# Objective
It's useful to have access to render pipeline statistics, since they
provide more information than FPS alone. For example, the number of
drawn triangles can be used to debug culling and LODs. The number of
fragment shader invocations can provide a more stable alternative metric
than GPU elapsed time.
See also: Render node GPU timing overlay #8067, which doesn't provide
pipeline statistics, but adds a nice overlay.
## Solution
Add `RenderDiagnosticsPlugin`, which enables collecting pipeline
statistics and CPU & GPU timings.
---
## Changelog
- Add `RenderDiagnosticsPlugin`
- Add `RenderContext::diagnostic_recorder` method
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
`QueryState::archetype_component_access` is only really ever used to
extend `SystemMeta`'s. It can be removed to save some memory for every
`Query` in an app.
## Solution
* Remove it.
* Have `new_archetype` pass in a `&mut Access<ArchetypeComponentId>`
instead and pull it from `SystemMeta` directly.
* Split `QueryState::new` from `QueryState::new_with_access` and a
common `QueryState::new_uninitialized`.
* Split `new_archetype` into an internal and public version. Call the
internal version in `update_archetypes`.
This should make it faster to construct new QueryStates, and by proxy
lenses and joins as well.
`matched_tables` also similarly is only used to deduplicate inserting
into `matched_table_ids`. If we can find another efficient way to do so,
it might also be worth removing.
The [generated
assembly](https://github.com/james7132/bevy_asm_tests/compare/main...remove-query-state-archetype-component-access#diff-496530101f0b16e495b7e9b77c0e906ae3068c8adb69ed36c92d5a1be5a9efbe)
reflects this well, with all of the access related updates in
`QueryState` being removed.
---
## Changelog
Removed: `QueryState::archetype_component_access`.
Changed: `QueryState::new_archetype` now takes a `&mut
Access<ArchetypeComponentId>` argument, which will be updated with the
new accesses.
Changed: `QueryState::update_archetype_component_access` now takes a
`&mut Access<ArchetypeComponentId>` argument, which will be updated with
the new accesses.
## Migration Guide
TODO
# Objective
Improve code quality involving fixedbitset.
## Solution
Update to fixedbitset 0.5. Use the new `grow_and_insert` function
instead of `grow` and `insert` functions separately.
This should also speed up most of the set operations involving
fixedbitset. They should be ~2x faster, but testing this against the
stress tests seems to show little to no difference. The multithreaded
executor doesn't seem to be all that much faster in many_cubes and
many_foxes. These use cases are likely dominated by other operations or
the bitsets aren't big enough to make them the bottleneck.
This introduces a duplicate dependency due to petgraph and wgpu, but the
former may take some time to update.
## Changelog
Removed: `Access::grow`
## Migration Guide
`Access::grow` has been removed. It's no longer needed. Remove all
references to it.
# Objective
Make `Transform` APIs more ergonomic by allowing users to pass `Dir3` as
an argument where a direction is needed. Fixes#12481.
## Solution
Accept `impl TryInto<Dir3>` instead of `Vec3` for direction/axis
arguments in `Transform` APIs
---
## Changelog
The following `Transform` methods now accept an `impl TryInto<Dir3>`
argument where they previously accepted directions as `Vec3`:
* `Transform::{look_to,looking_to}`
* `Transform::{look_at,looking_at}`
* `Transform::{align,aligned_by}`
## Migration Guide
This is not a breaking change since the arguments were previously `Vec3`
which already implements `TryInto<Dir3>`, and behavior is unchanged.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: IQuick 143 <IQuick143cz@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Even if we have `Laba` and `Oklcha` colorspaces using lightness as the
L field name, `Oklaba` doesn't do the same
- The shorthand function for creating a new color should be named
`Oklaba::lab`, but is named `lch`
## Solution
- Rename field l in `Oklaba` to lightness
- Rename `Oklaba::lch` to `Oklaba::lab`
---
## Changelog
### Changed
- Changed name in l field in `Oklaba` to lightness
- Changed method name `Oklaba::lch` to `Oklaba::lab`
## Migration Guide
If you were creating a Oklaba instance directly, instead of using L, you
should use lightness
```rust
// Before
let oklaba = Oklaba { l: 1., ..Default::default() };
// Now
let oklaba = Oklaba { lightness: 1., ..Default::default() };
```
if you were using the function `Oklaba::lch`, now the method is named
`Oklaba::lab`
# Objective
Give easy methods for uniform point sampling in a variety of primitive
shapes (particularly useful for circles and spheres) because in a lot of
cases its quite easy to get wrong (non-uniform).
## Solution
Added the `ShapeSample` trait to `bevy_math` and implemented it for
`Circle`, `Sphere`, `Rectangle`, `Cuboid`, `Cylinder`, `Capsule2d` and
`Capsule3d`. There are a few other shapes it would be reasonable to
implement for like `Triangle`, `Ellipse` and `Torus` but I'm not
immediately sure how these would be implemented (other than rejection
which could be the best method, and could be more performant than some
of the solutions in this pr I'm not sure). This exposes the
`sample_volume` and `sample_surface` methods to get both a random point
from its interior or its surface. EDIT: Renamed `sample_volume` to
`sample_interior` and `sample_surface` to `sample_boundary`
This brings in `rand` as a default optional dependency (without default
features), and the methods take `&mut impl Rng` which allows them to use
any random source implementing `RngCore`.
---
## Changelog
### Added
Added the methods `sample_interior` and `sample_boundary` to a variety
of primitive shapes providing easy uniform point sampling.
# Objective
assets that don't load before they get removed are retried forever,
causing buffer churn and slowdown.
## Solution
stop trying to prepare dead assets.
# Objective
Originally proposed as part of #8973. Adds `with_` methods for each side
of `UiRect`
## Solution
Add `with_left`, `with_right`, `with_top`, `with_bottom` to `UiRect`.
# Objective
Add reflect for `std::any::TypeId`.
I couldn't add ReflectSerialize/ReflectDeserialize for it, it was giving
me an error. I don't really understand why, since it works for
`std::path::PathBuf`.
Co-authored-by: Charles Bournhonesque <cbournhonesque@snapchat.com>
# Objective
Fixes#12480
by removing the explicit mention of equally sized triangles from the doc
for icospheres
Co-authored-by: Emi <emanuel.boehm@gmail.com>
# Objective
Fixes#12139
## Solution
- Derive `Debug` impl for `Entity`
- Add impl `Display` for `Entity`
- Add `entity_display` test to check the output contains all required
info
I decided to go with `0v0|1234` format as opposed to the `0v0[1234]`
which was initially discussed in the issue.
My rationale for this is that `[1234]` may be confused for index values,
which may be common in logs, and so searching for entities by text would
become harder. I figured `|1234` would help the entity IDs stand out
more.
Additionally, I'm a little concerned that this change is gonna break
existing logging for projects because `Debug` is now going to be a
multi-line output. But maybe this is ok.
We could implement `Debug` to be a single-line output, but then I don't
see why it would be different from `Display` at all.
@alice-i-cecile Let me know if we'd like to make any changes based on
these points.
# Objective
- Closes#11793
- Introduces a general API for aligning local coordinates of Transforms
with given vectors.
## Solution
- We introduce `Transform::align`, which allows a rotation to be
specified by four pieces of alignment data, as explained by the
documentation:
````rust
/// Rotates this [`Transform`] so that the `main_axis` vector, reinterpreted in local coordinates, points
/// in the given `main_direction`, while `secondary_axis` points towards `secondary_direction`.
///
/// For example, if a spaceship model has its nose pointing in the X-direction in its own local coordinates
/// and its dorsal fin pointing in the Y-direction, then `align(Vec3::X, v, Vec3::Y, w)` will make the spaceship's
/// nose point in the direction of `v`, while the dorsal fin does its best to point in the direction `w`.
///
/// More precisely, the [`Transform::rotation`] produced will be such that:
/// * applying it to `main_axis` results in `main_direction`
/// * applying it to `secondary_axis` produces a vector that lies in the half-plane generated by `main_direction` and
/// `secondary_direction` (with positive contribution by `secondary_direction`)
///
/// [`Transform::look_to`] is recovered, for instance, when `main_axis` is `Vec3::NEG_Z` (the [`Transform::forward`]
/// direction in the default orientation) and `secondary_axis` is `Vec3::Y` (the [`Transform::up`] direction in the default
/// orientation). (Failure cases may differ somewhat.)
