qt5base-lts/examples/opengl/qopenglwidget/glwidget.h

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// Copyright (C) 2016 The Qt Company Ltd.
// SPDX-License-Identifier: LicenseRef-Qt-Commercial OR BSD-3-Clause
#ifndef GLWIDGET_H
#define GLWIDGET_H
#include <QOpenGLWidget>
#include <QOpenGLFunctions>
Modernize the OpenGL examples Change them to use QOpenGLWidget and QOpenGLTexture. Advocate also the usage of VBOs. Hopeless examples, that rely on the fixed pipeline and will not compile or work in ES and dynamic builds, are moved to a "legacy" directory. The documentation pages for these are removed. This long due change avoids the confusion newcomers experience when trying to get started with Qt 5 and OpenGL. hellowindow's behavior is changed to open a single window only by default. The old default behavior, that opened three windows on platforms that supported both MultipleWindows & ThreadedOpenGL, can be requested by passing --multiple. --single is removed since it is the default now. This plays much nicer with drivers that have issues with threading. In addition, say hello to hellogl2. This is the old hellogl example updated to use QOpenGLWidget and OpenGL 2. It also has a mainwindow with multiple (un)dockable widgets containing the OpenGL widgets. This helps testing the behavior when the top-level of the QOpenGLWidget changes and provides a very important example of how to do proper resource management in this case. (must use aboutToBeDestroyed() of the context, since the context goes away and is replaced by a new one on every dock/undock) As a bonus, the logo is now real 3D, no more orthographic nonsense. Launch with --multisample to request 4x MSAA. Launch with --coreprofile to request 3.2 Core. In this particular example the shaders are present in both versions and there is a VAO so the application is functional with core profile contexts. Change-Id: Id780a80cb0708ef164cc172450ed74050f065596 Reviewed-by: Gunnar Sletta <gunnar.sletta@jollamobile.com>
2014-08-02 17:42:15 +00:00
#include <QOpenGLBuffer>
#include <QVector3D>
#include <QMatrix4x4>
#include <QElapsedTimer>
#include <QList>
#include <QPushButton>
class Bubble;
class MainWindow;
Modernize the OpenGL examples Change them to use QOpenGLWidget and QOpenGLTexture. Advocate also the usage of VBOs. Hopeless examples, that rely on the fixed pipeline and will not compile or work in ES and dynamic builds, are moved to a "legacy" directory. The documentation pages for these are removed. This long due change avoids the confusion newcomers experience when trying to get started with Qt 5 and OpenGL. hellowindow's behavior is changed to open a single window only by default. The old default behavior, that opened three windows on platforms that supported both MultipleWindows & ThreadedOpenGL, can be requested by passing --multiple. --single is removed since it is the default now. This plays much nicer with drivers that have issues with threading. In addition, say hello to hellogl2. This is the old hellogl example updated to use QOpenGLWidget and OpenGL 2. It also has a mainwindow with multiple (un)dockable widgets containing the OpenGL widgets. This helps testing the behavior when the top-level of the QOpenGLWidget changes and provides a very important example of how to do proper resource management in this case. (must use aboutToBeDestroyed() of the context, since the context goes away and is replaced by a new one on every dock/undock) As a bonus, the logo is now real 3D, no more orthographic nonsense. Launch with --multisample to request 4x MSAA. Launch with --coreprofile to request 3.2 Core. In this particular example the shaders are present in both versions and there is a VAO so the application is functional with core profile contexts. Change-Id: Id780a80cb0708ef164cc172450ed74050f065596 Reviewed-by: Gunnar Sletta <gunnar.sletta@jollamobile.com>
2014-08-02 17:42:15 +00:00
QT_FORWARD_DECLARE_CLASS(QOpenGLTexture)
QT_FORWARD_DECLARE_CLASS(QOpenGLShader)
QT_FORWARD_DECLARE_CLASS(QOpenGLShaderProgram)
class GLWidget : public QOpenGLWidget, protected QOpenGLFunctions
{
Q_OBJECT
public:
