The two POSIX style crash handlers (OSX and X11) now remove their signal
handlers when they are destroyed.
Additonally if they are called while no OS singleton is set, they will
simply abort(). This should not happen now that they remove themselves,
but if a future change seperates OS object and crash handler lifetimes,
this may be easier to report/debug than hanging on SIGSEGV.
This allows more consistency in the manner we include core headers,
where previously there would be a mix of absolute, relative and
include path-dependent includes.
On X11 when we send an XResizeWindow request to the X server it is happy
to say it is done when the request has been handed over to the window
manager. The window manager itself may however take some time to
actually do the resize. Godot expects that a resize request is
immediate. To work around this issue we could implement the whole
_NET_WM_SYNC_REQUEST protocol. However this protocol does not fit very
well with the way we currently process X events and would when
implemented in the current framework still cause a 1 frame delay between
a resize request and the actual resize happening.
This fixes#21720
When we start the engine we haven't yet gotten any X11 motion events so
we don't yet know where our mouse cursor is located. Instead we now
query the X server for this information when we start and update the
appropriate values.
In addition when we move the window we also update the mouse position
based off of X server knowledge as we will also not have received any
mouse motion events.
this fixes#8145 (for X11 only)
When setting an icon that is too large previously Godot would die with a
X Error of failed request: BadLength error. To avoid this we install an
error handler right before we set an icon. If the error handler triggers
we halve the icon size until it works or until we've reached a 0 size on
either width or height.
We print a warning when this happens to alert developers.
This fixes#19716
This adds a static is_viable() method to all rasterizers which has to be
called before initializing the rasterizer. This allows us to check what
rasterizer to use in OS::initialize together with the GL context
initialization.
This commit also adds a new project setting
"rendering/quality/driver/driver_fallback" which allows the creator of a
project to specify whether or not fallback to GLES2 is allowed. This
setting is ignored for the editor so the editor will always open even if
the project itself cannot run. This will hopefully reduce confusion for
users downloading projects from the internet.
We also no longer crash when GLES3 is not functioning on a platform.
This fixes#15324
Modern distributions such as Fedora do not ship 'xdialog' with their
default deployment. This commit adds support for Gnome's Zenity as well
as KDE's kdialog.
- 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.
This commit makes operator[] on Vector const and adds a write proxy to it. From
now on writes to Vectors need to happen through the .write proxy. So for
instance:
Vector<int> vec;
vec.push_back(10);
std::cout << vec[0] << std::endl;
vec.write[0] = 20;
Failing to use the .write proxy will cause a compilation error.
In addition COWable datatypes can now embed a CowData pointer to their data.
This means that String, CharString, and VMap no longer use or derive from
Vector.
_ALWAYS_INLINE_ and _FORCE_INLINE_ are now equivalent for debug and non-debug
builds. This is a lot faster for Vector in the editor and while running tests.
The reason why this difference used to exist is because force-inlined methods
used to give a bad debugging experience. After extensive testing with modern
compilers this is no longer the case.
-Project/Editor settings now show tooltips properly
-Settings thar require restart now will show a restart warning
-Video driver is now visible all the time, can be changed easily
-Added function to request current video driver
[x11] Preserve window size when calling this method.
[osx] Make sure it don't make the window resizable if it's not needed.
[windows] clean up the code.
- Fix a bug when mouse is confined don't update the cursor shape.
- Don't let the mouse leave the window when resizing to a smaller
resolution when MOUSE_MODE_CONFINED.
- Fix set_borderless_window to preserve the actual video_mode.widht/height.