It used an old vendored version of acorn.js which seems to choke on this
trailing comma. This is not a problem for more recent Emscripten versions.
We disable the `comma-dangle` check in ESLint to prevent this issue.
(cherry picked from commit 23b51a1708)
Performances are not great in general, bad on Firefox, on Chrome, well,
it's an improvement compared to the way they broke ScriptProcessorNode.
I'm actually surprised this works, it involves so many allocations, but
there's no way around it when SharedArrayBuffer is not available :(.
Browsers doesn't really like forcing the mix rate, e.g. Firefox does not
allow input (microphone) if the mix rate is not the default one, Chrom*
will exhibit worse performances, etc.
We were using `Content-Length` from the server when `Content-Encoding`
was not set (i.e. response was not compressed).
Sadly, in CORS requests accessing headers is restricted, and while
`Content-Length` is enabled by default, `Content-Encoding` is not.
This results in the impossibility of knowing if the content was
compressed, unless the server explicitly enabled the encoding header
via `Access-Control-Expose-Headers`.
To keep maximum compatibility we must disable `body_size` completely.
(cherry picked from commit 737ed0f66e)
Promise chaining the emscripten module `then` function breaks it badly,
causing an infinite loop.
I'm unsure about the source of the issue, but most likely at this point
is due to the old emscripten version (I remember very old html5 builds
having issue with promise chaining too).
With this commit, we no longer use the module as a promise, and
instantiate it using `Promise` objects directly for compatibility.
(cherry picked from commit ae3c9345cc)
`WebAssembly.instantiateStreaming` requires the mime-type to be
`application/wasm`, but some servers (including most debug servers) do
not provide the content-type header.
This commit forces it via JavaScript, by creating a `Response` object
with the `wasm` content, and explicitly defined `content-type` header.
(cherry picked from commit 778ef4e217)
With a very nice hack, a new hidden configuration option that delays
dropped files removal at exit.
This still leaks while the project manager is running, but will clear
memory as soon as it exits or load something.
(reminder, dropped files are reguarly removed after the signal is
emitted specifically to avoid leaks, but I prefer hacking the HTML5
config then the project manager).
(cherry picked from commit f1e810adcb)
It used to be updated before the first iteration, causing the
window/viewport size values to be incorrect during the initialization
phase (e.g. during the first `_ready` notification).
(cherry picked from commit 3f059b90d6)
Added as an export option "Experimental Virtual Keyboard".
There is no zoom, so text/line edit must be in the top part of the
screen, or it will get hidden by the virtual keyboard.
UTF8/Latin-1 only (I think regular UTF-8 should work out of the box in
4.0 but I can't test it).
It uses an hidden textarea or input, based on the multiline variable,
and only gets activated if the device has a touchscreen.
This could cause problems on devices with both touchscreen and a real
keyboard (although input should still work in general with some minor
focus issues). I'm thinking of a system to detect the first physical
keystroke and disable it in case, but it might do more harm then good,
so it must be well thought.
This allow the loading bar to be much more reliable, even in cases where
realible stream loading status is not detectable (server-side
compression, chunked encoding).
A template for `jsdoc` that generat the HTML5 public classref.
The script can be run via `npm run docs` to print to stdout.
You can dry run via `npm run docs -- --d dry-run` or write to file via
`npm run docs -- -d /path/to/file.rst`
Also update Makefile in `doc/` and add dry run test to CI.
(cherry picked from commit 472482013e)
This commit also removes the utils.js engine file, moving some of it's
content to config.js and some to engine.js .
(cherry picked from commit 018ee5a4dc)
Three canvas resize policies:
- `None`: Godot window settings are ignored.
- `Project`: Godot handles the canvas like a native app (resizing it
when setting the window size).
- `Adaptive`: Canvas size will always adapt to browser window size.
Use `None` if you want to control the canvas size with custom JavaScript
code.
`OS.get_screen_scale` will now return the `window.devicePixelRatio`
value, `OS.get_screen_dpi` uses CSS media queries to find approximate
DPI value for the current display.
`OS.get_screen_size` also return the actual screen size (not the CSS
pixel size).
No longer use emscripten functions for gamepads, implement them as
library functions in library_godot_display.js instead.
This allows us to do a better job at "guessing" vendorId, productId, OS,
etc. thus allowing us to better find the remapping for the controller.
Happy new year to the wonderful Godot community!
2020 has been a tough year for most of us personally, but a good year for
Godot development nonetheless with a huge amount of work done towards Godot
4.0 and great improvements backported to the long-lived 3.2 branch.
We've had close to 400 contributors to engine code this year, authoring near
7,000 commit! (And that's only for the `master` branch and for the engine code,
there's a lot more when counting docs, demos and other first-party repos.)
Here's to a great year 2021 for all Godot users 🎆
(cherry picked from commit b5334d14f7)
Working, with emscripten > 2.0.9
Yes, the unreleased version. 2.0.9 works, but throws and error due to a
bug in emscripten with the thirdparty ENet library.
The issue is fixed upstream so newer releases will work.