///
/// In some cases a rotation cannot be constructed. Another axis will be picked in those cases:
/// * if `main_axis` or `main_direction` is zero, `Vec3::X` takes its place
/// * if `secondary_axis` or `secondary_direction` is zero, `Vec3::Y` takes its place
/// * if `main_axis` is parallel with `secondary_axis` or `main_direction` is parallel with `secondary_direction`,
/// a rotation is constructed which takes `main_axis` to `main_direction` along a great circle, ignoring the secondary
/// counterparts
///
/// Example
/// ```
/// # use bevy_math::{Vec3, Quat};
/// # use bevy_transform::components::Transform;
/// let mut t1 = Transform::IDENTITY;
/// let mut t2 = Transform::IDENTITY;
/// t1.align(Vec3::ZERO, Vec3::Z, Vec3::ZERO, Vec3::X);
/// t2.align(Vec3::X, Vec3::Z, Vec3::Y, Vec3::X);
/// assert_eq!(t1.rotation, t2.rotation);
///
/// t1.align(Vec3::X, Vec3::Z, Vec3::X, Vec3::Y);
/// assert_eq!(t1.rotation, Quat::from_rotation_arc(Vec3::X, Vec3::Z));
/// ```
pub fn align(
&mut self,
main_axis: Vec3,
main_direction: Vec3,
secondary_axis: Vec3,
secondary_direction: Vec3,
) { //... }
````
- We introduce `Transform::aligned_by`, the returning-Self version of
`align`:
````rust
pub fn aligned_by(
mut self,
main_axis: Vec3,
main_direction: Vec3,
secondary_axis: Vec3,
secondary_direction: Vec3,
) -> Self { //... }
````
- We introduce an example (examples/transforms/align.rs) that shows the
usage of this API. It is likely to be mathier than most other
`Transform` APIs, so when run, the example demonstrates what the API
does in space:
<img width="1440" alt="Screenshot 2024-03-12 at 11 01 19 AM"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/2975848/884b3cc3-cbd9-48ae-8f8c-49a677c59dfe">
---
## Changelog
- Added methods `align`, `aligned_by` to `Transform`.
- Added transforms/align.rs to examples.
---
## Discussion
### On the form of `align`
The original issue linked above suggests an API similar to that of the
existing `Transform::look_to` method:
````rust
pub fn align_to(&mut self, direction: Vec3, up: Vec3) { //... }
````
Not allowing an input axis of some sort that is to be aligned with
`direction` would not really solve the problem in the issue, since the
user could easily be in a scenario where they have to compose with
another rotation on their own (undesirable). This leads to something
like:
````rust
pub fn align_to(&mut self, axis: Vec3, direction: Vec3, up: Vec3) { //... }
````
However, this still has two problems:
- If the vector that the user wants to align is parallel to the Y-axis,
then the API basically does not work (we cannot fully specify a
rotation)
- More generally, it does not give the user the freedom to specify which
direction is to be treated as the local "up" direction, so it fails as a
general alignment API
Specifying both leads us to the present situation, with two local axis
inputs (`main_axis` and `secondary_axis`) and two target directions
(`main_direction` and `secondary_direction`). This might seem a little
cumbersome for general use, but for the time being I stand by the
decision not to expand further without prompting from users. I'll expand
on this below.
### Additional APIs?
Presently, this PR introduces only `align` and `aligned_by`. Other
potentially useful bundles of API surface arrange into a few different
categories:
1. Inferring direction from position, a la `Transform::look_at`, which
might look something like this:
````rust
pub fn align_at(&mut self, axis: Vec3, target: Vec3, up: Vec3) {
self.align(axis, target - self.translation, Vec3::Y, up);
}
````
(This is simple but still runs into issues when the user wants to point
the local Y-axis somewhere.)
2. Filling in some data for the user for common use-cases; e.g.:
````rust
pub fn align_x(&mut self, direction: Vec3, up: Vec3) {
self.align(Vec3::X, direction, Vec3::Y, up);
}
````
(Here, use of the `up` vector doesn't lose any generality, but it might
be less convenient to specify than something else. This does naturally
leave open the question of what `align_y` would look like if we provided
it.)
Morally speaking, I do think that the `up` business is more pertinent
when the intention is to work with cameras, which the `look_at` and
`look_to` APIs seem to cover pretty well. If that's the case, then I'm
not sure what the ideal shape for these API functions would be, since it
seems like a lot of input would have to be baked into the function
definitions. For some cases, this might not be the end of the world:
````rust
pub fn align_x_z(&mut self, direction: Vec3, weak_direction: Vec3) {
self.align(Vec3::X, direction, Vec3::Z, weak_direction);
}
````
(However, this is not symmetrical in x and z, so you'd still need six
API functions just to support the standard positive coordinate axes, and
if you support negative axes then things really start to balloon.)
The reasons that these are not actually produced in this PR are as
follows:
1. Without prompting from actual users in the wild, it is unknown to me
whether these additional APIs would actually see a lot of use. Extending
these to our users in the future would be trivial if we see there is a
demand for something specific from the above-mentioned categories.
2. As discussed above, there are so many permutations of these that
could be provided that trying to do so looks like it risks unduly
ballooning the API surface for this feature.
3. Finally, and most importantly, creating these helper functions in
user-space is trivial, since they all just involve specializing `align`
to particular inputs; e.g.:
````rust
fn align_ship(ship_transform: &mut Transform, nose_direction: Vec3, dorsal_direction: Vec3) {
ship_transform.align(Ship::NOSE, nose_direction, Ship::DORSAL, dorsal_direction);
}
````
With that in mind, I would prefer instead to focus on making the
documentation and examples for a thin API as clear as possible, so that
users can get a grip on the tool and specialize it for their own needs
when they feel the desire to do so.
### `Dir3`?
As in the case of `Transform::look_to` and `Transform::look_at`, the
inputs to this function are, morally speaking, *directions* rather than
vectors (actually, if we're being pedantic, the input is *really really*
a pair of orthonormal frames), so it's worth asking whether we should
really be using `Dir3` as inputs instead of `Vec3`. I opted for `Vec3`
for the following reasons:
1. Specifying a `Dir3` in user-space is just more annoying than
providing a `Vec3`. Even in the most basic cases (e.g. providing a
vector literal), you still have to do error handling or call an unsafe
unwrap in your function invocations.
2. The existing API mentioned above uses `Vec3`, so we are just adhering
to the same thing.
Of course, the use of `Vec3` has its own downsides; it can be argued
that the replacement of zero-vectors with fixed ones (which we do in
`Transform::align` as well as `Transform::look_to`) more-or-less amounts
to failing silently.
### Future steps
The question of additional APIs was addressed above. For me, the main
thing here to handle more immediately is actually just upstreaming this
API (or something similar and slightly mathier) to `glam::Quat`. The
reason that this would be desirable for users is that this API currently
only works with `Transform`s even though all it's actually doing is
specifying a rotation. Upstreaming to `glam::Quat`, properly done, could
buy a lot basically for free, since a number of `Transform` methods take
a rotation as an input. Using these together would require a little bit
of mathematical savvy, but it opens up some good things (e.g.
`Transform::rotate_around`).
# Objective
- Addresses #12462
- When we serialize an enum, deserialize it, then reserialize it, the
correct variant should be selected.
## Solution
- Change `dynamic_enum.set_variant` to
`dynamic_enum.set_variant_with_index` in `EnumVisitor`
# Objective
- Adds 3d grids, suggestion of #9400
## Solution
- Added 3d grids (grids spanning all three dimensions, not flat grids)
to bevy_gizmos
---
## Changelog
- `gizmos.grid(...)` and `gizmos.grid_2d(...)` now return a
`GridBuilder2d`.
- Added `gizmos.grid_3d(...)` which returns a `GridBuilder3d`.
- The difference between them is basically only that `GridBuilder3d`
exposes some methods for configuring the z axis while the 2d version
doesn't.
- Allowed for drawing the outer edges along a specific axis by calling
`.outer_edges_x()`, etc. on the builder.
## Additional information
Please note that I have not added the 3d grid to any example as not to
clutter them.
Here is an image of what the 3d grid looks like:
<img width="1440" alt="Screenshot 2024-03-12 at 02 19 55"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/62256001/4cd3b7de-cf2c-4f05-8a79-920a4dd804b8">
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
Beginning of refactoring of light.rs in bevy_pbr, as per issue #12349
Create and move light.rs to its own directory, and extract AmbientLight
struct.
## Solution
- moved light.rs to light/mod.rs
- extracted AmbientLight struct to light/ambient_light.rs
# Objective
Fixes#12064
## Solution
Prior to #11326, the "global physical" translation of text was rounded.
After #11326, only the "offset" is being rounded.
This moves things around so that the "global translation" is converted
to physical pixels, rounded, and then converted back to logical pixels,
which is what I believe was happening before / what the comments above
describe.
## Discussion
This seems to work and fix an obvious mistake in some code, but I don't
fully grok the ui / text pipelines / math here.
