Mesa provides YUV shaders, and can import multi-planar YUV DMA-BUFs
as a single EGLImage. Remove the arbitrary limitation.
If the driver doesn't support importing YUV as a single EGLImage,
the import will fail and the result will be the same anyways.
Clamping texture coordinates prevents OpenGL from blending the left and
right edge (or top and bottom edge) when scaling textures with GL_LINEAR
filtering. This prevents visual artifacts like swaywm/sway#5809.
Per discussion on IRC, this behaviour is made default. Compositors that want
the wrapping behaviour (e.g. for tiled patterns) can override this by doing:
struct wlr_gles2_texture_attribs attribs;
wlr_gles2_texture_get_attribs(texture, &attribs);
glBindTexture(attribs.target, attribs.tex);
glTexParameteri(attribs.target, GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_S, GL_REPEAT);
glTexParameteri(attribs.target, GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_T, GL_REPEAT);
glBindTexture(attribs.target, 0);
Instead of requiring callers to manually make the EGL context current
before binding a buffer and unsetting it after unbinding a buffer, do
it inside wlr_renderer_bind_buffer.
This hides renderer-specific implementation details inside the
wlr_renderer interface. Non-GLES2 renderers may not use EGL.
This removes all EGL dependencies from the backends.
References: https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots/issues/2618
References: https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots/pull/2615#issuecomment-756687006
It can be surprising and unexpected that texture operations (such as
texture upload and import) change the current EGL context, especially
when it's done under-the-hood by wlroots in response to wl_surface
requests.
To prevent surprises, save and restore the previous EGL context.
It can be surprising that destroying a buffer changes the EGL context,
especially since this can be triggered from anywhere wlr_buffer_unlock
is called.
Prevent this from happening by saving and restoring the EGL context.
Rename wlr_renderer_get_dmabuf_formats to
wlr_renderer_get_dmabuf_texture_formats. This makes it clear the formats
are only suitable for creating wlr_textures.
texcoord is a vector of coordinates, with the first member being the X
axis value and the second member being the Y axis value. It makes more
sense to use the accessors with the same names.
This leaves an EGL context current behind. wlr_gles2_renderer_create was
assuming the EGL context was already current because of this (because it
called a GL function right off the bat).
This function can be called after wlr_egl_make_current to cleanup the
EGL context. This avoids having lingering EGL contexts that make things
work by chance.
Closes: https://github.com/swaywm/wlroots/issues/2197
Instead of requiring compositors to call wlr_texture_get_size each time
they want to access the texture's size, expose this information as
wlr_texture fields.
This makes it easier for the user of this library to properly handle
failure of this function.
The signature of wlr_renderer_impl.init_wl_display was also modified to
allow for proper error propagation.
Remove glapi.sh code generation, replace it with hand-written loading
code that checks extension strings before calling eglGetProcAddress.
The GLES2 renderer still uses global state because of:
- {PUSH,POP}_GLES2_DEBUG macros
- wlr_gles2_texture_from_* taking a wlr_egl instead of the renderer
This requires functions without a prototype definition to be static.
This allows to detect dead code, export less symbols and put shared
functions in headers.
Prior to this commit, compositors needed to render the texture to an
intermediate off-screen buffer using wlr_renderer APIs if they wanted to
use a custom rendering path (e.g. render to a 3D scene).
A new wlr_gles2_texture_get_attribs exposes the GL texture target and ID
so that compositors can render wlr_textures with their own shaders. An
example of a compositor doing so is available at [1].
[1]: 3db905b784/src/render.c (L227)
We don't need our own enum for types. Instead we just use
GL_TEXTURE_{2D,EXTERNAL_OES}, which already describes usage.
Also fixes a situation where we were using GL_TEXTURE_2D in a situation
we should not have. wl_drm buffers are always GL_TEXTURE_EXTERNAL_OES,
no matter if they're RGB or any other format.
When a texture is destroyed between wlr_egl_make_current and
wlr_egl_swap_buffers, it resets the current EGL surface to NULL. This
makes wlr_egl_swap_buffers fail.
If the EGL context is already current, there's no need to reset it.