Most callers work on a stateblock rather than a device, and the main fields
we check (vertexShader and pixelShader) are part of the stateblock as well.
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.
GL_ARB_fragment_program and GL_ATI_fragment_shader can disable
projected textures properly, and they can also handle
D3DTTFF_PROJECTED | D3DTTFF_COUNT3 properly.
There's no need to do that with the nvts and opengl ffp fixed function
fragment pipeline, it's perfectly well defined in GL which one takes
effect. This removes a few more troubles when switching between
shaders and arbfp.
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 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 creates an nvts version of this function, and removes the nvts
code from the original one. The nvts version is used by the nvts
pipeline implementation, the original one by the nvrc-only, atifs and
ffp one.
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.