## Before / After and test example
<details>
<summary>Expand Code</summary>
```rust
use std::f32::consts::FRAC_PI_2;
use bevy::prelude::*;
use bevy_internal:🪟:WindowResolution;
const FONT_SIZE: f32 = 25.0;
const PADDING: f32 = 5.0;
fn main() {
App::new()
.add_plugins(
DefaultPlugins.set(WindowPlugin {
primary_window: Some(Window {
resolution: WindowResolution::default().with_scale_factor_override(1.0),
..default()
}),
..default()
}),
//.set(ImagePlugin::default_nearest()),
)
.add_systems(Startup, setup)
.run();
}
fn setup(mut commands: Commands, asset_server: Res<AssetServer>) {
commands.spawn(Camera2dBundle::default());
let font = asset_server.load("fonts/FiraSans-Bold.ttf");
for x in [20.5, 140.0] {
for i in 1..10 {
text(
&mut commands,
font.clone(),
x,
(FONT_SIZE + PADDING) * i as f32,
i,
Quat::default(),
1.0,
);
}
}
for x in [450.5, 700.0] {
for i in 1..10 {
text(
&mut commands,
font.clone(),
x,
((FONT_SIZE * 2.0) + PADDING) * i as f32,
i,
Quat::default(),
2.0,
);
}
}
for y in [400.0, 600.0] {
for i in 1..10 {
text(
&mut commands,
font.clone(),
(FONT_SIZE + PADDING) * i as f32,
y,
i,
Quat::from_rotation_z(FRAC_PI_2),
1.0,
);
}
}
}
fn text(
commands: &mut Commands,
font: Handle<Font>,
x: f32,
y: f32,
i: usize,
rot: Quat,
scale: f32,
) {
let text = (65..(65 + i)).map(|a| a as u8 as char).collect::<String>();
commands.spawn(TextBundle {
style: Style {
position_type: PositionType::Absolute,
left: Val::Px(x),
top: Val::Px(y),
..default()
},
text: Text::from_section(
text,
TextStyle {
font,
font_size: FONT_SIZE,
..default()
},
),
transform: Transform::from_rotation(rot).with_scale(Vec2::splat(scale).extend(1.)),
..default()
});
}
```
</details>
Open both images in new tabs and swap back and forth. Pay attention to
the "A" and "ABCD" lines.
<details>
<summary>Before</summary>
<img width="640" alt="main3"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/200550/248d7a55-d06d-433f-80da-1914803c3551">
</details>
<details>
<summary>After</summary>
<img width="640" alt="pr3"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/200550/26a9d292-07ae-4af3-b035-e187b2529ace">
</details>
---------
Co-authored-by: François Mockers <mockersf@gmail.com>
# Objective
`System<f32>` currently does not implement `Eq` even though it should
## Solution
Manually implement `Eq` like other traits are manually implemented
# Objective
To have a user level workaround for #12237.
## Solution
Workaround to the problem is described in:
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/12237#issuecomment-1983680632
## Changelog
### Changed
- `CreateWindowParams` type and `create_windows` system from
`bevy_winit` is now public, which allows library authors and game
developers to manually trigger window creation when needed.
# Objective
Fixes#12301. Provide more comprehensive crate level docs for bevy_ptr,
explaining it's methodology and design.
## Solution
Write out said docs.
---------
Co-authored-by: BD103 <59022059+BD103@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Reduce allocations on the UI hot path.
## Solution
- Cache buffers used by the `ui_stack_system`.
## Follow-Up
- `sort_by_key` is potentially-allocating. It might be worthwhile to
include the child index as part of the sort-key and use unstable sort.
# Objective
- Closes#11954
## Solution
Change the load_meshes field in `GltfLoaderSettings` from a bool to
`RenderAssetUsages` flag, and add a new load_materials flag.
Use these to determine where the gLTF mesh and material assets are
retained in memory (if the provided flags are empty, then the assets are
skipped during load).
---
## Migration Guide
When loading gLTF assets with `asset_server.load_with_settings`, use
`RenderAssetUsages` instead of `bool` when setting load_meshes e.g.
```rust
let _ = asset_server.load_with_settings("...", |s: &mut GltfLoaderSettings| {
s.load_meshes = RenderAssetUsages::RENDER_WORLD;
});
```
Use the new load_materials field for controlling material load &
retention behaviour instead of load_meshes.
gLTF .meta files need similar updates e.g
```
load_meshes: true,
```
to
```
load_meshes: ("MAIN_WORLD | RENDER_WORLD"),
```
---------
Co-authored-by: 66OJ66 <hi0obxud@anonaddy.me>
# Objective
Add a `scale_around_center` method to the `BoundingVolume` trait, as per
#12130.
## Solution
Added `scale_around_center` to the `BoundingVolume` trait, implemented
in `Aabb2d`, `Aabb3d`, `BoundingCircle`, and `BoundingSphere` (with
tests).
# Objective
- Fix GamepadEvent::Connection not being sent for devices connected at
startup.
## Solution
- GamepadConnectionEvent was being sent directly for gamepads connected
at startup, which causes consumers of GamepadEvent to not receive those
events.
- Instead send GamepadEvent. The gamepad_event_system splits
GamepadEvent up, so consumers of GamepadConnectionEvent will still
receive the events.
# Objective
- Part of #12351
- Add fps overlay
## Solution
- Create `FpsOverlayPlugin`
- Allow for configuration through resource `FpsOverlayConfig`
- Allow for configuration during runtime
### Preview on default settings
![20240308_22h23m25s_grim](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/62356462/33d3d7a9-435e-4e0b-9814-d3274e779a69)
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Adds gizmo line joints, suggestion of #9400
## Solution
- Adds `line_joints: GizmoLineJoint` to `GizmoConfig`. Currently the
following values are supported:
- `GizmoLineJoint::None`: does not draw line joints, same behaviour as
previously
- `GizmoLineJoint::Bevel`: draws a single triangle between the lines
- `GizmoLineJoint::Miter` / 'spiky joints': draws two triangles between
the lines extending them until they meet at a (miter) point.
- NOTE: for very small angles between the lines, which happens
frequently in 3d, the miter point will be very far away from the point
at which the lines meet.
- `GizmoLineJoint::Round(resolution)`: Draw a circle arc between the
lines. The circle is a triangle fan of `resolution` triangles.
---
## Changelog
- Added `GizmoLineJoint`, use that in `GizmoConfig` and added necessary
pipelines and draw commands.
- Added a new `line_joints.wgsl` shader containing three vertex shaders
`vertex_bevel`, `vertex_miter` and `vertex_round` as well as a basic
`fragment` shader.
## Migration Guide
Any manually created `GizmoConfig`s must now set the `.line_joints`
field.
## Known issues
- The way we currently create basic closed shapes like rectangles,
circles, triangles or really any closed 2d shape means that one of the
corners will not be drawn with joints, although that would probably be
expected. (see the triangle in the 2d image)
- This could be somewhat mitigated by introducing line caps or fixed by
adding another segment overlapping the first of the strip. (Maybe in a
followup PR?)
- 3d shapes can look 'off' with line joints (especially bevel) because
wherever 3 or more lines meet one of them may stick out beyond the joint
drawn between the other 2.
- Adding additional lines so that there is a joint between every line at
a corner would fix this but would probably be too computationally
expensive.
- Miter joints are 'unreasonably long' for very small angles between the
lines (the angle is the angle between the lines in screen space). This
is technically correct but distracting and does not feel right,
especially in 3d contexts. I think limiting the length of the miter to
the point at which the lines meet might be a good idea.
- The joints may be drawn with a different gizmo in-between them and
their corresponding lines in 2d. Some sort of z-ordering would probably
be good here, but I believe this may be out of scope for this PR.
## Additional information
Some pretty images :)
<img width="1175" alt="Screenshot 2024-03-02 at 04 53 50"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/62256001/58df7e63-9376-4430-8871-32adba0cb53b">
- Note that the top vertex does not have a joint drawn.
<img width="1440" alt="Screenshot 2024-03-02 at 05 03 55"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/62256001/137a00cf-cbd4-48c2-a46f-4b47492d4fd9">
Now for a weird video:
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/62256001/93026f48-f1d6-46fe-9163-5ab548a3fce4
- The black lines shooting out from the cube are miter joints that get
very long because the lines between which they are drawn are (almost)
collinear in screen space.
---------
Co-authored-by: Pablo Reinhardt <126117294+pablo-lua@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
Rotating vectors is a very common task. It is required for a variety of
things both within Bevy itself and in many third party plugins, for
example all over physics and collision detection, and for things like
Bevy's bounding volumes and several gizmo implementations.
For 3D, we can do this using a `Quat`, but for 2D, we do not have a
clear and efficient option. `Mat2` can be used for rotating vectors if
created using `Mat2::from_angle`, but this is not obvious to many users,
it doesn't have many rotation helpers, and the type does not give any
guarantees that it represents a valid rotation.