Compose render-to-texture widgets through QRhi QPlatformTextureList holds a QRhiTexture instead of GLuint. A QPlatformBackingStore now optionally can own a QRhi and a QRhiSwapChain for the associated window. Non-GL rendering must use this QRhi everywhere, whereas GL (QOpenGLWidget) can choose to still rely on resource sharing between contexts. A widget tells that it wants QRhi and the desired configuration in a new virtual function in QWidgetPrivate returning a QPlatformBackingStoreRhiConfig. This is evaluated (among a top-level's all children) upon create() before creating the repaint manager and the QWidgetWindow. In QOpenGLWidget what do request is obvious: it will request an OpenGL-based QRhi. QQuickWidget (or a potential future QRhiWidget) will be more interesting: it needs to honor the standard Qt Quick env.vars. and QQuickWindow APIs (or, in whatever way the user configured the QRhiWidget), and so will set up the config struct accordingly. In addition, the rhiconfig and surface type is (re)evaluated when (re)parenting a widget to a new tlw. If needed, this will now trigger a destroy - create on the tlw. This should be be safe to do in setParent. When multiple child widgets report an enabled rhiconfig, the first one (the first child encountered) wins. So e.g. attempting to have a QOpenGLWidget and a Vulkan-based QQuickWidget in the same top-level window will fail one of the widgets (it likely won't render). RasterGLSurface is no longer used by widgets. Rather, the appropriate surface type is chosen. The rhi support in the backingstore is usable without widgets as well. To make rhiFlush() functional, one needs to call setRhiConfig() after creating the QBackingStore. (like QWidget does to top-level windows) Most of the QT_NO_OPENGL ifdefs are eliminated all over the place. Everything with QRhi is unconditional code at compile time, except the actual initialization. Having to plumb the widget tlw's shareContext (or, now, the QRhi) through QWindowPrivate is no longer needed. The old approach does not scale: to implement composeAndFlush (now rhiFlush) we need more than just a QRhi object, and this way we no longer pollute everything starting from the widget level (QWidget's topextra -> QWidgetWindow -> QWindowPrivate) just to send data around. The BackingStoreOpenGLSupport interface and the QtGui - QtOpenGL split is all gone. Instead, there is a QBackingStoreDefaultCompositor in QtGui which is what the default implementations of composeAndFlush and toTexture call. (overriding composeAndFlush and co. f.ex. in eglfs should continue working mostly as-is, apart from adapting to the texture list changes and getting the native OpenGL texture id out of the QRhiTexture) As QQuickWidget is way too complicated to just port as-is, an rhi manual test (rhiwidget) is introduced as a first step, in ordewr to exercise a simple, custom render-to-texture widget that does something using a (not necessarily OpenGL-backed) QRhi and acts as fully functional QWidget (modeled after QOpenGLWidget). This can also form the foundation of a potential future QRhiWidget. It is also possible to force the QRhi-based flushing always, regardless of the presence of render-to-texture widgets. To exercise this, set the env.var. QT_WIDGETS_RHI=1. This picks a platform-specific default, and can be overridden with QT_WIDGETS_RHI_BACKEND. (in sync with Qt Quick) This can eventually be extended to query the platform plugin as well to check if the platform plugin prefers to always do flushes with a 3D API. QOpenGLWidget should work like before from the user's perspective, while internally it has to do some things differently to play nice and prevent regressions with the new rendering architecture. To exercise this better, the qopenglwidget example gets a new tab-based view (that could perhaps replace the example's main window later on?). The openglwidget manual test is made compatible with Qt 6, and gets a counterpart in form of the dockedopenglwidget manual test, which is a modified version of the cube example that features dock widgets. This is relevant in particular because render-to-texture widgets within a QDockWidget has its own specific quirks, with logic taking this into account, hence testing is essential. For existing applications there are two important consequences with this patch in place: - Once the rhi-based composition is enabled, it stays active for the lifetime of the top-level window. - Dynamically creating and parenting the first render-to-texture widget to an already created tlw will destroy and recreate the tlw (and the underlying window). The visible effects of this depend on the platform. (e.g. the window may disappear and reappear on some, whereas with other windowing systems it is not noticeable at all - this is not really different from similar situtions with reparenting or when moving windows between screens, so should be acceptable in practice) - On iOS raster windows are flushed with Metal (and rhi) from now on (previously this was through OpenGL by making flush() call composeAndFlush(). Change-Id: Id05bd0f7a26fa845f8b7ad8eedda3b0e78ab7a4e Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
