This enhancement is specially noticeable in OSX, since it includes Mono's install location (both official and homebrew). This makes it possible to build Godot with Mono on OSX without pkg-config (pkg-config is bundled with Mono, but it's not added to PATH, so finding it would require finding the Mono root directory first).
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.
When a Reference managed instance is garbage collected and its finalizer is called, it could happen that the native instance is referenced once again before the finalizer can unreference and memdelete it. The workaround is to create a new managed instance when this happens (at least for now).
- We no longer generate RID and NodePath C# classes. Both will be maintained manually.
- We no longer generate C# declarations and runtime registration of internal calls for the following classes: RID, NodePath, String, GD, SignalAwaiter and Godot.Object (partial base).
- We no longer auto-generate the base members of Godot.Object. They will be maintained manually as a partial class.
This makes it easier to maintain these C# classes and their internal calls, as well as the bindings generator which no longer generates C# classes that don't derive from Godot Object, and it no longer generates the Godot.Object base members (which where unreadable in the bindings generator code).
- Added missing 'RID(Object from)' constructor to the RID C# class.
- Replaced MONO_GLUE_DISABLED constant macro with MONO_GLUE_ENABLED.
- Add sources in module/mono/glue even if glue is disabled, but surround glue files with ifdef MONO_GLUE_ENABLED.
First of all, this fixes the handling of exceptions so the engine actually notices them,
it was broken in 4172fa03b5.
Next, unhandled exceptions now do NOT cause an abort(). They're logged now,
so before #16987. The pending exception thing still works though.
This average is not a proper approximation of a grayscale value,
get_v() is better suited for that.
If we want a real to_grayscale() conversion, it's somewhat more
involved: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grayscale
Remove the deprecated Gray() from C# bindings as it conflicts
with new named color constants.
- Count and panel per script.
- Ability to disable warnings per script using special comments.
- Ability to disable warnings globally using Project Settings.
- Option to treat enabled warnings as errors.
Fixes exported property modified values lost when creating a placeholder script instance with a failed script compilation
- Object set/get will call PlaceHolderScriptInstance's new fallback set/get methods as a last resort. This way, placeholder script instances can keep the values for storage or until the script is compiled successfuly.
- Script::can_instance() will only return true if a real script instance can be created. Otherwise, in the case of placeholder script instances, it will return false.
- Object::set_script(script) is now in charge of requesting the creation of placeholder script instances. It's no longer Script::instance_create(owner)'s duty.
- PlaceHolderScriptInstance has a new method set_build_failed(bool) to determine whether it should call into its script methods or not.
- Fixed a few problems during reloading of C# scripts.
- 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.
I've removed the section about being unable to export games using C# - as you are now able to do this, as long as the export templates are installed. Also, I've made a few minor grammar tweaks.
On macOS, it is common to install packages like Mono through the third-party
package-manager Homebrew. This commit simply adds an additional path to
where Homebrew installs the Mono framework.