We should have a proper type for 2D rotations. In addition to allowing
for potential optimization, it would allow us to have a consistent and
explicitly documented representation used throughout the engine, i.e.
counterclockwise and in radians.
## Representation
The mathematical formula for rotating a 2D vector is the following:
```
new_x = x * cos - y * sin
new_y = x * sin + y * cos
```
Here, `sin` and `cos` are the sine and cosine of the rotation angle.
Computing these every time when a vector needs to be rotated can be
expensive, so the rotation shouldn't be just an `f32` angle. Instead, it
is often more efficient to represent the rotation using the sine and
cosine of the angle instead of storing the angle itself. This can be
freely passed around and reused without unnecessary computations.
The two options are either a 2x2 rotation matrix or a unit complex
number where the cosine is the real part and the sine is the imaginary
part. These are equivalent for the most part, but the unit complex
representation is a bit more memory efficient (two `f32`s instead of
four), so I chose that. This is like Nalgebra's
[`UnitComplex`](https://docs.rs/nalgebra/latest/nalgebra/geometry/type.UnitComplex.html)
type, which can be used for the
[`Rotation2`](https://docs.rs/nalgebra/latest/nalgebra/geometry/type.Rotation2.html)
type.
## Implementation
Add a `Rotation2d` type represented as a unit complex number:
```rust
/// A counterclockwise 2D rotation in radians.
///
/// The rotation angle is wrapped to be within the `]-pi, pi]` range.
pub struct Rotation2d {
/// The cosine of the rotation angle in radians.
///
/// This is the real part of the unit complex number representing the rotation.
pub cos: f32,
/// The sine of the rotation angle in radians.
///
/// This is the imaginary part of the unit complex number representing the rotation.
pub sin: f32,
}
```
Using it is similar to using `Quat`, but in 2D:
```rust
let rotation = Rotation2d::radians(PI / 2.0);
// Rotate vector (also works on Direction2d!)
assert_eq!(rotation * Vec2::X, Vec2::Y);
// Get angle as degrees
assert_eq!(rotation.as_degrees(), 90.0);
// Getting sin and cos is free
let (sin, cos) = rotation.sin_cos();
// "Subtract" rotations
let rotation2 = Rotation2d::FRAC_PI_4; // there are constants!
let diff = rotation * rotation2.inverse();
assert_eq!(diff.as_radians(), PI / 4.0);
// This is equivalent to the above
assert_eq!(rotation2.angle_between(rotation), PI / 4.0);
// Lerp
let rotation1 = Rotation2d::IDENTITY;
let rotation2 = Rotation2d::FRAC_PI_2;
let result = rotation1.lerp(rotation2, 0.5);
assert_eq!(result.as_radians(), std::f32::consts::FRAC_PI_4);
// Slerp
let rotation1 = Rotation2d::FRAC_PI_4);
let rotation2 = Rotation2d::degrees(-180.0); // we can use degrees too!
let result = rotation1.slerp(rotation2, 1.0 / 3.0);
assert_eq!(result.as_radians(), std::f32::consts::FRAC_PI_2);
```
There's also a `From<f32>` implementation for `Rotation2d`, which means
that methods can still accept radians as floats if the argument uses
`impl Into<Rotation2d>`. This means that adding `Rotation2d` shouldn't
even be a breaking change.
---
## Changelog
- Added `Rotation2d`
- Bounding volume methods now take an `impl Into<Rotation2d>`
- Gizmo methods with rotation now take an `impl Into<Rotation2d>`
## Future use cases
- Collision detection (a type like this is quite essential considering
how common vector rotations are)
- `Transform` helpers (e.g. return a 2D rotation about the Z axis from a
`Transform`)
- The rotation used for `Transform2d` (#8268)
- More gizmos, maybe meshes... everything in 2D that uses rotation
---------
Co-authored-by: Tristan Guichaoua <33934311+tguichaoua@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Robert Walter <robwalter96@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: IQuick 143 <IQuick143cz@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Add a way to combine 2 queries together in a similar way to
`Query::transmute_lens`
- Fixes#1658
## Solution
- Use a similar method to query transmute, but take the intersection of
matched archetypes between the 2 queries and the union of the accesses
to create the new underlying QueryState.
---
## Changelog
- Add query joins
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
Fix#10876. Improve `Query` and `QueryState`'s docs.
## Solution
Explicitly denote that Query is always guaranteed to return results from
all matching entities once and only once for each entity, and that
iteration order is not guaranteed in any way.
# Objective
Fixes#12402
## Solution
Use `despawn_recursive` instead of `despawn` for despawning
`PlaybackMode::Despawn` audio.
## Migration Guide
`PlaybackSettings::DESPAWN` (`PlaybackMode::Despawn`) now despawns the
audio entity's children as well. If you were relying on the previous
behavior, you may be able to use `PlaybackMode::Remove`, or you may need
to use `PlaybackMode::Once` and manage your audio component lifecycle
manually.
# Objective
- `toml_edit` released a new patch that deprecates `Document`
- this warns when Bevy builds, and CI deny warns
## Solution
- fix deprecation warnings
Updates the requirements on
[ruzstd](https://github.com/KillingSpark/zstd-rs) to permit the latest
version.
<details>
<summary>Release notes</summary>
<p><em>Sourced from <a
href="https://github.com/KillingSpark/zstd-rs/releases">ruzstd's
releases</a>.</em></p>
<blockquote>
<h2>Send + Sync for FrameDecoder and optional checksum calculation</h2>
<ul>
<li>The FrameDecoder is now Send + Sync (RingBuffer impls these traits
now)</li>
<li>Hashing content and checking the result against the frame header is
now optional</li>
</ul>
</blockquote>
</details>
<details>
<summary>Changelog</summary>
<p><em>Sourced from <a
href="https://github.com/KillingSpark/zstd-rs/blob/master/Changelog.md">ruzstd's
changelog</a>.</em></p>
<blockquote>
<h1>After 0.6.0</h1>
</blockquote>
</details>
<details>
<summary>Commits</summary>
<ul>
<li><a
href="abc01fa186"><code>abc01fa</code></a>
prepare changelog after version 0.6.0 released</li>
<li><a
href="943f96c97a"><code>943f96c</code></a>
we had a breaking change, bump version to 0.6.0</li>
<li><a
href="e0d32e83b4"><code>e0d32e8</code></a>
bump version to 0.5.1 and update criterion dependency</li>
<li><a
href="a16e38be5c"><code>a16e38b</code></a>
make RingBuffer Send + Sync so that the FrameDecoder is Send + Sync</li>
<li><a
href="4688f442da"><code>4688f44</code></a>
Merge pull request <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/KillingSpark/zstd-rs/issues/54">#54</a>
from a1phyr/add_metadata</li>
<li><a
href="6ab76d53c7"><code>6ab76d5</code></a>
Add crate category and keywords</li>
<li><a
href="f7e99753b9"><code>f7e9975</code></a>
try avoiding node12 github actions</li>
<li><a
href="86f97b84f5"><code>86f97b8</code></a>
fix naming</li>
<li><a
href="ea26ea140a"><code>ea26ea1</code></a>
use cargo-hack to test feature powerset</li>
<li><a
href="1ec35d2a3b"><code>1ec35d2</code></a>
add a changelog</li>
<li>Additional commits viewable in <a
href="https://github.com/KillingSpark/zstd-rs/compare/v0.5.0...v0.6.0">compare
view</a></li>
</ul>
</details>
<br />
Dependabot will resolve any conflicts with this PR as long as you don't
alter it yourself. You can also trigger a rebase manually by commenting
`@dependabot rebase`.
[//]: # (dependabot-automerge-start)
[//]: # (dependabot-automerge-end)
---
<details>
<summary>Dependabot commands and options</summary>
<br />
You can trigger Dependabot actions by commenting on this PR:
- `@dependabot rebase` will rebase this PR
- `@dependabot recreate` will recreate this PR, overwriting any edits
that have been made to it
- `@dependabot merge` will merge this PR after your CI passes on it
- `@dependabot squash and merge` will squash and merge this PR after
your CI passes on it
- `@dependabot cancel merge` will cancel a previously requested merge
and block automerging
- `@dependabot reopen` will reopen this PR if it is closed
- `@dependabot close` will close this PR and stop Dependabot recreating
it. You can achieve the same result by closing it manually
- `@dependabot show <dependency name> ignore conditions` will show all
of the ignore conditions of the specified dependency
- `@dependabot ignore this major version` will close this PR and stop
Dependabot creating any more for this major version (unless you reopen
the PR or upgrade to it yourself)
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Dependabot creating any more for this minor version (unless you reopen
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</details>
Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com>
Co-authored-by: dependabot[bot] <49699333+dependabot[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
Fixes#10106
Adds a table showing computational complexity, as seen for Query (and
similar to std::collections docs).