2021-10-25 13:21:31 +00:00
GLWidget(MainWindow *maybeMainWindow, const QColor &background);
~GLWidget();
public slots:
void setScaling(int scale);
void setLogo();
void setTexture();
Modernize the OpenGL examples Change them to use QOpenGLWidget and QOpenGLTexture. Advocate also the usage of VBOs. Hopeless examples, that rely on the fixed pipeline and will not compile or work in ES and dynamic builds, are moved to a "legacy" directory. The documentation pages for these are removed. This long due change avoids the confusion newcomers experience when trying to get started with Qt 5 and OpenGL. hellowindow's behavior is changed to open a single window only by default. The old default behavior, that opened three windows on platforms that supported both MultipleWindows & ThreadedOpenGL, can be requested by passing --multiple. --single is removed since it is the default now. This plays much nicer with drivers that have issues with threading. In addition, say hello to hellogl2. This is the old hellogl example updated to use QOpenGLWidget and OpenGL 2. It also has a mainwindow with multiple (un)dockable widgets containing the OpenGL widgets. This helps testing the behavior when the top-level of the QOpenGLWidget changes and provides a very important example of how to do proper resource management in this case. (must use aboutToBeDestroyed() of the context, since the context goes away and is replaced by a new one on every dock/undock) As a bonus, the logo is now real 3D, no more orthographic nonsense. Launch with --multisample to request 4x MSAA. Launch with --coreprofile to request 3.2 Core. In this particular example the shaders are present in both versions and there is a VAO so the application is functional with core profile contexts. Change-Id: Id780a80cb0708ef164cc172450ed74050f065596 Reviewed-by: Gunnar Sletta <gunnar.sletta@jollamobile.com>
2014-08-02 17:42:15 +00:00
void setShowBubbles(bool);
void setTransparent(bool transparent);
protected:
void resizeGL(int w, int h) override;
void paintGL() override;
void initializeGL() override;
private:
void paintTexturedCube();
void paintQtLogo();
void createGeometry();
void createBubbles(int number);
void quad(qreal x1, qreal y1, qreal x2, qreal y2, qreal x3, qreal y3, qreal x4, qreal y4);
void extrude(qreal x1, qreal y1, qreal x2, qreal y2);
Compose render-to-texture widgets through QRhi QPlatformTextureList holds a QRhiTexture instead of GLuint. A QPlatformBackingStore now optionally can own a QRhi and a QRhiSwapChain for the associated window. Non-GL rendering must use this QRhi everywhere, whereas GL (QOpenGLWidget) can choose to still rely on resource sharing between contexts. A widget tells that it wants QRhi and the desired configuration in a new virtual function in QWidgetPrivate returning a QPlatformBackingStoreRhiConfig. This is evaluated (among a top-level's all children) upon create() before creating the repaint manager and the QWidgetWindow. In QOpenGLWidget what do request is obvious: it will request an OpenGL-based QRhi. QQuickWidget (or a potential future QRhiWidget) will be more interesting: it needs to honor the standard Qt Quick env.vars. and QQuickWindow APIs (or, in whatever way the user configured the QRhiWidget), and so will set up the config struct accordingly. In addition, the rhiconfig and surface type is (re)evaluated when (re)parenting a widget to a new tlw. If needed, this will now trigger a destroy - create on the tlw. This should be be safe to do in setParent. When multiple child widgets report an enabled rhiconfig, the first one (the first child encountered) wins. So e.g. attempting to have a QOpenGLWidget and a Vulkan-based QQuickWidget in the same top-level window will fail one of the widgets (it likely won't render). RasterGLSurface is no longer used by widgets. Rather, the appropriate surface type is chosen. The rhi support in the backingstore is usable without widgets as well. To make rhiFlush() functional, one needs to call setRhiConfig() after creating the QBackingStore. (like QWidget does to top-level windows) Most of the QT_NO_OPENGL ifdefs are eliminated all over the place. Everything with QRhi is unconditional code at compile time, except the actual initialization. Having to plumb the