Based on a patch by Stefan Dösinger. This is more flexible, and allows
the shader backend implementation to be simpler, since it doesn't have
to know about specific formats. The next patch makes use of this.
Note that minMipLookup and magLookup aren't particularly safe to use,
they're global arrays initialized from IWineD3DImpl_FillGLCaps(). The same
goes for the other global dynamic lookup tables.
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.
Since some of those function pointers are direct GL functions the function
prototype needs the WINE_GLAPI calling convention. This makes prevents
drawStridedSlow from crashing with USE_WIN32_OPENGL.
GL_RGBA doesn't gaurantee an internal storage depth, which can cause the test
to fail if it's stored with less than 8 bits of precision. Some nVidia
drivers would actually store with 4 bits of precision.
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.
Currently the ddraw capabilities were almost static, except of D3D
support. When overlay support is added, the caps depend on certain
settings in WineD3D or capabilities available from OpenGL and Xv. So
set those caps in wined3d as well.
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.
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.
This patch adds a new field to the state templates. If this extension
field is != 0, then the line is only applied to the final state table
if the extension is supported. Once a line is applied to the final
table, all further templates for this state from the same pipeline
part are ignored. This allows removing some extension checks from the
state handlers, which cleans them up and saves a few CPU cycles when
applying the states.
This code creates the structures and the pipeline selection, as well
as the caps filling. It does not yet move the actual code around,
since this will be a bigger task.