## Solution
Add the complexity table
---
## Changelog
- Add complexity table for Input methods
Co-authored-by: James Liu <contact@jamessliu.com>
# Objective
Remove Bevy internals from backtraces
## Solution
Executors insert `__rust_begin_short_backtrace` into the callstack
before running a system.
<details>
<summary>Example current output</summary>
```
thread 'Compute Task Pool (3)' panicked at src/main.rs:7:33:
Foo
stack backtrace:
0: rust_begin_unwind
at /rustc/8ace7ea1f7cbba7b4f031e66c54ca237a0d65de6/library/std/src/panicking.rs:647:5
1: core::panicking::panic_fmt
at /rustc/8ace7ea1f7cbba7b4f031e66c54ca237a0d65de6/library/core/src/panicking.rs:72:14
2: foo::main::{{closure}}
at ./src/main.rs:7:33
3: core::ops::function::impls::<impl core::ops::function::FnMut<A> for &mut F>::call_mut
at /rustc/8ace7ea1f7cbba7b4f031e66c54ca237a0d65de6/library/core/src/ops/function.rs:294:13
4: <Func as bevy_ecs::system::function_system::SystemParamFunction<fn() .> Out>>::run::call_inner
at /home/vj/workspace/rust/bevy/crates/bevy_ecs/src/system/function_system.rs:661:21
5: <Func as bevy_ecs::system::function_system::SystemParamFunction<fn() .> Out>>::run
at /home/vj/workspace/rust/bevy/crates/bevy_ecs/src/system/function_system.rs:664:17
6: <bevy_ecs::system::function_system::FunctionSystem<Marker,F> as bevy_ecs::system::system::System>::run_unsafe
at /home/vj/workspace/rust/bevy/crates/bevy_ecs/src/system/function_system.rs:504:19
7: bevy_ecs::schedule::executor::multi_threaded::ExecutorState::spawn_system_task::{{closure}}::{{closure}}
at /home/vj/workspace/rust/bevy/crates/bevy_ecs/src/schedule/executor/multi_threaded.rs:621:26
8: core::ops::function::FnOnce::call_once
at /rustc/8ace7ea1f7cbba7b4f031e66c54ca237a0d65de6/library/core/src/ops/function.rs:250:5
9: <core::panic::unwind_safe::AssertUnwindSafe<F> as core::ops::function::FnOnce<()>>::call_once
at /rustc/8ace7ea1f7cbba7b4f031e66c54ca237a0d65de6/library/core/src/panic/unwind_safe.rs:272:9
10: std::panicking::try::do_call
at /rustc/8ace7ea1f7cbba7b4f031e66c54ca237a0d65de6/library/std/src/panicking.rs:554:40
11: __rust_try
12: std::panicking::try
at /rustc/8ace7ea1f7cbba7b4f031e66c54ca237a0d65de6/library/std/src/panicking.rs:518:19
13: std::panic::catch_unwind
at /rustc/8ace7ea1f7cbba7b4f031e66c54ca237a0d65de6/library/std/src/panic.rs:142:14
14: bevy_ecs::schedule::executor::multi_threaded::ExecutorState::spawn_system_task::{{closure}}
at /home/vj/workspace/rust/bevy/crates/bevy_ecs/src/schedule/executor/multi_threaded.rs:614:23
15: <core::panic::unwind_safe::AssertUnwindSafe<F> as core::future::future::Future>::poll
at /rustc/8ace7ea1f7cbba7b4f031e66c54ca237a0d65de6/library/core/src/panic/unwind_safe.rs:297:9
16: <futures_lite::future::CatchUnwind<F> as core::future::future::Future>::poll::{{closure}}
at /home/vj/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/futures-lite-2.2.0/src/future.rs:588:42
17: <core::panic::unwind_safe::AssertUnwindSafe<F> as core::ops::function::FnOnce<()>>::call_once
at /rustc/8ace7ea1f7cbba7b4f031e66c54ca237a0d65de6/library/core/src/panic/unwind_safe.rs:272:9
18: std::panicking::try::do_call
at /rustc/8ace7ea1f7cbba7b4f031e66c54ca237a0d65de6/library/std/src/panicking.rs:554:40
19: __rust_try
20: std::panicking::try
at /rustc/8ace7ea1f7cbba7b4f031e66c54ca237a0d65de6/library/std/src/panicking.rs:518:19
21: std::panic::catch_unwind
at /rustc/8ace7ea1f7cbba7b4f031e66c54ca237a0d65de6/library/std/src/panic.rs:142:14
22: <futures_lite::future::CatchUnwind<F> as core::future::future::Future>::poll
at /home/vj/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/futures-lite-2.2.0/src/future.rs:588:9
23: async_executor::Executor::spawn::{{closure}}
at /home/vj/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/async-executor-1.8.0/src/lib.rs:158:20
24: async_task::raw::RawTask<F,T,S,M>::run::{{closure}}
at /home/vj/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/async-task-4.7.0/src/raw.rs:550:21
25: core::ops::function::FnOnce::call_once
at /rustc/8ace7ea1f7cbba7b4f031e66c54ca237a0d65de6/library/core/src/ops/function.rs:250:5
26: <core::panic::unwind_safe::AssertUnwindSafe<F> as core::ops::function::FnOnce<()>>::call_once
at /rustc/8ace7ea1f7cbba7b4f031e66c54ca237a0d65de6/library/core/src/panic/unwind_safe.rs:272:9
27: std::panicking::try::do_call
at /rustc/8ace7ea1f7cbba7b4f031e66c54ca237a0d65de6/library/std/src/panicking.rs:554:40
28: __rust_try
29: std::panicking::try
at /rustc/8ace7ea1f7cbba7b4f031e66c54ca237a0d65de6/library/std/src/panicking.rs:518:19
30: std::panic::catch_unwind
at /rustc/8ace7ea1f7cbba7b4f031e66c54ca237a0d65de6/library/std/src/panic.rs:142:14
31: async_task::raw::RawTask<F,T,S,M>::run
at /home/vj/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/async-task-4.7.0/src/raw.rs:549:23
32: async_task::runnable::Runnable<M>::run
at /home/vj/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/async-task-4.7.0/src/runnable.rs:781:18
33: async_executor::Executor::run::{{closure}}::{{closure}}
at /home/vj/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/async-executor-1.8.0/src/lib.rs:254:21
34: <futures_lite::future::Or<F1,F2> as core::future::future::Future>::poll
at /home/vj/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/futures-lite-2.2.0/src/future.rs:449:33
35: async_executor::Executor::run::{{closure}}
at /home/vj/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/async-executor-1.8.0/src/lib.rs:261:32
36: futures_lite::future::block_on::{{closure}}
at /home/vj/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/futures-lite-2.2.0/src/future.rs:99:19
37: std:🧵:local::LocalKey<T>::try_with
at /rustc/8ace7ea1f7cbba7b4f031e66c54ca237a0d65de6/library/std/src/thread/local.rs:286:16
38: std:🧵:local::LocalKey<T>::with
at /rustc/8ace7ea1f7cbba7b4f031e66c54ca237a0d65de6/library/std/src/thread/local.rs:262:9
39: futures_lite::future::block_on
at /home/vj/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/futures-lite-2.2.0/src/future.rs:78:5
40: bevy_tasks::task_pool::TaskPool::new_internal::{{closure}}::{{closure}}::{{closure}}::{{closure}}
at /home/vj/workspace/rust/bevy/crates/bevy_tasks/src/task_pool.rs:180:37
41: std::panicking::try::do_call
at /rustc/8ace7ea1f7cbba7b4f031e66c54ca237a0d65de6/library/std/src/panicking.rs:554:40
42: __rust_try
43: std::panicking::try
at /rustc/8ace7ea1f7cbba7b4f031e66c54ca237a0d65de6/library/std/src/panicking.rs:518:19
44: std::panic::catch_unwind
at /rustc/8ace7ea1f7cbba7b4f031e66c54ca237a0d65de6/library/std/src/panic.rs:142:14
45: bevy_tasks::task_pool::TaskPool::new_internal::{{closure}}::{{closure}}::{{closure}}
at /home/vj/workspace/rust/bevy/crates/bevy_tasks/src/task_pool.rs:174:43
46: std:🧵:local::LocalKey<T>::try_with
at /rustc/8ace7ea1f7cbba7b4f031e66c54ca237a0d65de6/library/std/src/thread/local.rs:286:16
47: std:🧵:local::LocalKey<T>::with
at /rustc/8ace7ea1f7cbba7b4f031e66c54ca237a0d65de6/library/std/src/thread/local.rs:262:9
48: bevy_tasks::task_pool::TaskPool::new_internal::{{closure}}::{{closure}}
at /home/vj/workspace/rust/bevy/crates/bevy_tasks/src/task_pool.rs:167:25
note: Some details are omitted, run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=full` for a verbose backtrace.
