`core/os/os.h` doesn't use `core/io/image.h`. It just brings
transitive dependencies. Lots of dependencies because `core/os/os.h`
is transitively included in almost every file of godot
Also added `core/io/image.h` into files^1 where `Ref<Image>` and `core/os/os.h`
were used to prevent obscure errors involving `Ref<Image>`
^1 except those which include `core/io/image_loader.h` or `core/io/image.h` by
corresponding .h file with the same name
Signed-off-by: Yevhen Babiichuk (DustDFG) <dfgdust@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: A Thousand Ships <96648715+AThousandShips@users.noreply.github.com>
Features:
- Debug-only tracking of objects by type. See
get_driver_allocs_by_object_type et al.
- Debug-only Breadcrumb info for debugging GPU crashes and device lost
- Performance report per frame from get_perf_report
- Some VMA calls had to be modified in order to insert the necessary
memory callbacks
Functionality marked as "debug-only" is only available in debug or dev
builds.
Misc fixes:
- Early break optimization in RenderingDevice::uniform_set_create
============================
The work was performed by collaboration of TheForge and Google. I am
merely splitting it up into smaller PRs and cleaning it up.
Fixes#73374
As of godot 4 On windows/osx the game window will be frozen and will not
be updated.
In the debugger loop it calls
OS::get_singleton()->process_and_drop_events();
which allows windows/osx to handle system events. If the window doesn't
handle these events then both systems will judge the window to be 'not
responding' (osx beachball cursor)
When the event processing code was migrated from OS to DisplayServer the
process_and_drop_events() logic was moved to DisplayServer, but the call
inside the remote debugger pause loop was not updated to call the
DisplayServer version, there are currently no implementations of
OS::process_and_drop_events() so i removed it and switched to the new
DisplayServer::force_process_and_drop_events() method.
Adds 3D fixed timestep interpolation to the rendering server.
This does not yet include support for multimeshes or particles.
Co-authored-by: lawnjelly <lawnjelly@gmail.com>
Folder names ending with one or more `.` characters are not allowed
on Windows, so this would break writing logs, shader cache and other
project-specific files. Trailing periods are now stripped in this case.
On non-Windows platforms, this change still applies in the interest
of portability.
Aims for more consistent MIDI support across Windows, MacOS, Linux and
to provide a base for adding MIDI drivers for other platforms.
Reworks the MIDIDriverALSAMidi MIDI parsing implementation as a platform
independent version in MIDIDriver::Parser.
Uses MIDIDriver::Parser to provide running status support in MacOS
MIDIDriverCoreMidi.
Collects connected input names at open, ensuring devices indices reported
in events match names in array returned from get_connected_inputs.
Fixes#77035.
Fixes#79811.
With code review changes by: A Thousand Ships (she/her)
<96648715+AThousandShips@users.noreply.github.com>
Adds fixed timestep interpolation to the rendering server (2D only).
Switchable on and off with a project setting (default is off).
Co-authored-by: lawnjelly <lawnjelly@gmail.com>
- `Main::setup` early exits (failure or `--help`/`--version`) now
consistently return `EXIT_FAILURE` or `EXIT_SUCCESS` on all platforms,
instead of 255 on some and a Godot Error code on others.
- `Main::start` now returns the exit code, simplifying the handling of early
failures.
- `Main::iteration` needs to explicit set the exit code in OS if it errors
out.
- Web and iOS now properly return `OS::get_exit_code()` instead of 0.
It is possible to query the OS for the connected MIDI controllers,
but the event messages' device field was not being used. This implements
controller index being sent in InputEventMIDI messages in the device
property, matching the index from OS.get_connected_midi_inputs().
Based on the work done by @ramdor.
Closesgodotengine/godot-proposals#7733
Co-authored-by: Richie <richie_github@grange-lane.co.uk>
This change simply extracts 'SafeBinaryMutex' from 'mutex.h' to
'safe_binary_mutex.h', in an effort to reduce the compilation
speed impact of including `mutex.h`.
This adds a new enum `KeyLocation` and associated property
`InputEventKey.location`, which indicates the left/right location of key
events which may come from one of two physical keys, eg. Shift, Ctrl.
It also adds simulation of missing Shift KEYUP events for Windows.
When multiple Shifts are held down at the same time, Windows natively
only sends a KEYUP for the last one to be released.
This commits rewrites the sync logic in a way that the
`use_system_threads_for_low_priority_tasks` setting, which was added due to
the lack of a cross-platform wait-for-multiple-objects functionality, can be
removed (it's as if it was effectively hardcoded to `false`).
With the new implementation, we have the best of both worlds: threads don't
have to poll, plus no bespoke threads are used.
In addition, regarding deadlock prevention, since not every possible case of
wait-deadlock could be avoided, this commits removes the current best-effort
avoidance mechanisms and keeps only a simple, pessimistic way of detection.
It turns out that the only current user of deadlock prevention, ResourceLoader,
works fine with it and so every possible situation in resource loading is now
properly handled, with no possibilities of deadlocking. There's a comment in
the code with further details.
Lastly, a potential for load tasks never being awaited/disposed is cleared.