They are now version 4, which is hopefully the final format,
relying on nothing but QDataStream.
Except for the qshader autotest which tests all the 1..4 versions
and so needs appropriate test data.
Also unifies the batch file naming.
Change-Id: Iec478be86d14dbec7ffb9d5f9b62c14fca5d7c9e
Reviewed-by: Eirik Aavitsland <eirik.aavitsland@qt.io>
What's more, demonstrate two types of rendering to a cubemap:
one by one to each face, and by attaching all faces as color
attachments in one go.
Both are used by Qt Quick 3D in connection with shadows, so this
proves that the same is possible to implement with QRhi.
Task-number: QTBUG-81261
Change-Id: I5c7077224d7cae0dd6ea02ac30a9e6f9f1f0c229
Reviewed-by: Eirik Aavitsland <eirik.aavitsland@qt.io>
Uses the two compute shaders from Qt Quick 3D. Demonstrates
and tests both RGBA16F textures and using them (and doing
load/store with mip levels individually) in combination with
compute.
Task-number: QTBUG-81213
Change-Id: I3f0f250d5997a26c857b7c45517684c63b44e58e
Reviewed-by: Johan Helsing <johan.helsing@qt.io>
The new version takes/returns a value that can be unpacked and passed to
other functions without knowing which backend is in use.
The old API will be removed in a later change when dependent modules have
been updated
Task-number: QTBUG-78570
Change-Id: I18d928ceef3cb617c0c509ecccb345551a7990af
Reviewed-by: Laszlo Agocs <laszlo.agocs@qt.io>
While we are at it, remove the Border and MirrorOnce wrap modes that have
not been supported on OpenGL, because they are unsupported with Metal+iOS
as well.
Task-number: QTBUG-78580
Change-Id: I0db94b9d3a6125b3bb5d7b1db5d02a42cd94d2c2
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
This was used to support QFlags f = 0 initialization, but with 0 used
as a pointer literal now considered bad form, it had been changed many
places to QFlags f = nullptr, which is meaningless and confusing.
Change-Id: I4bc592151c255dc5cab1a232615caecc520f02e8
Reviewed-by: Thiago Macieira <thiago.macieira@intel.com>
As usual, keep some QVector overloads around to allow Qt Quick to compile.
Color attachments and vertex input bindings get an at(index) type of
accessor, unlike any other of similar lists. This is because there the
index is significant, and sequential iteration is not the only type of
operation that is performed. Sometimes a lookup based on an index will
be needed as well.
Task-number: QTBUG-78883
Change-Id: I3882941f09e94ee2f179e0e9b8161551f0d5dae7
Reviewed-by: Christian Strømme <christian.stromme@qt.io>
Reviewed-by: Paul Olav Tvete <paul.tvete@qt.io>
Forcing users to go through a QVector, when in practice they almost
always want to source the data from an initializer list, a QVarLengthArray,
or a plain C array, is not ideal. Especially since we can reason about
the maximum number of elements in the vast majority of use cases for all
the affected lists. QRhiResource is also not copyable so we do not need
the usual machinery offered by containers. So switch to a
QVarLengthArray.
Note that a resource is not a container. The only operations we are
interested in is to be able to source data either via an initializer
list or by iterating on something, and to be able to extract the data,
in case a user wishes to set up another resource based on the existing
one.
In some cases a QVector overload is kept for source compatibility with
other modules (Qt Quick). These may be removed in the future.
Also do a similar QVector->QVarLengthArray change in the srb-related
data in the backends.
Change-Id: I6f5b2ebd8e75416ce0cca0817bb529446a4cb664
Reviewed-by: Christian Strømme <christian.stromme@qt.io>
Revert surfacePixelSize() to be a getter only. With Metal this will
mean returning the "live" layer size (and so not the
layer.drawableSize), which is in line with what we expect with other
backends.
Instead, we leave it to the swapchain's buildOrResize() to "commit"
the size by setting drawableSize on the layer. With typical
application or Qt Quick logic this ensures that layer.drawableSize is
set once and stays static until we get to process the next resize - on
the rendering thread.
This of course would still mean that there was a race when a client
queries surfacePixelSize() to set the depth-stencil buffer size that
is associated with a swapchain. (because that must happen before
calling buildOrResize() according to the current semantics)
That can however be solved in a quite elegant way, it turns out,
because we already have a flag that indicates if a QRhiRenderBuffer is
used in combination with (and only in combination with) a
swapchain. If we simply say that setting the UsedWithSwapChainOnly
flag provides automatic sizing as well (so no setPixelSize() call is
needed), clients can simply get rid of the problematic
surfacePixelSize() query and everything works.
Task-number: QTBUG-78641
Change-Id: Ib1bfc9ef8531bcce033d1f1e5d4d5b4984d6d69f
Reviewed-by: Tor Arne Vestbø <tor.arne.vestbo@qt.io>
It can be important to see for example the adapter enumeration that is
printed when qt.rhi.general is enabled. Make it enabled by default in
the tests.
Change-Id: I7bd073781e176d9b17b5386c548e9f8a2e16c10f
Reviewed-by: Christian Strømme <christian.stromme@qt.io>
This will also cause clearing to 0,0,0,0.