Encountered a panic in system `foo::main::{{closure}}`!
Encountered a panic in system `bevy_app::main_schedule::Main::run_main`!
get on your knees and beg mommy for forgiveness you pervert~ 💖
```
</details>
<details>
<summary>Example output with this PR</summary>
```
Panic at src/main.rs:7:33:
Foo
stack backtrace:
0: rust_begin_unwind
at /rustc/8ace7ea1f7cbba7b4f031e66c54ca237a0d65de6/library/std/src/panicking.rs:647:5
1: core::panicking::panic_fmt
at /rustc/8ace7ea1f7cbba7b4f031e66c54ca237a0d65de6/library/core/src/panicking.rs:72:14
2: foo::main::{{closure}}
at ./src/main.rs:7:59
3: core::ops::function::impls::<impl core::ops::function::FnMut<A> for &mut F>::call_mut
at /rustc/8ace7ea1f7cbba7b4f031e66c54ca237a0d65de6/library/core/src/ops/function.rs:294:13
4: <Func as bevy_ecs::system::function_system::SystemParamFunction<fn() .> Out>>::run::call_inner
at /home/vj/workspace/rust/bevy/crates/bevy_ecs/src/system/function_system.rs:661:21
5: <Func as bevy_ecs::system::function_system::SystemParamFunction<fn() .> Out>>::run
at /home/vj/workspace/rust/bevy/crates/bevy_ecs/src/system/function_system.rs:664:17
6: <bevy_ecs::system::function_system::FunctionSystem<Marker,F> as bevy_ecs::system::system::System>::run_unsafe
at /home/vj/workspace/rust/bevy/crates/bevy_ecs/src/system/function_system.rs:504:19
note: Some details are omitted, run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=full` for a verbose backtrace.
Encountered a panic in system `foo::main::{{closure}}`!
Encountered a panic in system `bevy_app::main_schedule::Main::run_main`!
```
</details>
Full backtraces (`RUST_BACKTRACE=full`) are unchanged.
## Alternative solutions
Write a custom panic hook. This could potentially let use exclude a few
more callstack frames but requires a dependency on `backtrace` and is
incompatible with user-provided panic hooks.
---
## Changelog
- Backtraces now exclude many Bevy internals (unless
`RUST_BACKTRACE=full` is used)
---------
Co-authored-by: James Liu <contact@jamessliu.com>
# Objective
fix occasional crash from commands.insert when quickly spawning and
despawning skinned/morphed meshes
## Solution
use `try_insert` instead of `insert`. if the entity is deleted we don't
mind failing to add the `NoAutomaticBatching` marker.
# Objective
- Fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/12380
## Solution
- Before #11986 AssetEvents were scheduled after PostUpdate. That pr
moved these into First. This PR moves them into Last which is closer to
how they were scheduled before.
# Objective
- After #12370, ci testing with minimal plugins doesn't hang but it
crash as the resource `ScreenshotManager` doesn't exist
## Solution
- Check if the resource exists
# Objective
Fix missing `TextBundle` (and many others) which are present in the main
crate as default features but optional in the sub-crate. See:
- https://docs.rs/bevy/0.13.0/bevy/ui/node_bundles/index.html
- https://docs.rs/bevy_ui/0.13.0/bevy_ui/node_bundles/index.html
~~There are probably other instances in other crates that I could track
down, but maybe "all-features = true" should be used by default in all
sub-crates? Not sure.~~ (There were many.) I only noticed this because
rust-analyzer's "open docs" features takes me to the sub-crate, not the
main one.
## Solution
Add "all-features = true" to docs.rs metadata for crates that use
features.
## Changelog
### Changed
- Unified features documented on docs.rs between main crate and
sub-crates
# Objective
Provide guidelines for contributing code to `bevy_audio`, with a focus
on the critical sections of the audio engine.
## Changelog
Added to the crate-level documentation comment with a section
introducing audio programming, real-time safety and why it is important
to audio programming, as well as recommendations for some programming
use-cases. The section concludes with links to more resources about
audio programming.
I might have gone overboard with the writeup, but I didn't want to
assume a lot out of potential `bevy_audio` contributors, and so I spent
a bit of time defining terms as simply as I could.
I didn't want to pressure people to do so, but the first link on the
additional resources should really be "required reading" as it goes more
in depth about the why and how of audio programming.
---------
Co-authored-by: Nathan Graule <nathan.graule@arturia.com>
# Objective
`ButtonInput<KeyCode>` documentation is currently incorrect/incomplete,
see #12273.
## Solution
Fix the documentation.
I think in the future we should also stop triggering
`just_pressed`/`just_released` when focus switches between two Bevy
windows, as those functions are independent of the window. It could also
make sense to add individual `ButtonInput<KeyCode>`s per window.
---------
Co-authored-by: Mateusz Wachowiak <mateusz_wachowiak@outlook.com>
# Objective
- Fix#12356
- better isolation of ci testing tools in dev tools instead of being in
various crates
## Solution
- Move the parts doing the work of ci testing to the dev tools
# Objective
- Fix incorrect link in UIMaterial docs
## Solution
- Updated the link
Co-authored-by: Frank Hampus Weslien <frankhampusweslien@google.com>
This is an implementation of RFC #51:
https://github.com/bevyengine/rfcs/blob/main/rfcs/51-animation-composition.md
Note that the implementation strategy is different from the one outlined
in that RFC, because two-phase animation has now landed.
# Objective
Bevy needs animation blending. The RFC for this is [RFC 51].
## Solution
This is an implementation of the RFC. Note that the implementation
strategy is different from the one outlined there, because two-phase
animation has now landed.
This is just a draft to get the conversation started. Currently we're
missing a few things:
- [x] A fully-fleshed-out mechanism for transitions
- [x] A serialization format for `AnimationGraph`s
- [x] Examples are broken, other than `animated_fox`
- [x] Documentation
---
## Changelog
### Added
* The `AnimationPlayer` has been reworked to support blending multiple
animations together through an `AnimationGraph`, and as such will no
longer function unless a `Handle<AnimationGraph>` has been added to the
entity containing the player. See [RFC 51] for more details.
* Transition functionality has moved from the `AnimationPlayer` to a new
component, `AnimationTransitions`, which works in tandem with the
`AnimationGraph`.
## Migration Guide
* `AnimationPlayer`s can no longer play animations by themselves and
need to be paired with a `Handle<AnimationGraph>`. Code that was using
`AnimationPlayer` to play animations will need to create an
`AnimationGraph` asset first, add a node for the clip (or clips) you
want to play, and then supply the index of that node to the
`AnimationPlayer`'s `play` method.
* The `AnimationPlayer::play_with_transition()` method has been removed
and replaced with the `AnimationTransitions` component. If you were
previously using `AnimationPlayer::play_with_transition()`, add all
animations that you were playing to the `AnimationGraph`, and create an
`AnimationTransitions` component to manage the blending between them.
[RFC 51]:
https://github.com/bevyengine/rfcs/blob/main/rfcs/51-animation-composition.md
---------
Co-authored-by: Rob Parrett <robparrett@gmail.com>
# Objective
- With the recent lighting changes, the default configuration in the
`bloom_3d` example is less clear what bloom actually does
- See [this
screenshot](4fdb1455d5 (r1494648414))
for a comparison.
- `bloom_3d` additionally uses a for-loop to spawn the spheres, which
can be turned into `commands::spawn_batch` call.
- The text is black, which is difficult to see on the gray background.
## Solution
- Increase emmisive values of materials.
- Set text to white.
## Showcase
Before:
<img width="1392" alt="before"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/59022059/757057ad-ed9f-4eed-b135-8e2032fcdeb5">
After:
<img width="1392" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/59022059/3f9dc7a8-94b2-44b9-8ac3-deef1905221b">
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
Make bevy_utils less of a compilation bottleneck. Tackle #11478.
## Solution
* Move all of the directly reexported dependencies and move them to
where they're actually used.
* Remove the UUID utilities that have gone unused since `TypePath` took
over for `TypeUuid`.
* There was also a extraneous bytemuck dependency on `bevy_core` that
has not been used for a long time (since `encase` became the primary way
to prepare GPU buffers).
* Remove the `all_tuples` macro reexport from bevy_ecs since it's
accessible from `bevy_utils`.
---
## Changelog
Removed: Many of the reexports from bevy_utils (petgraph, uuid, nonmax,
smallvec, and thiserror).
