Fleshed out the "Optimize Mesh" options found in the mesh import UI
Gave a checkbox to every vertex attribute that can be compressed
Surfaced option to enable/disable Octahedral compression for
normal/tangent vectors
Also surfaces the vertex position compression option which previously
inaccessible because the defaults did not compress vertex positions
Supports all current importers (obj, fbx, collada, gltf)
Sets `AlignOperands` to `DontAlign`.
`clang-format` developers seem to mostly care about space-based indentation and
every other version of clang-format breaks the bad mismatch of tabs and spaces
that it seems to use for operand alignment. So it's better without, so that it
respects our two-tabs `ContinuationIndentWidth`.
Implement Octahedral Compression for normal/tangent vectors
*Oct32 for uncompressed vectors
*Oct16 for compressed vectors
Reduces vertex size for each attribute by
*Uncompressed: 12 bytes, vec4<float32> -> vec2<unorm16>
*Compressed: 2 bytes, vec4<unorm8> -> vec2<unorm8>
Binormal sign is encoded in the y coordinate of the encoded tangent
Added conversion functions to go from octahedral mapping to cartesian
for normal and tangent vectors
sprite_3d and soft_body meshes write to their vertex buffer memory
directly and need to convert their normals and tangents to the new oct
format before writing
Created a new mesh flag to specify whether a mesh is using octahedral
compression or not
Updated documentation to discuss new flag/defaults
Created shader flags to specify whether octahedral or cartesian vectors
are being used
Updated importers to use octahedral representation as the default format
for importing meshes
Updated ShaderGLES2 to support 64 bit version codes as we hit the limit
of the 32-bit integer that was previously used as a bitset to store
enabled/disabled flags
This can be used to invert a normal map's Y direction.
The existing Invert import option that inverts all RGB channels
is kept for compatibility with existing projects.
Fix issue when two skeletons end up directly parented.
Prevent animating TRS for skinned Mesh node.
Fix animating weights on meshes with targets but no weights.
Repeating NPOT textures are not guaranteed to be displayed correctly
in GLES2, since the specification does not mandate support for it.
The warning is also displayed in GLES3 projects that are configured
to allow falling back to GLES2.
This changes the types of a big number of variables.
General rules:
- Using `uint64_t` in general. We also considered `int64_t` but eventually
settled on keeping it unsigned, which is also closer to what one would expect
with `size_t`/`off_t`.
- We only keep `int64_t` for `seek_end` (takes a negative offset from the end)
and for the `Variant` bindings, since `Variant::INT` is `int64_t`. This means
we only need to guard against passing negative values in `core_bind.cpp`.
- Using `uint32_t` integers for concepts not needing such a huge range, like
pages, blocks, etc.
In addition:
- Improve usage of integer types in some related places; namely, `DirAccess`,
core binds.
Note:
- On Windows, `_ftelli64` reports invalid values when using 32-bit MinGW with
version < 8.0. This was an upstream bug fixed in 8.0. It breaks support for
big files on 32-bit Windows builds made with that toolchain. We might add a
workaround.
Fixes#44363.
Fixesgodotengine/godot-proposals#400.
Co-authored-by: Rémi Verschelde <rverschelde@gmail.com>
During the development of 3.3, internationalization features were added to allow arbitrary bone and node names.
However, doing so will break all references and existing animation clips for projects upgraded from 3.2
This adds an import setting, enabled by default, but disabled for newly generated .import files which restores the old behavior.
Its only purpose was to prevent importing CSV files as translations, but it
would still import them as *nothing*, leading to workflow issues.
This is now properly fixed with #47268 which allows disabling the import for
specific files.
(cherry picked from commit 7ed2220928)
Keyframe times shift slowly in imported animations, starting with a zero shift
at the beginning and increasing and becoming erratic slowly farther into an
animation, reaching significant levels at times after about 3 minutes into an
animation. This commit fixes the issue by increasing the precision of the
floating point numbers used for keyframe time calculations. Only the most
significant cases that cause fast accumulation of errors over a short animation
duration are fixed. Other cases that would have a marginal benefit from
switching to double precision numbers are left for another PR/further analysis.
Note that this change has no impact on the runtime performance of games/apps
created using Godot. It only affects the GLTF importer.
Fixes#47127.
(cherry picked from commit 6770a9413b)
- Based on C++11's `mutex`
- No more need to allocate-deallocate or check for null
- No pointer anymore, just a member variable
- Platform-specific implementations no longer needed
- Simpler for `NO_THREADS`
- `BinaryMutex` added for special cases as the non-recursive version
- `MutexLock` now takes a reference. At this point the cases of null `Mutex`es are rare. If you ever need that, just don't use `MutexLock`.
- `ScopedMutexLock` is dropped and replaced by `MutexLock`, because they were pretty much the same.