This prevents the target from changing during the first PreLoad() call
on a surface, which would be inconvenient when attaching a surface to
a FBO for example.
This gives a small performance improvement for applications that are
smart enough to set the D3DPRESENTFLAG_DISCARD_DEPTHSTENCIL flag, or
to create depth stencils with Discard set to TRUE.
Since those surfaces are stored in blocks, the 4 pixel step doesn't only apply to surfaces < 4, but
also to surfaces bigger than that, with a non-multiple-of-4 size.
Clear all attachments before deleting FBOs. It should be valid to
delete FBOs that still have attachments, but for some reason the
nvidia drivers don't like it. The resulting memory corruption can be
pretty nasty, and this workaround seems clean enough.
This is the prefered format of many codecs, and for some codecs this
is the only supported output format. As usual I try to handle all the
conversion in the GPU and keep the CPU involvement minimal to gain the
full performance of PBO transfers.
Although sharing FBOs across contexts is allowed by EXT_framebuffer_object
(issue 76), it causes issues with nVidia drivers. Considering the GL 3 spec
explicitly disallows sharing of FBOs accross contexts (Appendix D), this
patch is probably the right thing to do.
This is a long-needed cleanup aimed at removing the ddraw_primary,
ddraw_window, ddraw_width and ddraw_height members from
IWineD3DDeviceImpl, which just do not belong there. Destination
window and screen handling is supposed to be done by swapchains.
This is an ATI specific format designed for compressed normal maps,
and quite a few games check for its existence. While it is an
ATI-specific "extension" in d3d9, it is a core part of
D3D10(DXGI_FORMAT_BC5), and supported on Geforce 8 cards.
This happened to work because most cards have the same amount of
pshader and vshader constants, but for some reason this doesn't hold
true on this macbook pro here, which lead to a crash due to heap
corruption
This is cleaner than the if statements in the code. Also np2 textures
should in theory support linear filtering, but fglrx doesn't seem to
like it. This needs further investigation. So far we've never used
linear filtering on np2 textures, so there should not be a
regression. Furthermore I think shader support is more important than
filtering, since NP2 textures are mostly used for 1:1 copying to the
screen.
ATI cards prior to the radeon HD series did not have unconditional non
power of two support. So far we've used texture_rectangle for that, or
created a bigger power of two texture with padding. This had the
disadvantage that we had to correct the coordinates, which causes
extreme problems with shaders(doesn't work, pretty much).
Both the MacOS and the fglrx driver have support for
GL_ARB_texture_non_power_of_two, and run it on the hardware as long as
we stay within the texture_rectangle limitations. This allows us to
have conditional non power of two textures with normalized
coordinates. This patch adds an internal extension, and the code
creates a regular GL_TEXTURE_2D texture with NP2 size, but refuses
mipmapping, filtering and texture_rectangle incompatible
operations. This makes np2 textures work with shaders on fglrx and
macos.