Removed: bevy_core's reexports of bytemuck.
## Migration Guide
bevy_utils' reexports of petgraph, uuid, nonmax, smallvec, and thiserror
have been removed.
bevy_core' reexports of bytemuck's types has been removed.
Add them as dependencies in your own crate instead.
# Objective
Fixes#12353
When only `webp` was selected, `ImageLoader` would not be initialized.
That is, users using `default-features = false` would need to add `png`
or `bmp` or something in addition to `webp` in order to use `webp`.
This was also the case for `pnm`.
## Solution
Add `webp` and `pnm` to the list of features that trigger the
initialization of `ImageLoader`.
# Objective
- Resolves#11309
## Solution
- Add `bevy_dev_tools` crate as a default feature.
- Add `DevToolsPlugin` and add it to an app if the `bevy_dev_tools`
feature is enabled.
`bevy_dev_tools` is reserved by @alice-i-cecile, should we wait until it
gets transferred to cart before merging?
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: BD103 <59022059+BD103@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
- Fix slightly wrong logic from #11442
- Directional lights should not have a near clip plane
## Solution
- Push near clip out to infinity, so that the frustum normal is still
available if its needed for whatever reason in shader
- also opportunistically nabs a typo
# Objective
Fix#12304. Remove unnecessary type registrations thanks to #4154.
## Solution
Conservatively remove type registrations. Keeping the top level
components, resources, and events, but dropping everything else that is
a type of a member of those types.
# Objective
Following #10756, we're now using raw pointers in BundleInserter and
BundleSpawner. This is primarily to get around the need to split the
borrow on the World, but it leaves a lot to be desired in terms of
safety guarantees. There's no type level guarantee the code can't
dereference a null pointer, and it's restoring them to borrows fairly
liberally within the associated functions.
## Solution
* Replace the pointers with `NonNull` and a new `bevy_ptr::ConstNonNull`
that only allows conversion back to read-only borrows
* Remove the closure to avoid potentially aliasing through the closure
by restructuring the match expression.
* Move all conversions back into borrows as far up as possible to ensure
that the borrow checker is at least locally followed.
# Objective
Fixes#12225
Prior to the `bevy_color` port, `GREEN` used to mean "full green." But
it is now a much darker color matching the css1 spec.
## Solution
Change usages of `basic::GREEN` or `css::GREEN` to `LIME` to restore the
examples to their former colors.
This also removes the duplicate definition of `GREEN` from `css`. (it
was already re-exported from `basic`)
## Note
A lot of these examples could use nicer colors. I'm not trying to do
that here.
"Dark Grey" will be tackled separately and has its own tracking issue.
# Objective
Addresses one of the side-notes in #12225.
Colors in the `basic` palette are inconsistent in a few ways:
- `CYAN` was named `AQUA` in the referenced spec. (an alias was added in
a later spec)
- Colors are defined with e.g. "half green" having a `g` value of `0.5`.
But any spec would have been based on 8-bit color, so `0x80 / 0xFF` or
`128 / 255` or ~`0.502`. This precision is likely meaningful when doing
color math/rounding.
## Solution
Regenerate the colors from
https://play.rust-lang.org/?version=stable&mode=debug&edition=2021&gist=37563bedc8858033bd8b8380328c5230
# Objective
- Avoid version mismatch
- When cpal updates oboe in a patch release, this breaks android support
for Bevy
## Solution
- Use the same version of oboe as cpal by relying on it to re-export the
feature
# Objective
Fixes#12310.
#11681 added transformations for bounding volumes, but I accidentally
only added a note in the docs about repeated rotations for `Aabb2d` and
not `Aabb3d`.
## Solution
Copy the docs over to `Aabb3d`.
# Objective
- Describe the objective or issue this PR addresses.
Improve docs around emissive colors --
I couldn't figure out how to increase the emissive strength of
materials, asking on discord @alice-i-cecile told me that color channel
values can go above `1.0` in the case of the `emissive` field. I would
have never figured this out on my own, because [the docs for
emissive](https://docs.rs/bevy/latest/bevy/prelude/struct.StandardMaterial.html#structfield.emissive)
don't mention this possibility, and indeed if you follow the link in the
`emissive` doc [to the `Color`
type](https://docs.rs/bevy/latest/bevy/render/color/enum.Color.html#variants),
you are told that values should be in `[0.0, 1.0]`.
## Solution
- Describe the solution used to achieve the objective above.
Just added a note on the possibility of large color channel values with
example.
# Objective
`initialize_resource<T>` and it's non-send equivalent is only used in
two locations each. Fix#6285.
## Solution
Remove them, replace their calls with their internals. Cut down on a bit
of generic codegen.
This does mean that `initialize_resource_internal` is now `pub(crate)`,
but that's likely OK given that only one variant will remain once
NonSend resources are removed from the World.
# Objective
Follow up to #11600 and #10588https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/11944 made clear that some
people want to use slicing with texture atlases
## Changelog
* Added support for `TextureAtlas` slicing and tiling.
`SpriteSheetBundle` and `AtlasImageBundle` can now use `ImageScaleMode`
* Added new `ui_texture_atlas_slice` example using a texture sheet
<img width="798" alt="Screenshot 2024-02-23 at 11 58 35"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/26703856/47a8b764-127c-4a06-893f-181703777501">
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Pablo Reinhardt <126117294+pablo-lua@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
When doing a final pass for #3362, it appeared that `ComponentStorage`
as a trait, the two types implementing it, and the associated type on
`Component` aren't really necessary anymore. This likely was due to an
earlier constraint on the use of consts in traits, but that definitely
doesn't seem to be a problem in Rust 1.76.
## Solution
Remove them.
---
## Changelog
Changed: `Component::Storage` has been replaced with
`Component::STORAGE_TYPE` as a const.
Removed: `bevy::ecs::component::ComponentStorage` trait
Removed: `bevy::ecs::component::TableStorage` struct
Removed: `bevy::ecs::component::SparseSetStorage` struct
## Migration Guide
If you were manually implementing `Component` instead of using the
derive macro, replace the associated `Storage` associated type with the
`STORAGE_TYPE` const:
```rust
// in Bevy 0.13
impl Component for MyComponent {
type Storage = TableStorage;
}
// in Bevy 0.14
impl Component for MyComponent {
const STORAGE_TYPE: StorageType = StorageType::Table;
}
```
Component is no longer object safe. If you were relying on `&dyn
Component`, `Box<dyn Component>`, etc. please [file an issue
](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues) to get [this
change](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/12311) reverted.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
- Explain it is flushed in the same schedule run (was not obvious to me)
- Point to `apply_deferred` example
- Remove mentions of `System::apply_deferred` and
`Schedule::apply_deferred` which are probably too low level for the most
users
Co-authored-by: James Liu <contact@jamessliu.com>
# Objective
cpal has been updated to [0.15.3](https://crates.io/crates/cpal/0.15.3).
we can remove the skip to avoid check for cpal 0.15.2 dependencies in
deny.toml
cpal now uses ndk 8.0 and Oboe 6.0, so we only have a version for
raw-window-handle, version 0.6
## Solution
- Remove temporal fix that skipped the check for the cpal dependency.
- Update oboe to 0.6
Fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/11917
# Objective
`bevy_utils::Entry` is only useful when using
`BuildHasherDefault<AHasher>`. It would be great if we didn't have to
write out `bevy_utils::hashbrown::hash_map::Entry` whenever we want to
use a different `BuildHasher`, such as when working with
`bevy_utils::TypeIdMap`.
## Solution
Give `bevy_utils::Entry` a new optional type parameter for defining a
custom `BuildHasher`, such as `NoOpHash`. This parameter defaults to
`BuildHasherDefault<AHasher>`— the `BuildHasher` used by
`bevy_utils::HashMap`.
---
## Changelog
- Added an optional third type parameter to `bevy_utils::Entry` to
specify a custom `BuildHasher`
# Objective
Make it straightforward to translate and rotate bounding volumes.
## Solution
Add `translate_by`/`translated_by`, `rotate_by`/`rotated_by`,
`transform_by`/`transformed_by` methods to the `BoundingVolume` trait.
This follows the naming used for mesh transformations (see #11454 and
#11675).
---
## Changelog
- Added `translate_by`/`translated_by`, `rotate_by`/`rotated_by`,
`transform_by`/`transformed_by` methods to the `BoundingVolume` trait
and implemented them for the bounding volumes
- Renamed `Position` associated type to `Translation`
---------
Co-authored-by: Mateusz Wachowiak <mateusz_wachowiak@outlook.com>
# Objective
- The doc example for `World::run_system_with_input` mistakenly
indicates that systems share state
- Some of the doc example code is unnecessary and/or could be cleaned up
## Solution
Replace the incorrect result value for the correct one in the doc
example. I also went with an explicit `assert_eq` check as it presents
the same information but can be validated by CI via doc tests.
