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.
shader_get_registers_used is delayed until compile time for some 1.x
shaders, mostly to wait for the right vertex declaration to be
set. This means that on a recompile it will be run again, adding
another instance of each local constant, which in turn causes compile
errors because of constant redeclaration. Just purging the lists
before finding the constants is a simple and reliable solution.
The GL_ARB_vertex_program extension does not define a standard value for
output texture coordinates. This makes problems when using vertex
shaders with fixed function fragment processing because fffp divides the
texture coords by its .w component. This means that gl shaders have to
write to the .w component of texture coords. Direct3D shaders however
do not.
As spotted by Christoph Bumiller, these branches are now never
reached. Also, at least in the case of WINED3DSIO_TEXM3x3SPEC and
WINED3DSIO_TEXM3x3VSPEC the old code was not quite correct, since we
can lookup rather than guess the texture type these days.