Commit Graph

9 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Rémi Verschelde af6a3a419a Better format generated shader headers 2020-02-11 12:03:05 +01:00
Juan Linietsky 263bebe023 Untested support for compute shaders 2020-02-11 12:02:34 +01:00
Juan Linietsky 0586e18449 Custom material support seems complete. 2020-02-11 11:53:29 +01:00
Juan Linietsky 9b0dd4f571 A lot of progress with canvas rendering, still far from working. 2020-02-11 11:53:27 +01:00
Rémi Verschelde 173b342ca7 Remove trailing whitespace
With `sed -i $(rg -l '[[:blank:]]*$' -g'!thirdparty') -e 's/[[:blank:]]*$//g'`
(+ manual revert of some thirdparty code under `platform/android`).
2018-11-20 11:15:02 +01:00
lupoDharkael edcca5f7ad Dont use equality operators with None singleton in python files 2018-10-27 01:18:15 +02:00
Juan Linietsky c83742ba86 -Lightmap and lightmap capture support for GLES2
-Added hint to not show some properties when running on low end gfx
2018-09-28 20:33:18 -03:00
Juan Linietsky 65fd37c149 -Rewrote GLES2 lighting and shadows and optimized state changes, did many optimizations, added vertex lighting.
-Did some fixes to GLES3 too
2018-09-23 12:14:50 -03:00
Viktor Ferenczi c5bd0c37ce Running builder (content generator) functions in subprocesses on Windows
- Refactored all builder (make_*) functions into separate Python modules along to the build tree
- Introduced utility function to wrap all invocations on Windows, but does not change it elsewhere
- Introduced stub to use the builders module as a stand alone script and invoke a selected function

There is a problem with file handles related to writing generated content (*.gen.h and *.gen.cpp)
on Windows, which randomly causes a SHARING VIOLATION error to the compiler resulting in flaky
builds. Running all such content generators in a new subprocess instead of directly inside the
build script works around the issue.

Yes, I tried the multiprocessing module. It did not work due to conflict with SCons on cPickle.
Suggested workaround did not fully work either.

Using the run_in_subprocess wrapper on osx and x11 platforms as well for consistency. In case of
running a cross-compilation on Windows they would still be used, but likely it will not happen
in practice. What counts is that the build itself is running on which platform, not the target
platform.

Some generated files are written directly in an SConstruct or SCsub file, before the parallel build starts. They don't need to be written in a subprocess, apparently, so I left them as is.
2018-07-27 21:37:55 +02:00