GL_ATI_envmap_bumpmap provides two things: Signed V8U8 pixel formats,
and bump mapping. The extension is only supported on fglrx, and this
driver also supports GL_ARB_fragment_program. Thus the bump mapping
code is never used on any driver out there. Furthermore, if it is
used, it tends to crash the driver
The signed pixel format is used, as it can be used by pixel shaders or
the ARBfp replacement. However, the format is broken in fglrx, and
negative values are clamped to 0.0. This results in test
failures. WineD3D has an alternative codepath using scale+bias to
enable V8U8 using a standard signed RGB which works correctly on
fglrx.
This creates a function for setting the texture name and one for
setting the texture target. The idea is that the texture target should
get set right after the surface is created, and won't change, while
generating a texture name can wait.
Note that using GL_DEPTH_COMPONENT instead of eg. GL_DEPTH_COMPONENT24
will work, but will create a renderbuffer with the format of the
onscreen depth buffer.
This prevents shader path from being entered for an offscreen surface
when there is p8 render target and fixes failures in ddraw visual test
(with opengl rendering and RTL_READDRAW mode) and visual glitches in
Red Alert.
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.
If a format is not supported natively by opengl, a shader may be able
to convert it. Up to now, CheckDeviceFormat had magic knowldge which
GL extensions lead to which supported format. This patch adds
functions that allow CheckDeviceFormat to ask the actual
implementation for its capabilities.
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.