_IRasterizer* rasty) const
{
if (mShader && GLEW_ARB_shader_objects) {
mShader->Update(ms, rasty);
}
else if (mBlenderShader && GLEW_ARB_shader_objects) {
TexFace to Material Settings big patch Summary: ======== The idea here is to move the texface options into the material panel. For images with the change please visit: http://code.blender.org/index.php/2011/09/bge-material-texface-changes 1 - Some of the legacy problems 2.49 and 2.5x has with the texface system: ========================================================================== 1.1) Shadow, Bilboard and Halo are mutual exclusive (in the code), yet you can select a face to be more than one mode. 1.2) Sort only works for blend Alpha yet it's an option regardless of the Transparency Blend you pick. 1.3) Shared doesn't affect anything in BGE. 1.4) ObColor only works for Text objects (old bitmap texts) when using Texture Face Materials. (not address yet, I so far ignored obcolor) 2 - Notes: ============ 2.1) Now "Use Face Textures" in material Option panel will work in Multitexture even if there is no texture channel. 2.2) In FaceTexture mode it will use TexFace all the time, even if you don't check the "Use Texture Face" option in the UI. It's a matter of decision, since the code for either way is there. I decided by the solution that makes the creation of a material fast - in this mode the user doesn't need to mess with textures or this "Use Texture Face" option at all. I'm not strong in my opinion here. But I think if we don't have this then what is the point of the Texture Face mode? 2.3) I kept references for tface only when we need the image, UV or the tiling setting. It should help later when/if we split the Image and UV layers from the tface struct (Campbell and Brecht proposal). 3 - Changes in a Nutshell: ========================== 3.1) "Texture Face" panel (in the Mesh/Object Data panel) no longer exists. Those settings are all part of the material properties, visible when Game Render is set. 3.2) "Texture Face" Shading mode (in the Render panel) is now called “Single Texture”, it needs a material for special settings (e.g. Billboard, Alpha Sort, …). 3.3) New options in the Material Panel * Shadeless option in the Material panel is now supported for all three Shading modes. * Physics is now toggleable, this is the old Collision option. * Two Side (on) is now called Back Culling (off). * Alpha Sort is one of the Alpha options, together (and mutually exclusive) to Alpha Blend, Alpha Clip, Add and Opaque (i.e. solid). * Shadow, Billboard and Halo are grouped in the “Face Orientation” property. * "Face Textures" and "Face Textures Alpha" (under Options) can be used for all but GLSL shading mode (to be supported in GLSL eventually). * The backend in the game engine is still the same as before. The only changes are in the interface and in the way you need to think your materials. The bottomline is: It’s no longer possible to share materials between faces that do not share the same game properties. 4 - Acknowledgment: ================== Mike Pan for the design discussions, and testing along the whole development process. Vitor Balbio for the first hands-on code with the interface changes. That helped me a lot to push me into work on that. Benoit Bolsee and Brecht van Lommel for patch review (* no one reviewed the whole patch, or the latest iteractions, so I still hold liability for any problems). Blender artists that gave feedback and helped testing the patch. Patch review and original documentation can be found here: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Dfelinto/TexFace http://codereview.appspot.com/4289041/
2011-09-19 19:55:59 +00:00
int alphablend;
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
mBlenderShader->Update(ms, rasty);
/* we do blend modes here, because they can change per object
* with the same material due to obcolor/obalpha */
