This is replaced by a much lighter weight and faster JNLM denoiser. OIDN is still much more accurate, and may be provided as an optional backend in the future, but the JNLM denoiser seems good enough for most use cases and removing OIDN reduces the build system complexity, binary size, and build times very significantly.
Introduces support for FSR2 as a new upscaler option available from the project settings. Also introduces an specific render list for surfaces that require motion and the ability to derive motion vectors from depth buffer and camera motion.
Upstreams the fix from #73310, so we can remove that patch.
Remove `infback.c` which we stopped compiling after #79273.
The `OF` macro was also removed so I can drop the patch where I yell
at Gentoo developers.
Security update, fixes CVE-2022-37434 in zlib.
Only applications exposing/using `inflateGetHeader()` seem to be affected,
which is not our case, so this is not critical for Godot.
Remove duplicated copy of zlib in freetype sources to force using the updated
version in `thirdparty/zlib/`.
Co-authored-by: Rémi Verschelde <rverschelde@gmail.com>
As many open source projects have started doing it, we're removing the
current year from the copyright notice, so that we don't need to bump
it every year.
It seems like only the first year of publication is technically
relevant for copyright notices, and even that seems to be something
that many companies stopped listing altogether (in a version controlled
codebase, the commits are a much better source of date of publication
than a hardcoded copyright statement).
We also now list Godot Engine contributors first as we're collectively
the current maintainers of the project, and we clarify that the
"exclusive" copyright of the co-founders covers the timespan before
opensourcing (their further contributions are included as part of Godot
Engine contributors).
Also fixed "cf." Frenchism - it's meant as "refer to / see".
Graphite is now available under:
MIT OR MPL-2.0 OR LGPL-2.1-or-later OR GPL-2.0-or-later
We pick MIT which is the same as Godot's main license for simplicity.
Remove define to skip deprecation warnings, upstream fixed those.
GLAD 1 creates unusable loaders for EGL, while the newly released GLAD 2
does not, so for consistency I thought that it would be a good idea to
uniform things beforehand. While it had some API changes some renames
were all that was needed and everything works like before, at least on
the Wayland branch.
I've kept the structure identical, although this new generator has quite
a few hefty features, such as a single header mode.
I've also added GLAD to `thirdparty/README.md`, but I haven't specified
that in the commit title because it's a very small "fix".
Initial TAA support based on the implementation in Spartan Engine.
Motion vectors are correctly generated for camera and mesh movement, but there is no support for other things like particles or skeleton deformations.
This importer was the fruit of a lot of amazing reverse engineering
work by RevoluPowered, based on the original Assimp importer that was
introduced by fire.
While promising and well tuned for a specific type of FBX scenes, it
was found to have many flaws to support the many FBX exporters and
legacy models that Godot users want to use. As we currently lack a
maintainer to improve it, those issues are left unresolved and FBX
import is still sub-par in the current Godot releases.
After some experimentation, we're instead adding a new importer that
relies on Facebook's `fbx2gltf` command line tool to convert FBX to
glTF, so that we can then use our well-maintained glTF importer.
See #59653 and https://github.com/facebookincubator/FBX2glTF for details.
It has been disabled in `master` since one year (#45852) and our plan
is for Bullet, and possibly other thirdparty physics engines, to be
implemented via GDExtension so that they can be selected by the users
who need them.