widget tlw's shareContext (or, now, the QRhi) through QWindowPrivate is no longer needed. The old approach does not scale: to implement composeAndFlush (now rhiFlush) we need more than just a QRhi object, and this way we no longer pollute everything starting from the widget level (QWidget's topextra -> QWidgetWindow -> QWindowPrivate) just to send data around. The BackingStoreOpenGLSupport interface and the QtGui - QtOpenGL split is all gone. Instead, there is a QBackingStoreDefaultCompositor in QtGui which is what the default implementations of composeAndFlush and toTexture call. (overriding composeAndFlush and co. f.ex. in eglfs should continue working mostly as-is, apart from adapting to the texture list changes and getting the native OpenGL texture id out of the QRhiTexture) As QQuickWidget is way too complicated to just port as-is, an rhi manual test (rhiwidget) is introduced as a first step, in ordewr to exercise a simple, custom render-to-texture widget that does something using a (not necessarily OpenGL-backed) QRhi and acts as fully functional QWidget (modeled after QOpenGLWidget). This can also form the foundation of a potential future QRhiWidget. It is also possible to force the QRhi-based flushing always, regardless of the presence of render-to-texture widgets. To exercise this, set the env.var. QT_WIDGETS_RHI=1. This picks a platform-specific default, and can be overridden with QT_WIDGETS_RHI_BACKEND. (in sync with Qt Quick) This can eventually be extended to query the platform plugin as well to check if the platform plugin prefers to always do flushes with a 3D API. QOpenGLWidget should work like before from the user's perspective, while internally it has to do some things differently to play nice and prevent regressions with the new rendering architecture. To exercise this better, the qopenglwidget example gets a new tab-based view (that could perhaps replace the example's main window later on?). The openglwidget manual test is made compatible with Qt 6, and gets a counterpart in form of the dockedopenglwidget manual test, which is a modified version of the cube example that features dock widgets. This is relevant in particular because render-to-texture widgets within a QDockWidget has its own specific quirks, with logic taking this into account, hence testing is essential. For existing applications there are two important consequences with this patch in place: - Once the rhi-based composition is enabled, it stays active for the lifetime of the top-level window. - Dynamically creating and parenting the first render-to-texture widget to an already created tlw will destroy and recreate the tlw (and the underlying window). The visible effects of this depend on the platform. (e.g. the window may disappear and reappear on some, whereas with other windowing systems it is not noticeable at all - this is not really different from similar situtions with reparenting or when moving windows between screens, so should be acceptable in practice) - On iOS raster windows are flushed with Metal (and rhi) from now on (previously this was through OpenGL by making flush() call composeAndFlush(). Change-Id: Id05bd0f7a26fa845f8b7ad8eedda3b0e78ab7a4e Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
2021-10-25 13:21:31 +00:00
void reset();
Modernize the OpenGL examples Change them to use QOpenGLWidget and QOpenGLTexture. Advocate also the usage of VBOs. Hopeless examples, that rely on the fixed pipeline and will not compile or work in ES and dynamic builds, are moved to a "legacy" directory. The documentation pages for these are removed. This long due change avoids the confusion newcomers experience when trying to get started with Qt 5 and OpenGL. hellowindow's behavior is changed to open a single window only by default. The old default behavior, that opened three windows on platforms that supported both MultipleWindows & ThreadedOpenGL, can be requested by passing --multiple. --single is removed since it is the default now. This plays much nicer with drivers that have issues with threading. In addition, say hello to hellogl2. This is the old hellogl example updated to use QOpenGLWidget and OpenGL 2. It also has a mainwindow with multiple (un)dockable widgets containing the OpenGL widgets. This helps testing the behavior when the top-level of the QOpenGLWidget changes and provides a very important example of how to do proper resource management in this case. (must use aboutToBeDestroyed() of the context, since the context goes away and is replaced by a new one on every dock/undock) As a bonus, the logo is now real 3D, no more orthographic nonsense. Launch with --multisample to request 4x MSAA. Launch with --coreprofile to request 3.2 Core. In this particular example the shaders are present in both versions and there is a VAO so the application is functional with core profile contexts. Change-Id: Id780a80cb0708ef164cc172450ed74050f065596 Reviewed-by: Gunnar Sletta <gunnar.sletta@jollamobile.com>