TexFace to Material Settings big patch Summary: ======== The idea here is to move the texface options into the material panel. For images with the change please visit: http://code.blender.org/index.php/2011/09/bge-material-texface-changes 1 - Some of the legacy problems 2.49 and 2.5x has with the texface system: ========================================================================== 1.1) Shadow, Bilboard and Halo are mutual exclusive (in the code), yet you can select a face to be more than one mode. 1.2) Sort only works for blend Alpha yet it's an option regardless of the Transparency Blend you pick. 1.3) Shared doesn't affect anything in BGE. 1.4) ObColor only works for Text objects (old bitmap texts) when using Texture Face Materials. (not address yet, I so far ignored obcolor) 2 - Notes: ============ 2.1) Now "Use Face Textures" in material Option panel will work in Multitexture even if there is no texture channel. 2.2) In FaceTexture mode it will use TexFace all the time, even if you don't check the "Use Texture Face" option in the UI. It's a matter of decision, since the code for either way is there. I decided by the solution that makes the creation of a material fast - in this mode the user doesn't need to mess with textures or this "Use Texture Face" option at all. I'm not strong in my opinion here. But I think if we don't have this then what is the point of the Texture Face mode? 2.3) I kept references for tface only when we need the image, UV or the tiling setting. It should help later when/if we split the Image and UV layers from the tface struct (Campbell and Brecht proposal). 3 - Changes in a Nutshell: ========================== 3.1) "Texture Face" panel (in the Mesh/Object Data panel) no longer exists. Those settings are all part of the material properties, visible when Game Render is set. 3.2) "Texture Face" Shading mode (in the Render panel) is now called “Single Texture”, it needs a material for special settings (e.g. Billboard, Alpha Sort, …). 3.3) New options in the Material Panel * Shadeless option in the Material panel is now supported for all three Shading modes. * Physics is now toggleable, this is the old Collision option. * Two Side (on) is now called Back Culling (off). * Alpha Sort is one of the Alpha options, together (and mutually exclusive) to Alpha Blend, Alpha Clip, Add and Opaque (i.e. solid). * Shadow, Billboard and Halo are grouped in the “Face Orientation” property. * "Face Textures" and "Face Textures Alpha" (under Options) can be used for all but GLSL shading mode (to be supported in GLSL eventually). * The backend in the game engine is still the same as before. The only changes are in the interface and in the way you need to think your materials. The bottomline is: It’s no longer possible to share materials between faces that do not share the same game properties. 4 - Acknowledgment: ================== Mike Pan for the design discussions, and testing along the whole development process. Vitor Balbio for the first hands-on code with the interface changes. That helped me a lot to push me into work on that. Benoit Bolsee and Brecht van Lommel for patch review (* no one reviewed the whole patch, or the latest iteractions, so I still hold liability for any problems). Blender artists that gave feedback and helped testing the patch. Patch review and original documentation can be found here: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Dfelinto/TexFace http://codereview.appspot.com/4289041/
2011-09-19 19:55:59 +00:00
alphablend = mBlenderShader->GetAlphaBlend();
if (ELEM3(alphablend, GEMAT_SOLID, GEMAT_ALPHA, GEMAT_ALPHA_SORT) && mMaterial->alphablend != GEMAT_SOLID)
