Commit Graph

10 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Rémi Verschelde 7bf9787921 SCons: Format buildsystem files with psf/black
Configured for a max line length of 120 characters.

psf/black is very opinionated and purposely doesn't leave much room for
configuration. The output is mostly OK so that should be fine for us,
but some things worth noting:

- Manually wrapped strings will be reflowed, so by using a line length
  of 120 for the sake of preserving readability for our long command
  calls, it also means that some manually wrapped strings are back on
  the same line and should be manually merged again.

- Code generators using string concatenation extensively look awful,
  since black puts each operand on a single line. We need to refactor
  these generators to use more pythonic string formatting, for which
  many options are available (`%`, `format` or f-strings).

- CI checks and a pre-commit hook will be added to ensure that future
  buildsystem changes are well-formatted.

(cherry picked from commit cd4e46ee65)
2020-06-10 15:30:52 +02:00
Rémi Verschelde 5dae2ea777 SCons: Enable C++11 on the whole codebase
**Important:** This does not mean *yet* that C++11 features should be used
in contributions to Godot's codebase.

For now this change is done solely for feature branches working on Vulkan
support and GDScript typed instruction sets for Godot 4.0, which will both
use C++11 features and are based on the master branch.

The plan is to start porting the codebase to C++11 after Godot 3.2 is
released, following upcoming guidelines on the subset of new features that
should be used, and when/how to use them.

We will advertise clearly when C++11 contributions are open, especially
once we start a coordinated effort to port Godot's massive codebase. In the
meantime, please bear with us and good ol' C++03. :)
2019-07-22 17:17:30 +02:00
Rémi Verschelde d52b70fb5e SCons: Always use env.Prepend for CPPPATH
Include paths are processed from left to right, so we use Prepend to
ensure that paths to bundled thirdparty files will have precedence over
system paths (e.g. `/usr/include` should have lowest priority).
2019-04-30 13:12:06 +02:00
Rémi Verschelde c2a669a9f0 SCons: Review uses of CCFLAGS, CXXFLAGS and CPPFLAGS
Many contributors (me included) did not fully understand what CCFLAGS,
CXXFLAGS and CPPFLAGS refer to exactly, and were thus not using them
in the way they are intended to be.

As per the SCons manual: https://www.scons.org/doc/HTML/scons-user/apa.html

- CCFLAGS: General options that are passed to the C and C++ compilers.
- CFLAGS: General options that are passed to the C compiler (C only;
  not C++).
- CXXFLAGS: General options that are passed to the C++ compiler. By
  default, this includes the value of $CCFLAGS, so that setting
  $CCFLAGS affects both C and C++ compilation.
- CPPFLAGS: User-specified C preprocessor options. These will be
  included in any command that uses the C preprocessor, including not
  just compilation of C and C++ source files [...], but also [...]
  Fortran [...] and [...] assembly language source file[s].

TL;DR: Compiler options go to CCFLAGS, unless they must be restricted
to either C (CFLAGS) or C++ (CXXFLAGS). Preprocessor defines go to
CPPFLAGS.
2019-04-24 16:57:58 +02:00
Hein-Pieter van Braam e5b335d367 Don't use -ffast-math or other unsafe math optimizations
Godot supports many different compilers and for production releases we
have to support 3 currently: GCC8, Clang6, and MSVC2017. These compilers
all do slightly different things with -ffast-math and it is causing
issues now. See #24841, #24540, #10758, #10070. And probably other
complaints about physics differences between release and release_debug
builds.

I've done some performance comparisons on Linux x86_64. All tests are
ran 20 times.

Bunnymark: (higher is better)
(bunnies)    min    max  stdev average
fast-math   7332   7597    71     7432
this pr     7379   7779   108     7621 (102%)

FPBench (gdscript port http://fpbench.org/) (lower is better)
(ms)
fast-math  15441  16127   192    15764
this pr    15671  16855   326    16001  (99%)

Float_add (adding floats in a tight loop) (lower is better)
(sec)
fast-math   5.49   5.78  0.07     5.65
this pr     5.65   5.90  0.06     5.76  (98%)

Float_div (dividing floats in a tight loop) (lower is better)
(sec)
fast-math  11.70  12.36  0.18    11.99
this pr    11.92  12.32  0.12    12.12  (99%)

Float_mul (multiplying floats in a tight loop) (lower is better)
(sec)
fast-math  11.72  12.17  0.12    11.93
this pr    12.01  12.62  0.17    12.26  (97%)

I have also looked at FPS numbers for tps-demo, 3d platformer, 2d
platformer, and sponza and could not find any measurable difference.

I believe that given the issues and oft-reported (physics) glitches on
release builds I believe that the couple of percent of tight-loop
floating point performance regression is well worth it.

This fixes #24540 and fixes #24841
2019-01-09 02:06:13 +01:00
Rémi Verschelde 3a2ca68af3 SCons: Build thirdparty code in own env, disable warnings
Also remove unnecessary `Export('env')` in other SCsubs,
Export should only be used when exporting *new* objects.
2018-09-28 14:07:39 +02:00
Matthias Hoelzl 26a1621678 Change -std=gnu++11 to -stc=c++11 and don't pass flag to MSVC 2017-12-12 18:58:51 +01:00
Ignacio Etcheverry 2f79c84ff5 etc: Append -std=gnu++11 to CCFLAGS instead of CXXFLAGS
This way it can override the -std flags passed to scons.
2017-09-01 18:51:50 +02:00
Hein-Pieter van Braam d44414c711 Disable -ffast-math for etc2comp
Apparently -ffast-math generates incorrect code with recent versions of
GCC and Clang. The manual page for GCC warns about this possibility.

In my tests it doesn't actually appear to be measurably slower in this
case, and this is used in a batch process so it seems safe to disable
this.

This fixes #10758 and fixes #10070
2017-08-30 11:51:24 +02:00
Ferenc Arn 6a9c990da7 Add ETC1/ETC2 compression support though etc2comp.
Remove rg-etc1 code. Also updated travis to use ubuntu 14.04.

Fixes #8457.
2017-05-31 18:59:00 -05:00