- Remove references to `ISTEXTINPUT` as any keyboard event with it's
utf8_buf set can be handled as text input.
- Update references to the key repeat flag.
The `ascii` member was only kept for historic reason as some platforms
didn't support utf8 when it was first introduced.
Remove the `ascii` struct members since many checks used this as a
fall-back for utf8_buf not being set which isn't needed.
There are a few cases where it's convenient to access the ASCII value
of an event (or nil) so a function has been added to do that.
*Details*
- WM_event_utf8_to_ascii() has been added for the few cases an events
ASCII value needs to be accessed, this just avoids having to do
multi-byte character checks in-line.
- RNA Event.ascii remains, using utf8_buf[0] for single byte characters.
- GHOST_TEventKeyData.ascii has been removed.
- To avoid regressions non-ASCII Latin1 characters from GHOST are
converted into multi-byte UTF8, when building X11 without
XInput & X_HAVE_UTF8_STRING it seems like could still occur.
While GHOST/SDL doesn't support non-ASCII text input,
use the UTF8 buffer to be consistent with all other back-ends.
Move the conversion from SDL_KeyboardEvent to ASCII into a function.
Also only lookup this value on key press (not release).
Measurements shown on average a 1.08x speedup for a 1.04x increase in
memory usage which is an acceptable trade off for a default setting,
although discoverability of such settings influencing memory usage could
be improved.
Reviewed By: brecht
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15429
The current specific CentOS7 workaround we have for AoT, which is to
disable __FAST_MATH__ by using -fhonor-nans, now also fixes the
compilation issue for JIT as well since at least driver 23570.
Simplify logic for initializing the wl_buffer, ensure the cursors
custom data is never heft in a half initialized state.
Also remove the need for multiple calls to close when handling errors.
To avoid Cycles not showing any hair by default, and to avoid very slow render
due to many overlaps with the previous 1 meter default in the node.
Fixes T97584, T99319
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15405
with a very high min-driver version requirement, placeholder until JIT
CentOS runtime compilation issue gets fixed in a defined version.
min-driver version check can be worked around by setting
CYCLES_ONEAPI_ALL_DEVICES environment variable.
Add logging to all Wayland listener callbacks as it can be difficult
to detect the cause of problems.
Using break-points often isn't practical for debugging interactive
windowing / compositor issues
Logging needs to be enabled on the command line, e.g:
blender --log "ghost.wl.*" --log-level 2 --log-show-basename
Add macros from BLI_utildefines, mainly to avoid that avoid repetition
(ELEM, UNPACK*, CLAMP* & ARRAY_SIZE).
Also add macros LIKELY/UNLIKELY as there are quiet a lot of checks
for unlikely situations for GHOST/Wayland (not having a keyboard,
or mouse for e.g.).
Pass in arguments for internal grab logic instead of accessing
some values from the window and other values as arguments.
While more verbose it's simpler to reason about.
We used it only to access device id for explicitly allowing Arc GPUs.
It made the backend require ze_loader.dll which could be problematic if
we end up using direct linking.
I've replaced filtering based on PCI device id by using other HW properties
instead (EUs, threads per EU), that are now available through Level-Zero.
Initially oneAPI implementation have waited after each memory
operation, even if there was no need for this. Now, the implementation
will wait only if it is really necessary - it have improved
performance noticeble for some scenes and a bit for the rest of them.
Add intern/wayland_dynload which is used when WITH_GHOST_WAYLAND_DYNLOAD
is enabled (off by default). When enabled, systems without Wayland
installed will fall back to X11.
This allows Blender to dynamically load:
- libwayland-client
- libwayland-cursor
- libwayland-egl
- libdecor-0 (when WITH_GHOST_WAYLAND_LIBDECOR is enabled).
Surfaces from window decorations were passed into GHOST's listeners
since libdecor & GHOST share a connection.
This error introduced by recent changes that assumed surfaces passed to
GHOST's handler functions were owned by GHOST.
Tag GHOST surfaces & outputs to ensure GHOST only attempts to access
data it created.
This is a follow up to [0], where it was assumed flushing the output
would run the appropriate leave handlers & clear the keyboard & pointer
surfaces. While that's mostly true it's not guaranteed.
Resolve this by clearing the pointers when closing windows and add NULL
checks before accessing the windows.
Tested with Gnome, KDE & River compositors.
[0]: 58ccd8338e
Add more math functions for float4 to make them on par with float3 ones. It
makes it possible to change the types of float3 variables to float4 without
additional work.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15318
It wasn't obvious when direct access or lookups should be used.
Add class methods for direct lookups as well as searching from known
windows when windows are accessed outside Wayland's handlers.
This avoids having to check if the window has been removed in some cases.
Closing a window could leave danging pointers which Wayland
callbacks are responsible for clearing.
However, any calls Blender makes that don't originate from Wayland's
handlers don't have that assurance (key-repeat in this case).
Resolve by using a window lookup on each key-repeat event.
GHOST_GetCursorPosition wasn't working properly under Wayland because
the last focused window didn't necessarily match the window used to call
wm_cursor_position_get(..).
Now the window passed into wm_cursor_position_get is passed to GHOST
so that window is used to access cursor coordinates.
Use client (window) relative coordinates for cursor position access,
this only moves the conversion from window-manager into GHOST,
(no functional changes).
This is needed for fix a bug in GHOST/Wayland which doesn't support
accessing absolute cursor coordinates & the window is needed to properly
access the cursor coordinates.
As it happens every caller to GHOST_GetCursorPosition was already making
the values window-relative, so there is little benefit in attempting to
workaround the problem on the Wayland side.
If needed the screen-space versions of functions can be exposed again.
Each off-screen buffer created a surface and EGL window which was
only freed when Blender exited.
Resolve by freeing the associated data when disposing the off-screen
context.
This patch adds a new Cycles device with similar functionality to the
existing GPU devices. Kernel compilation and runtime interaction happen
via oneAPI DPC++ compiler and SYCL API.
This implementation is primarly focusing on Intel® Arc™ GPUs and other
future Intel GPUs. The first supported drivers are 101.1660 on Windows
and 22.10.22597 on Linux.
The necessary tools for compilation are:
- A SYCL compiler such as oneAPI DPC++ compiler or
https://github.com/intel/llvm
- Intel® oneAPI Level Zero which is used for low level device queries:
https://github.com/oneapi-src/level-zero
- To optionally generate prebuilt graphics binaries: Intel® Graphics
Compiler All are included in Linux precompiled libraries on svn:
https://svn.blender.org/svnroot/bf-blender/trunk/lib The same goes for
Windows precompiled binaries but for the graphics compiler, available
as "Intel® Graphics Offline Compiler for OpenCL™ Code" from
https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/developer/articles/tool/oneapi-standalone-components.html,
for which path can be set as OCLOC_INSTALL_DIR.
Being based on the open SYCL standard, this implementation could also be
extended to run on other compatible non-Intel hardware in the future.
Reviewed By: sergey, brecht
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15254
Co-authored-by: Nikita Sirgienko <nikita.sirgienko@intel.com>
Co-authored-by: Stefan Werner <stefan.werner@intel.com>