TexFace to Material Settings big patch Summary: ======== The idea here is to move the texface options into the material panel. For images with the change please visit: http://code.blender.org/index.php/2011/09/bge-material-texface-changes 1 - Some of the legacy problems 2.49 and 2.5x has with the texface system: ========================================================================== 1.1) Shadow, Bilboard and Halo are mutual exclusive (in the code), yet you can select a face to be more than one mode. 1.2) Sort only works for blend Alpha yet it's an option regardless of the Transparency Blend you pick. 1.3) Shared doesn't affect anything in BGE. 1.4) ObColor only works for Text objects (old bitmap texts) when using Texture Face Materials. (not address yet, I so far ignored obcolor) 2 - Notes: ============ 2.1) Now "Use Face Textures" in material Option panel will work in Multitexture even if there is no texture channel. 2.2) In FaceTexture mode it will use TexFace all the time, even if you don't check the "Use Texture Face" option in the UI. It's a matter of decision, since the code for either way is there. I decided by the solution that makes the creation of a material fast - in this mode the user doesn't need to mess with textures or this "Use Texture Face" option at all. I'm not strong in my opinion here. But I think if we don't have this then what is the point of the Texture Face mode? 2.3) I kept references for tface only when we need the image, UV or the tiling setting. It should help later when/if we split the Image and UV layers from the tface struct (Campbell and Brecht proposal). 3 - Changes in a Nutshell: ========================== 3.1) "Texture Face" panel (in the Mesh/Object Data panel) no longer exists. Those settings are all part of the material properties, visible when Game Render is set. 3.2) "Texture Face" Shading mode (in the Render panel) is now called “Single Texture”, it needs a material for special settings (e.g. Billboard, Alpha Sort, …). 3.3) New options in the Material Panel * Shadeless option in the Material panel is now supported for all three Shading modes. * Physics is now toggleable, this is the old Collision option. * Two Side (on) is now called Back Culling (off). * Alpha Sort is one of the Alpha options, together (and mutually exclusive) to Alpha Blend, Alpha Clip, Add and Opaque (i.e. solid). * Shadow, Billboard and Halo are grouped in the “Face Orientation” property. * "Face Textures" and "Face Textures Alpha" (under Options) can be used for all but GLSL shading mode (to be supported in GLSL eventually). * The backend in the game engine is still the same as before. The only changes are in the interface and in the way you need to think your materials. The bottomline is: It’s no longer possible to share materials between faces that do not share the same game properties. 4 - Acknowledgment: ================== Mike Pan for the design discussions, and testing along the whole development process. Vitor Balbio for the first hands-on code with the interface changes. That helped me a lot to push me into work on that. Benoit Bolsee and Brecht van Lommel for patch review (* no one reviewed the whole patch, or the latest iteractions, so I still hold liability for any problems). Blender artists that gave feedback and helped testing the patch. Patch review and original documentation can be found here: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Dfelinto/TexFace http://codereview.appspot.com/4289041/
2011-09-19 19:55:59 +00:00
alphablend = mMaterial->alphablend;
TexFace to Material Settings big patch Summary: ======== The idea here is to move the texface options into the material panel. For images with the change please visit: http://code.blender.org/index.php/2011/09/bge-material-texface-changes 1 - Some of the legacy problems 2.49 and 2.5x has with the texface system: ========================================================================== 1.1) Shadow, Bilboard and Halo are mutual exclusive (in the code), yet you can select a face to be more than one mode. 1.2) Sort only works for blend Alpha yet it's an option regardless of the Transparency Blend you pick. 1.3) Shared doesn't affect anything in BGE. 1.4) ObColor only works for Text objects (old bitmap texts) when using Texture Face Materials. (not address yet, I so far ignored obcolor) 2 - Notes: ============ 2.1) Now "Use Face Textures" in material Option panel will work in Multitexture even if there is no texture channel. 