The base object will inherit the property table, for every FBX object, if it doesn't exist it will be ignored.
The previous code was dangerous and not simple to understand, this makes the code simpler and should result in no leaks with PropertyTable.
Features/Fixes:
Adds ability for multiple millions of polygons to be loaded.
Fixes memory leaks with tokens
Fixes memory leaks with property table
Fixes loading some corrupt files
Fixes meshes not having a unique name to the mesh node.
Opens up loading for two more versions: 7100 and 7200, up to 2020.
Preliminary support for Cinema4D files in parser now, before this was not possible it would cause memory corruption, which is gone now.
FBXProperties not being pointers presented simpler challenges in the long run also, fixed a bunch of bugs.
We do our own image loading, threading, and memory management in Godot already,
so the only components we need from etcpak (at least as of now) are the
`Compress*` methods defined in `ProcessDxtc.cpp` and `ProcessRGB.cpp`.
So we don't need to compile or vendor the rest.
-Used a more consistent set of keywords for the shader
-Remove all harcoded entry points
-Re-wrote the GLSL shader parser, new system is more flexible. Allows any entry point organization.
-Entry point for sky shaders is now sky().
-Entry point for particle shaders is now process().
- `etc` module was renamed to `etcpak` and modified to use the new library.
- PKM importer is removed in the process, it's obsolete.
- Old library `etc2comp` is removed.
- S3TC compression no longer done via `squish` (but decompression still is).
- Slight modifications to etcpak sources for MinGW compatibility,
to fix LLVM `-Wc++11-narrowing` errors, and to allow using vendored or
system libpng.
Co-authored-by: Rémi Verschelde <rverschelde@gmail.com>
There's now only 3 addressing modes: stack, constant, and member.
Self, class, and nil are now present respectively in the first 3 stack
slots. Global and class constants are moved to local constants when
compiling. Named globals is only present on editor to use on tool
singletons, so its use now emits a new instruction to copy the global to
the stack.
This allow us to further optimize the VM later by embedding the
addressing modes in the instructions themselves, which is better done
with less permutations.
When the type cannot be validated at compile time, the runtime must do a
check to ensure type safety is kept, as the code might be assuming the
return type is correct in another place, leading to crashes if the
contract is broken.
This ensures that annotations that rely on the datatype (such as
@export) can validated it timely, allowing compound expressions instead
of only literal values.