2014-08-02 17:42:15 +00:00
MainWindow *m_mainWindow;
qreal m_fAngle = 0;
qreal m_fScale = 1;
bool m_showBubbles = true;
QList<QVector3D> m_vertices;
QList<QVector3D> m_normals;
bool m_qtLogo = true;
QList<Bubble *> m_bubbles;
int m_frames = 0;
QElapsedTimer m_time;
QOpenGLShader *m_vshader1 = nullptr;
QOpenGLShader *m_fshader1 = nullptr;
QOpenGLShader *m_vshader2 = nullptr;
QOpenGLShader *m_fshader2 = nullptr;
QOpenGLShaderProgram *m_program1 = nullptr;
QOpenGLShaderProgram *m_program2 = nullptr;
QOpenGLTexture *m_texture = nullptr;
Modernize the OpenGL examples Change them to use QOpenGLWidget and QOpenGLTexture. Advocate also the usage of VBOs. Hopeless examples, that rely on the fixed pipeline and will not compile or work in ES and dynamic builds, are moved to a "legacy" directory. The documentation pages for these are removed. This long due change avoids the confusion newcomers experience when trying to get started with Qt 5 and OpenGL. hellowindow's behavior is changed to open a single window only by default. The old default behavior, that opened three windows on platforms that supported both MultipleWindows & ThreadedOpenGL, can be requested by passing --multiple. --single is removed since it is the default now. This plays much nicer with drivers that have issues with threading. In addition, say hello to hellogl2. This is the old hellogl example updated to use QOpenGLWidget and OpenGL 2. It also has a mainwindow with multiple (un)dockable widgets containing the OpenGL widgets. This helps testing the behavior when the top-level of the QOpenGLWidget changes and provides a very important example of how to do proper resource management in this case. (must use aboutToBeDestroyed() of the context, since the context goes away and is replaced by a new one on every dock/undock) As a bonus, the logo is now real 3D, no more orthographic nonsense. Launch with --multisample to request 4x MSAA. Launch with --coreprofile to request 3.2 Core. In this particular example the shaders are present in both versions and there is a VAO so the application is functional with core profile contexts. Change-Id: Id780a80cb0708ef164cc172450ed74050f065596 Reviewed-by: Gunnar Sletta <gunnar.sletta@jollamobile.com>
2014-08-02 17:42:15 +00:00
QOpenGLBuffer m_vbo1;
QOpenGLBuffer m_vbo2;
int m_vertexAttr1 = 0;
int m_normalAttr1 = 0;
int m_matrixUniform1 = 0;
int m_vertexAttr2 = 0;
int m_normalAttr2 = 0;
int m_texCoordAttr2 = 0;
int m_matrixUniform2 = 0;
int m_textureUniform2 = 0;
bool m_transparent = false;
QPushButton *m_btn = nullptr;
Compose render-to-texture widgets through QRhi QPlatformTextureList holds a QRhiTexture instead of GLuint. A QPlatformBackingStore now optionally can own a QRhi and a QRhiSwapChain for the associated window. Non-GL rendering must use this QRhi everywhere, whereas GL (QOpenGLWidget) can choose to still rely on resource sharing between contexts. A widget tells that it wants QRhi and the desired configuration in a new virtual function in QWidgetPrivate returning a QPlatformBackingStoreRhiConfig. This is evaluated (among a top-level's all children) upon create() before creating the repaint manager and the QWidgetWindow. In QOpenGLWidget what do request is obvious: it will request an OpenGL-based QRhi. QQuickWidget (or a potential future QRhiWidget) will be more interesting: it needs to honor the standard Qt Quick env.vars. and QQuickWindow APIs (or, in whatever way the user configured the QRhiWidget), and so will set up the config struct accordingly. In addition, the rhiconfig and surface type is (re)evaluated when (re)parenting a widget to a new tlw. If needed, this will now trigger a destroy - create on the tlw. This should be be safe to do in setParent. When multiple child widgets report an enabled rhiconfig, the first one (the first child encountered) wins. So e.g. attempting to have a QOpenGLWidget and a Vulkan-based QQuickWidget in the same top-level window will fail one of the widgets (it likely won't render). RasterGLSurface is no longer used by widgets. Rather, the