2.2) In FaceTexture mode it will use TexFace all the time, even if you don't check the "Use Texture Face" option in the UI. It's a matter of decision, since the code for either way is there. I decided by the solution that makes the creation of a material fast - in this mode the user doesn't need to mess with textures or this "Use Texture Face" option at all. I'm not strong in my opinion here. But I think if we don't have this then what is the point of the Texture Face mode? 2.3) I kept references for tface only when we need the image, UV or the tiling setting. It should help later when/if we split the Image and UV layers from the tface struct (Campbell and Brecht proposal). 3 - Changes in a Nutshell: ========================== 3.1) "Texture Face" panel (in the Mesh/Object Data panel) no longer exists. Those settings are all part of the material properties, visible when Game Render is set. 3.2) "Texture Face" Shading mode (in the Render panel) is now called “Single Texture”, it needs a material for special settings (e.g. Billboard, Alpha Sort, …). 3.3) New options in the Material Panel * Shadeless option in the Material panel is now supported for all three Shading modes. * Physics is now toggleable, this is the old Collision option. * Two Side (on) is now called Back Culling (off). * Alpha Sort is one of the Alpha options, together (and mutually exclusive) to Alpha Blend, Alpha Clip, Add and Opaque (i.e. solid). * Shadow, Billboard and Halo are grouped in the “Face Orientation” property. * "Face Textures" and "Face Textures Alpha" (under Options) can be used for all but GLSL shading mode (to be supported in GLSL eventually). * The backend in the game engine is still the same as before. The only changes are in the interface and in the way you need to think your materials. The bottomline is: It’s no longer possible to share materials between faces that do not share the same game properties. 4 - Acknowledgment: ================== Mike Pan for the design discussions, and testing along the whole development process. Vitor Balbio for the first hands-on code with the interface changes. That helped me a lot to push me into work on that. Benoit Bolsee and Brecht van Lommel for patch review (* no one reviewed the whole patch, or the latest iteractions, so I still hold liability for any problems). Blender artists that gave feedback and helped testing the patch. Patch review and original documentation can be found here: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/User:Dfelinto/TexFace http://codereview.appspot.com/4289041/
2011-09-19 19:55:59 +00:00
rasty->SetAlphaBlend(alphablend);
}
}
void KX_BlenderMaterial::ActivatGLMaterials( RAS_IRasterizer* rasty )const
{
if (mShader || !mBlenderShader) {
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
rasty->SetSpecularity(
mMaterial->speccolor[0]*mMaterial->spec_f,
mMaterial->speccolor[1]*mMaterial->spec_f,
mMaterial->speccolor[2]*mMaterial->spec_f,
mMaterial->spec_f
);
rasty->SetShinyness( mMaterial->hard );
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
rasty->SetDiffuse(
mMaterial->matcolor[0]*mMaterial->ref+mMaterial->emit,
mMaterial->matcolor[1]*mMaterial->ref+mMaterial->emit,
mMaterial->matcolor[2]*mMaterial->ref+mMaterial->emit,
1.0f);
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
rasty->SetEmissive(
mMaterial->matcolor[0]*mMaterial->emit,
mMaterial->matcolor[1]*mMaterial->emit,
mMaterial->matcolor[2]*mMaterial->emit,
1.0 );
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
rasty->SetAmbient(mMaterial->amb);
}
if (mMaterial->material)
rasty->SetPolygonOffset(-mMaterial->material->zoffs, 0.0);
