Calling shader_select() from inside depth_blt() isn't necessarily
safe. shader_select() assumes CompileShader() has been called for the
current shaders, but that depends on STATE_VSHADER / STATE_PIXELSHADER
being applied. That isn't always true when depth_blt() gets called,
with the result that sometimes GLSL programs could be created with no
shader objects attached.
Constant numbers start at 0, and the loading loop has a for(i; i <
dirtyconsts; i++). This means that the highest dirty constant isn't
loaded correctly. Rather than replacing the < with <=, which would
make it impossible to have no dirty constant, add 1 to the dirty
constant counter.
The previous logic assumed that if NVTS or ATIFS are available they
will be used. This happens to be true for NVTS, but ATIFS is only used
if neither ARBFP nor GLSL are supported. This breaks fixed function
fragment processing on ATI r300 and newer cards
The whole control structures in directx.c get terribly confusing with
the various codepaths for texturing and different shader
implementations. It is also hard to reflect the shader model
decisions this way too. This patch moves the shader specific parts of
the caps code into the shader backend where we can set our caps
dependent of the shader model decisions and without complex caps flag
checks.
Generating the shader ID and parts of the shader prolog and epilog was
done by the common vertexshader.c / pixelshader.c, which is ugly.
This patch doesn't get rid of all the uglyness, somewhen we'll still
have to sort out the relationship of [arb|glsl]_generate_shader and
[arb|glsl]_generate_declarations.
Add a new property of the shader backend which indicates whether the
shader backend is able to dirtify single constants rather than
dirtifying vshader and pshader constants as a whole. Depending on this
a different Set*ConstantF implementation is used which marks constants
dirty. The ARB shader backend uses this and marks constants clean
after uploading.