appropriate surface type is chosen. The rhi support in the backingstore is usable without widgets as well. To make rhiFlush() functional, one needs to call setRhiConfig() after creating the QBackingStore. (like QWidget does to top-level windows) Most of the QT_NO_OPENGL ifdefs are eliminated all over the place. Everything with QRhi is unconditional code at compile time, except the actual initialization. Having to plumb the widget tlw's shareContext (or, now, the QRhi) through QWindowPrivate is no longer needed. The old approach does not scale: to implement composeAndFlush (now rhiFlush) we need more than just a QRhi object, and this way we no longer pollute everything starting from the widget level (QWidget's topextra -> QWidgetWindow -> QWindowPrivate) just to send data around. The BackingStoreOpenGLSupport interface and the QtGui - QtOpenGL split is all gone. Instead, there is a QBackingStoreDefaultCompositor in QtGui which is what the default implementations of composeAndFlush and toTexture call. (overriding composeAndFlush and co. f.ex. in eglfs should continue working mostly as-is, apart from adapting to the texture list changes and getting the native OpenGL texture id out of the QRhiTexture) As QQuickWidget is way too complicated to just port as-is, an rhi manual test (rhiwidget) is introduced as a first step, in ordewr to exercise a simple, custom render-to-texture widget that does something using a (not necessarily OpenGL-backed) QRhi and acts as fully functional QWidget (modeled after QOpenGLWidget). This can also form the foundation of a potential future QRhiWidget. It is also possible to force the QRhi-based flushing always, regardless of the presence of render-to-texture widgets. To exercise this, set the env.var. QT_WIDGETS_RHI=1. This picks a platform-specific default, and can be overridden with QT_WIDGETS_RHI_BACKEND. (in sync with Qt Quick) This can eventually be extended to query the platform plugin as well to check if the platform plugin prefers to always do flushes with a 3D API. QOpenGLWidget should work like before from the user's perspective, while internally it has to do some things differently to play nice and prevent regressions with the new rendering architecture. To exercise this better, the qopenglwidget example gets a new tab-based view (that could perhaps replace the example's main window later on?). The openglwidget manual test is made compatible with Qt 6, and gets a counterpart in form of the dockedopenglwidget manual test, which is a modified version of the cube example that features dock widgets. This is relevant in particular because render-to-texture widgets within a QDockWidget has its own specific quirks, with logic taking this into account, hence testing is essential. For existing applications there are two important consequences with this patch in place: - Once the rhi-based composition is enabled, it stays active for the lifetime of the top-level window. - Dynamically creating and parenting the first render-to-texture widget to an already created tlw will destroy and recreate the tlw (and the underlying window). The visible effects of this depend on the platform. (e.g. the window may disappear and reappear on some, whereas with other windowing systems it is not noticeable at all - this is not really different from similar situtions with reparenting or when moving windows between screens, so should be acceptable in practice) - On iOS raster windows are flushed with Metal (and rhi) from now on (previously this was through OpenGL by making flush() call composeAndFlush(). Change-Id: Id05bd0f7a26fa845f8b7ad8eedda3b0e78ab7a4e Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
2021-10-25 13:21:31 +00:00
QPushButton *m_btn2 = nullptr;
QColor m_background;
Compose render-to-texture widgets through QRhi QPlatformTextureList holds a QRhiTexture instead of GLuint. A QPlatformBackingStore now optionally can own a QRhi and a QRhiSwapChain for the associated window. Non-GL rendering must use this QRhi everywhere, whereas GL (QOpenGLWidget) can choose to still rely on resource sharing between contexts. A widget tells that it wants QRhi and the desired configuration in a new virtual function in QWidgetPrivate returning a QPlatformBackingStoreRhiConfig. This is evaluated (among a top-level's all children) upon create() before creating the repaint manager and the QWidgetWindow. In QOpenGLWidget what do request is obvious: it will request an OpenGL-based QRhi. QQuickWidget (or a potential future