}
void KX_BlenderMaterial::ActivateTexGen(RAS_IRasterizer *ras) const
{
if (ras->GetDrawingMode() == RAS_IRasterizer::KX_TEXTURED) {
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
ras->SetAttribNum(0);
if (mShader && GLEW_ARB_shader_objects) {
if (mShader->GetAttribute() == BL_Shader::SHD_TANGENT) {
ras->SetAttrib(RAS_IRasterizer::RAS_TEXCO_DISABLE, 0);
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
ras->SetAttrib(RAS_IRasterizer::RAS_TEXTANGENT, 1);
ras->SetAttribNum(2);
}
}
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
ras->SetTexCoordNum(mMaterial->num_enabled);
for (int i=0; i<mMaterial->num_enabled; i++) {
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
int mode = mMaterial->mapping[i].mapping;
if (mode &USECUSTOMUV)
{
if (!mMaterial->mapping[i].uvCoName.IsEmpty())
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
ras->SetTexCoord(RAS_IRasterizer::RAS_TEXCO_UV2, i);
continue;
}
if ( mode &(USEREFL|USEOBJ))
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
ras->SetTexCoord(RAS_IRasterizer::RAS_TEXCO_GEN, i);
else if (mode &USEORCO)
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
ras->SetTexCoord(RAS_IRasterizer::RAS_TEXCO_ORCO, i);
else if (mode &USENORM)
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
ras->SetTexCoord(RAS_IRasterizer::RAS_TEXCO_NORM, i);
else if (mode &USEUV)
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
ras->SetTexCoord(RAS_IRasterizer::RAS_TEXCO_UV1, i);
else if (mode &USETANG)
Merge of apricot branch game engine changes into trunk, excluding GLSL. GLEW ==== Added the GLEW opengl extension library into extern/, always compiled into Blender now. This is much nicer than doing this kind of extension management manually, and will be used in the game engine, for GLSL, and other opengl extensions. * According to the GLEW website it works on Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, Irix, and Solaris. There might still be platform specific issues due to this commit, so let me know and I'll look into it. * This means also that all extensions will now always be compiled in, regardless of the glext.h on the platform where compilation happens. Game Engine =========== Refactoring of the use of opengl extensions and other drawing code in the game engine, and cleaning up some hacks related to GLSL integration. These changes will be merged into trunk too after this. The game engine graphics demos & apricot level survived my tests, but this could use some good testing of course. For users: please test with the options "Generate Display Lists" and "Vertex Arrays" enabled, these should be the fastest and are supposed to be "unreliable", but if that's the case that's probably due to bugs that can be fixed. * The game engine now also uses GLEW for extensions, replacing the custom opengl extensions code that was there. Removes a lot of #ifdef's, but the runtime checks stay of course. * Removed the WITHOUT_GLEXT environment variable. This was added to work around a specific bug and only disabled multitexturing anyway. It might also have caused a slowdown since it was retrieving the environment variable for every vertex in immediate mode (bug #13680). * Refactored the code to allow drawing skinned meshes with vertex arrays too, removing some specific immediate mode drawing functions for this that only did extra normal calculation. Now it always splits vertices of flat faces instead. * Refactored normal recalculation with some minor optimizations, required for the above change. * Removed some outdated code behind the __NLA_OLDDEFORM #ifdef. * Fixed various bugs in setting of multitexture coordinates and vertex attributes for vertex arrays. These were not being enabled/disabled correct according to the opengl spec, leading to crashes. Also tangent attributes used an immediate mode call for vertex arrays, which can't work. * Fixed use of uninitialized variable in RAS_TexVert. * Exporting skinned meshes was doing O(n^2) lookups for vertices and deform weights, now uses same trick as regular meshes.