Essential in order to allow fast testing of window transparency
issues in combination with QRhi and the various backends.
Change-Id: Iee2763c1d06f1d3e5d59a9142abaf30fab1dc543
Reviewed-by: Christian Strømme <christian.stromme@qt.io>
With OpenGL a scissor (or viewport) rectangle is not allowed to have a negative
width or height. Everything else is allowed. This is also the semantic we wish to
keep for QRhiViewport and QRhiScissor.
This raises some problems. For instance, when we do bottom-left - top-left
rectangle conversion, the case of partially out of bounds rects needs to be
taken into account.
Otherwise, Qt Quick ends up in wrong scissoring in certain cases, typically when
the QQuickWindow size is decreased so the content does not fit because that will
then start generating negative x, y scissors for clipping (which is perfectly
valid but the QRhi backends need to be able to deal with it)
Then there is the problem of having to clamp width and height carefully, because
some validation layers for some APIs will reject a viewport or scissor with
partially out of bounds rectangles.
To verify all this, add a new manual test, based on the cubemap one. (cubemap was
chosen because that is an ideal test scene as it fills the viewport completely, and
so it is visually straightforward when a scissor rectangle is moving around over it)
Fixes: QTBUG-78702
Change-Id: I60614836432ea9934fc0dbd0ac7e88931f476542
Reviewed-by: Christian Strømme <christian.stromme@qt.io>
...if there is one and the concept is applicable in the first place.
Change-Id: Iab202c1c1cdd229f4910159de4cae7ce30805ea9
Reviewed-by: Christian Strømme <christian.stromme@qt.io>
The device can be lost when physically removing the graphics adapter,
disabling the driver (Device Manager), upgrading/uninstalling the
graphics driver, and when it is reset due to an error.
Some of these can (and should) be tested manually, but the last
one has a convenient, programmatic way of triggering: by triggering
the timeout detection and recovery (TDR) of WDDM. A compute shader
with an infinite loop should trigger this after 2 seconds by default.
All tests in tests/manual/rhi can now be started with a --curse <count>
argument where <count> specifies the number of frames to render before
breaking the device. Qt Quick will get an environment variable with
similar semantics in a separate patch.
Change-Id: I4b6f8d977a15b5b89d686b3973965df6435810ae
Reviewed-by: Christian Strømme <christian.stromme@qt.io>
As an option. Must opt in via setting ExternalContentsInPass in
the flags for beginFrame(). It is somewhat unfortunate to require
declaring this up front, but forcing using secondary command buffers
always, even though beginExternal() may not be used in many applications,
would be an overkill.
Change-Id: I8d52bcab40c96f89f140c4c7877b6c459925e3c7
Reviewed-by: Andy Nichols <andy.nichols@qt.io>
Leftover from the migration to QColor as color clear value.
Change-Id: Ibf49d65234a1e14d53035b46249753a5929ca22b
Reviewed-by: Andy Nichols <andy.nichols@qt.io>
The Quick render loops do SkipPresent occasionally, and it all seemed
to work with the threaded one because we lack an autorelease pool on
the SG render thread. (to be corrected separately) The basic one ended
up crashing sometimes, however. Holding on to the drawable is incorrect.
Fixes: QTBUG-76953
Change-Id: I0d0ec6d09aa209d2c848d7a9dbd9b15916fe23ab
Reviewed-by: Andy Nichols <andy.nichols@qt.io>
Have feature flags as appropriate. OpenGL is causing a mess here
but let's support what we can since some of this will become relevant
in more sophisticated mesh drawing cases with 3D in particular.
Change-Id: Idfa7b4642ec87147978e03d78d6233efbd151491
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
Draws 1024 cubes at random x,y positions with varying color with
a single instanced draw call.
Change-Id: I8737503acf23866ad4734b1d88753415a3b93445
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
...but this will vary between backends, or in some cases
even between implementations of the same API.
Point size is settable only via the vertex shader (gl_PointSize).
It is silently ignored with D3D and HLSL.
Line widths other than 1 are supported only on OpenGL and Vulkan.
(but this is in fact deprecated with GL and optional with Vulkan)
Add QRhi::Feature values for both.
The line width is now settable on QRhiGraphicsPipeline. It is not a
dynamic state since the static, per-pipeline width is good enough for
most cases. (and the feature is not supported on half of the backends
anyways so it will get limited use in practice).
Change-Id: I6d3a32269527c452b794b2cb8b0f03101eab40b2
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
D3D11 and GL (4.3+, ES 3.1+) will come separately at a
later time.
Change-Id: If30f2f3d062fa27e57e9912674669225b82a7b93
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>
Comes with backends for Vulkan, Metal, Direct3D 11.1, and OpenGL (ES).
All APIs are private for now.
Shader conditioning (i.e. generating a QRhiShader in memory or on disk
from some shader source code) is done via the tools and APIs provided
by qt-labs/qtshadertools.
The OpenGL support follows the cross-platform tradition of requiring
ES 2.0 only, while optionally using some (ES) 3.x features. It can
operate in core profile contexts as well.
Task-number: QTBUG-70287
Change-Id: I246f2e36d562e404012c05db2aa72487108aa7cc
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@qt.io>