QRhiWidget) will be more interesting: it needs to honor the standard Qt Quick env.vars. and QQuickWindow APIs (or, in whatever way the user configured the QRhiWidget), and so will set up the config struct accordingly. In addition, the rhiconfig and surface type is (re)evaluated when (re)parenting a widget to a new tlw. If needed, this will now trigger a destroy - create on the tlw. This should be be safe to do in setParent. When multiple child widgets report an enabled rhiconfig, the first one (the first child encountered) wins. So e.g. attempting to have a QOpenGLWidget and a Vulkan-based QQuickWidget in the same top-level window will fail one of the widgets (it likely won't render). RasterGLSurface is no longer used by widgets. Rather, the appropriate surface type is chosen. The rhi support in the backingstore is usable without widgets as well. To make rhiFlush() functional, one needs to call setRhiConfig() after creating the QBackingStore. (like QWidget does to top-level windows) Most of the QT_NO_OPENGL ifdefs are eliminated all over the place. Everything with QRhi is unconditional code at compile time, except the actual initialization. Having to plumb the widget tlw's shareContext (or, now, the QRhi) through QWindowPrivate is no longer needed. The old approach does not scale: to implement composeAndFlush (now rhiFlush) we need more than just a QRhi object, and this way we no longer pollute everything starting from the widget level (QWidget's topextra -> QWidgetWindow -> QWindowPrivate) just to send data around. The BackingStoreOpenGLSupport interface and the QtGui - QtOpenGL split is all gone. Instead, there is a QBackingStoreDefaultCompositor in QtGui which is what the default implementations of composeAndFlush and toTexture call. (overriding composeAndFlush and co. f.ex. in eglfs should continue working mostly as-is, apart from adapting to the texture list changes and getting the native OpenGL texture id out of the QRhiTexture) As QQuickWidget is way too complicated to just port as-is, an rhi manual test (rhiwidget) is introduced as a first step, in ordewr to exercise a simple, custom render-to-texture widget that does something using a (not necessarily OpenGL-backed) QRhi and acts as fully functional QWidget (modeled after QOpenGLWidget). This can also form the foundation of a potential future QRhiWidget. It is also possible to force the QRhi-based flushing always, regardless of the presence of render-to-texture widgets. To exercise this, set the env.var. QT_WIDGETS_RHI=1. This picks a platform-specific default, and can be overridden with QT_WIDGETS_RHI_BACKEND. (in sync with Qt Quick) This can eventually be extended to query the platform plugin as well to check if the platform plugin prefers to always do flushes with a 3D API. QOpenGLWidget should work like before from the user's perspective, while internally it has to do some things differently to play nice and prevent regressions with the new rendering architecture. To exercise this better, the qopenglwidget example gets a new tab-based view (that could perhaps replace the example's main window later on?). The openglwidget manual test is made compatible with Qt 6, and gets a counterpart in form of the dockedopenglwidget manual test, which is a modified version of the cube example that features dock widgets. This is relevant in particular because render-to-texture widgets within a QDockWidget has its own specific quirks, with logic taking this into account, hence testing is essential. For existing applications there are two important consequences with this patch in place: - Once the rhi-based composition is enabled, it stays active for the lifetime of the top-level window. - Dynamically creating and parenting the first render-to-texture widget to an already created tlw will destroy and recreate the tlw (and the underlying window). The visible effects of this depend on the platform. (e.g. the window may disappear and reappear on some, whereas with other windowing systems it is not noticeable at all - this is not really different from similar situtions with reparenting or when moving windows between screens, so should be acceptable in practice) - On iOS raster windows are flushed with Metal (and rhi) from now on (previously this was through OpenGL by making flush() call composeAndFlush(). Change-Id: Id05bd0f7a26fa845f8b7ad8eedda3b0e78ab7a4e Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
2021-10-25 13:21:31 +00:00
QMetaObject::Connection m_contextWatchConnection;
};
#endif