2008-06-17 10:27:34 +00:00
ras->SetTexCoord(RAS_IRasterizer::RAS_TEXTANGENT, i);
else
ras->SetTexCoord(RAS_IRasterizer::RAS_TEXCO_DISABLE, i);
}
}
}
void KX_BlenderMaterial::setTexMatrixData(int i)
{
glMatrixMode(GL_TEXTURE);
glLoadIdentity();
if ( GLEW_ARB_texture_cube_map &&
mTextures[i].GetTextureType() == GL_TEXTURE_CUBE_MAP_ARB &&
mMaterial->mapping[i].mapping & USEREFL) {
glScalef(
mMaterial->mapping[i].scale[0],
-mMaterial->mapping[i].scale[1],
-mMaterial->mapping[i].scale[2]
);
}
else
{
glScalef(
mMaterial->mapping[i].scale[0],
mMaterial->mapping[i].scale[1],
mMaterial->mapping[i].scale[2]
);
}
glTranslatef(
mMaterial->mapping[i].offsets[0],
mMaterial->mapping[i].offsets[1],
mMaterial->mapping[i].offsets[2]
);
glMatrixMode(GL_MODELVIEW);
}
static void GetProjPlane(BL_Material *mat, int index,int num, float*param)
{
param[0]=param[1]=param[2]=param[3]=0.f;
if ( mat->mapping[index].projplane[num] == PROJX )
param[0] = 1.f;
else if ( mat->mapping[index].projplane[num] == PROJY )
param[1] = 1.f;
else if ( mat->mapping[index].projplane[num] == PROJZ)
param[2] = 1.f;
}
void KX_BlenderMaterial::setObjectMatrixData(int i, RAS_IRasterizer *ras)
{
KX_GameObject *obj =
(KX_GameObject*)
mScene->GetObjectList()->FindValue(mMaterial->mapping[i].objconame);
if (!obj) return;
glTexGeni(GL_S, GL_TEXTURE_GEN_MODE, GL_EYE_LINEAR );
glTexGeni(GL_T, GL_TEXTURE_GEN_MODE, GL_EYE_LINEAR );
glTexGeni(GL_R, GL_TEXTURE_GEN_MODE, GL_EYE_LINEAR );
GLenum plane = GL_EYE_PLANE;
// figure plane gen
float proj[4]= {0.f,0.f,0.f,0.f};
GetProjPlane(mMaterial, i, 0, proj);
glTexGenfv(GL_S, plane, proj);
GetProjPlane(mMaterial, i, 1, proj);
glTexGenfv(GL_T, plane, proj);
GetProjPlane(mMaterial, i, 2, proj);
glTexGenfv(GL_R, plane, proj);
glEnable(GL_TEXTURE_GEN_S);
glEnable(GL_TEXTURE_GEN_T);
glEnable(GL_TEXTURE_GEN_R);
const MT_Matrix4x4& mvmat = ras->GetViewMatrix();
glMatrixMode(GL_TEXTURE);
glLoadIdentity();
glScalef(
mMaterial->mapping[i].scale[0],
mMaterial->mapping[i].scale[1],
mMaterial->mapping[i].scale[2]
);
MT_Point3 pos = obj->NodeGetWorldPosition();
MT_Vector4 matmul = MT_Vector4(pos[0], pos[1], pos[2], 1.f);
MT_Vector4 t = mvmat*matmul;
glTranslatef( (float)(-t[0]), (float)(-t[1]), (float)(-t[2]) );
glMatrixMode(GL_MODELVIEW);
}
// ------------------------------------
void KX_BlenderMaterial::UpdateIPO(
MT_Vector4 rgba,
MT_Vector3 specrgb,
MT_Scalar hard,
MT_Scalar spec,
MT_Scalar ref,
MT_Scalar emit,
MT_Scalar alpha
)
{
// only works one deep now
mMaterial->speccolor[0] = (float)(specrgb)[0];
mMaterial->speccolor[1] = (float)(specrgb)[1];
mMaterial->speccolor[2] = (float)(specrgb)[2];
mMaterial->matcolor[0] = (float)(rgba[0]);
mMaterial->matcolor[1] = (float)(rgba[1]);
mMaterial->matcolor[2] = (float)(rgba[2]);
mMaterial->alpha = (float)(alpha);
mMaterial->hard = (float)(hard);
mMaterial->emit = (float)(emit);
mMaterial->spec_f = (float)(spec);
mMaterial->ref = (float)(ref);
}
void KX_BlenderMaterial::SetBlenderGLSLShader(int layer)
{
if (!mBlenderShader)
mBlenderShader = new BL_BlenderShader(mScene, mMaterial->material, layer);
if (!mBlenderShader->Ok()) {
delete mBlenderShader;
mBlenderShader = 0;
}
}
#ifdef WITH_PYTHON
PyMethodDef KX_BlenderMaterial::Methods[] =
{
KX_PYMETHODTABLE( KX_BlenderMaterial, getShader ),
KX_PYMETHODTABLE( KX_BlenderMaterial, getMaterialIndex ),
KX_PYMETHODTABLE( KX_BlenderMaterial, setBlending ),
{NULL,NULL} //Sentinel
};
PyAttributeDef KX_BlenderMaterial::Attributes[] = {
KX_PYATTRIBUTE_RO_FUNCTION("shader", KX_BlenderMaterial, pyattr_get_shader),
KX_PYATTRIBUTE_RO_FUNCTION("material_index", KX_BlenderMaterial, pyattr_get_materialIndex),
KX_PYATTRIBUTE_RW_FUNCTION("blending", KX_BlenderMaterial, pyattr_get_blending, pyattr_set_blending),
{ NULL } //Sentinel
};
PyTypeObject KX_BlenderMaterial::Type = {
PyVarObject_HEAD_INIT(NULL, 0)
2009-08-10 00:07:34 +00:00
"KX_BlenderMaterial",
sizeof(PyObjectPlus_Proxy),
0,
py_base_dealloc,
0,
0,
0,
0,
py_base_repr,
0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,0,
Py_TPFLAGS_DEFAULT | Py_TPFLAGS_BASETYPE,
0,0,0,0,0,0,0,
Methods,
0,
0,
&PyObjectPlus::Type,
0,0,0,0,0,0,
py_base_new
};
PyObject* KX_BlenderMaterial::pyattr_get_shader(void *self_v, const KX_PYATTRIBUTE_DEF *attrdef)
{
KX_BlenderMaterial* self= static_cast<KX_BlenderMaterial*>(self_v);
return self->PygetShader(NULL, NULL);
}
PyObject* KX_BlenderMaterial::pyattr_get_materialIndex(void *self_v, const KX_PYATTRIBUTE_DEF *attrdef)
{
KX_BlenderMaterial* self= static_cast<KX_BlenderMaterial*>(self_v);
return PyLong_FromSsize_t(self->GetMaterialIndex());
}
PyObject* KX_BlenderMaterial::pyattr_get_blending(void *self_v, const KX_PYATTRIBUTE_DEF *attrdef)
{
KX_BlenderMaterial* self= static_cast<KX_BlenderMaterial*>(self_v);
unsigned int* bfunc = self->getBlendFunc();
return Py_BuildValue("(ll)", (long int)bfunc[0], (long int)bfunc[1]);
}
int KX_BlenderMaterial::pyattr_set_blending(void *self_v, const KX_PYATTRIBUTE_DEF *attrdef, PyObject *value)
{
KX_BlenderMaterial* self= static_cast<KX_BlenderMaterial*>(self_v);
PyObject* obj = self->PysetBlending(value, NULL);
if (obj)
{
Py_DECREF(obj);
return 0;
}
return -1;
}
KX_PYMETHODDEF_DOC( KX_BlenderMaterial, getShader , "getShader()")
{
if ( !GLEW_ARB_fragment_shader) {
if (!mModified)
spit("Fragment shaders not supported");
mModified = true;
Py_RETURN_NONE;
}
if ( !GLEW_ARB_vertex_shader) {
if (!mModified)
spit("Vertex shaders not supported");
mModified = true;
Py_RETURN_NONE;
}
if (!GLEW_ARB_shader_objects) {
if (!mModified)
spit("GLSL not supported");
mModified = true;
Py_RETURN_NONE;
}
else {
// returns Py_None on error
// the calling script will need to check
if (!mShader && !mModified) {
mShader = new BL_Shader();
mModified = true;
}
if (mShader && !mShader->GetError()) {
m_flag &= ~RAS_BLENDERGLSL;
mMaterial->SetSharedMaterial(true);
mScene->GetBucketManager()->ReleaseDisplayLists(this);
return mShader->GetProxy();
}else
{
// decref all references to the object
// then delete it!
// We will then go back to fixed functionality
// for this material
if (mShader) {
delete mShader; /* will handle python de-referencing */
mShader=0;
}
}
Py_RETURN_NONE;
}
PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError, "material.getShader(): KX_BlenderMaterial, GLSL Error");
return NULL;
}
KX_PYMETHODDEF_DOC( KX_BlenderMaterial, getMaterialIndex, "getMaterialIndex()")
{
return PyLong_FromSsize_t( GetMaterialIndex() );
}
KX_PYMETHODDEF_DOC( KX_BlenderMaterial, getTexture, "getTexture( index )" )
{
// TODO: enable python switching
return NULL;
}
KX_PYMETHODDEF_DOC( KX_BlenderMaterial, setTexture , "setTexture( index, tex)")
{
// TODO: enable python switching
return NULL;
}
static unsigned int GL_array[11] = {
GL_ZERO,
GL_ONE,
GL_SRC_COLOR,
GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_COLOR,
GL_DST_COLOR,
GL_ONE_MINUS_DST_COLOR,
GL_SRC_ALPHA,
GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA,
GL_DST_ALPHA,
GL_ONE_MINUS_DST_ALPHA,
GL_SRC_ALPHA_SATURATE
};
KX_PYMETHODDEF_DOC( KX_BlenderMaterial, setBlending , "setBlending( bge.logic.src, bge.logic.dest)")
{
unsigned int b[2];
if (PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "ii:setBlending", &b[0], &b[1]))
{
bool value_found[2] = {false, false};
for (int i=0; i<11; i++)
{
if (b[0] == GL_array[i]) {
value_found[0] = true;
mBlendFunc[0] = b[0];
}
if (b[1] == GL_array[i]) {
value_found[1] = true;
mBlendFunc[1] = b[1];
}
if (value_found[0] && value_found[1]) break;
}
if (!value_found[0] || !value_found[1]) {
PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError, "material.setBlending(int, int): KX_BlenderMaterial, invalid enum.");
return NULL;
}
mUserDefBlend = true;
Py_RETURN_NONE;
}
return NULL;
}
#endif // WITH_PYTHON