Also removed some unnecessary code, such as the `Resource` derives on
`Counter`. In fact, I just replaced `Counter` with a `u8` in the
`Local`. I think it makes the example a little cleaner.
---
## Changelog
- Update docs for `World::run_system` and `World::run_system_with_input`
# Objective
- Fixes#12255
Still needs confirming what the consequences are from having camera
viewport nodes live on the root of the taffy tree.
## Solution
To fix calculating the layouts for UI nodes we need to cleanup the
children previously set whenever `TargetCamera` is updated. This also
maintains a list of taffy camera nodes and cleans them up when removed.
---
## Changelog
Fixed#12255
## Migration Guide
changes affect private structs/members so shouldn't need actions by
engine users.
# Objective
Fixes#12126
Notably this does not appear to fix the console error spam that appears
to be coming from winit, only the performance bug that occurs when
tabbing out and back into the game.
## Solution
The winit event loop starts out as `ControlFlow::Wait` by default. When
switching to `UpdateMode::Reactive` or `UpdateMode::ReactiveLowPower`,
we repeatedly update this to `ControlFlow::WaitUntil(next)`. When
switching back to `UpdateMode::Continuous`, the event loop is
erroneously stuck at the latest `ControlFlow::WaitUntil(next)` that was
issued.
I also changed how we handle `Event::NewEvents` since the `StartCause`
already tells us enough information to make that decision. This came
about my debugging and I left it in as an improvement.
# Objective
Resolves#4154
Currently, registration must all be done manually:
```rust
#[derive(Reflect)]
struct Foo(Bar);
#[derive(Reflect)]
struct Bar(Baz);
#[derive(Reflect)]
struct Baz(usize);
fn main() {
// ...
app
.register_type::<Foo>()
.register_type::<Bar>()
.register_type::<Baz>()
// .register_type::<usize>() <- This one is handled by Bevy, thankfully
// ...
}
```
This can grow really quickly and become very annoying to add, remove,
and update as types change. It would be great if we could help reduce
the number of types that a user must manually implement themselves.
## Solution
As suggested in #4154, this PR adds automatic recursive registration.
Essentially, when a type is registered, it may now also choose to
register additional types along with it using the new
`GetTypeRegistration::register_type_dependencies` trait method.
The `Reflect` derive macro now automatically does this for all fields in
structs, tuple structs, struct variants, and tuple variants. This is
also done for tuples, arrays, `Vec<T>`, `HashMap<K, V>`, and
`Option<T>`.
This allows us to simplify the code above like:
```rust
#[derive(Reflect)]
struct Foo(Bar);
#[derive(Reflect)]
struct Bar(Baz);
#[derive(Reflect)]
struct Baz(usize);
fn main() {
// ...
app.register_type::<Foo>()
// ...
}
```
This automatic registration only occurs if the type has not yet been
registered. If it has been registered, we simply skip it and move to the
next one. This reduces the cost of registration and prevents overwriting
customized registrations.
## Considerations
While this does improve ergonomics on one front, it's important to look
at some of the arguments against adopting a PR like this.
#### Generic Bounds
~~Since we need to be able to register the fields individually, we need
those fields to implement `GetTypeRegistration`. This forces users to
then add this trait as a bound on their generic arguments. This
annoyance could be relieved with something like #5772.~~
This is no longer a major issue as the `Reflect` derive now adds the
`GetTypeRegistration` bound by default. This should technically be okay,
since we already add the `Reflect` bound.
However, this can also be considered a breaking change for manual
implementations that left out a `GetTypeRegistration` impl ~~or for
items that contain dynamic types (e.g. `DynamicStruct`) since those also
do not implement `GetTypeRegistration`~~.
#### Registration Assumptions
By automatically registering fields, users might inadvertently be
relying on certain types to be automatically registered. If `Foo`
auto-registers `Bar`, but `Foo` is later removed from the code, then
anywhere that previously used or relied on `Bar`'s registration would
now fail.
---
## Changelog
- Added recursive type registration to structs, tuple structs, struct
variants, tuple variants, tuples, arrays, `Vec<T>`, `HashMap<K, V>`, and
`Option<T>`
- Added a new trait in the hidden `bevy_reflect::__macro_exports` module
called `RegisterForReflection`
- Added `GetTypeRegistration` impl for
`bevy_render::render_asset::RenderAssetUsages`
## Migration Guide
All types that derive `Reflect` will now automatically add
`GetTypeRegistration` as a bound on all (unignored) fields. This means
that all reflected fields will need to also implement
`GetTypeRegistration`.
If all fields **derive** `Reflect` or are implemented in `bevy_reflect`,
this should not cause any issues. However, manual implementations of
`Reflect` that excluded a `GetTypeRegistration` impl for their type will
need to add one.
```rust
#[derive(Reflect)]
struct Foo<T: FromReflect> {
data: MyCustomType<T>
}
// OLD
impl<T: FromReflect> Reflect for MyCustomType<T> {/* ... */}
// NEW
impl<T: FromReflect + GetTypeRegistration> Reflect for MyCustomType<T> {/* ... */}
impl<T: FromReflect + GetTypeRegistration> GetTypeRegistration for MyCustomType<T> {/* ... */}
```
---------
Co-authored-by: James Liu <contact@jamessliu.com>
Co-authored-by: radiish <cb.setho@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
Hi, this is a minimal implementation of #12159. I wasn't sure if the
`EventLoopProxy` should be wrapped somewhat to make it more explicit.
# Objective
Minimal implementation of #12159
When using `UpdateMode::Reactive` it is currently not possible to
request a redraw when a long running task is finished or an external
source has new data.
This makes the following possible which will then run an app update once
``` rust
// EventLoopProxy is Send on most architectures
// The EventLoopProxy can also be saved in a thread local for WASM or a static in other architecturecs
pub fn example(proxy: NonSend<EventLoopProxy<()>>) {
let clone: EventLoopProxy<()> = proxy.clone();
thread::spawn(move || {
// do long work
clone.send_event(());
});
}
```
## Solution
By using the EventLoopProxy one can manually send events from external
threads to the event loop as `UserEvent`s.
This simply sets redraw_requested when a `UserEvent` is received.
## Changelog
- Added the ability to request a redraw from an external source
---------
Co-authored-by: Kellner, Robin <Robin.Kellner@vector.com>
# Objective
Correct references to `Input` into `ButtonInput` in the keyboard input
docs since it was renamed in 0.13.
## Solution
Change the type used in the keyboard input docs from `Input` to
`ButtonInput`.
# Objective
`Dir3` and `Dir3A` can be rotated using `Quat`s. However, if enough
floating point error accumulates or (more commonly) the rotation itself
is degenerate (like not normalized), the resulting direction can also
become denormalized.
Currently, with debug assertions enabled, it panics in these cases with
the message `rotated.is_normalized()`. This error message is unclear,
doesn't give information about *how* it is denormalized (like is the
length too large, NaN, or something else), and is overall not very
helpful. Panicking for small-ish error might also be a bit too strict,
and has lead to unwanted crashes in crates like `bevy_xpbd` (although it
has also helped in finding actual bugs).
The error message should be clearer and give more context, and it
shouldn't cause unwanted crashes.
## Solution
Change the `debug_assert!` to a warning for small error with a (squared
length) threshold of 2e-4 and a panic for clear error with a threshold
of 2e-2. The warnings mention the direction type and the length of the
denormalized vector.
Here's what the error and warning look like:
```
Error: `Dir3` is denormalized after rotation. The length is 1.014242.
```
```
Warning: `Dir3A` is denormalized after rotation. The length is 1.0001414.
```
I gave the same treatment to `new_unchecked`:
```
Error: The vector given to `Dir3::new_unchecked` is not normalized. The length is 1.014242.
```
```
Warning: The vector given to `Dir3A::new_unchecked` is not normalized. The length is 1.0001414.
```
---
## Discussion
### Threshold values
The thresholds are somewhat arbitrary. 2e-4 is what Glam uses for the
squared length in `is_normalized` (after I corrected it in
bitshifter/glam-rs#480), and 2e-2 is just what I thought could be a
clear sign of something being critically wrong. I can definitely tune
them if there are better thresholds though.
### Logging
`bevy_math` doesn't have `bevy_log`, so we can't use `warn!` or
`error!`. This is why I made it use just `eprintln!` and `panic!` for
now. Let me know if there's a better way of logging errors in
`bevy_math`.
# Objective
In my library,
[`bevy_dev_console`](https://github.com/doonv/bevy_dev_console) I need
access to `App` within `LogPlugin::update_subscriber` in order to
communicate with the `App` from my custom `Layer`.
## Solution
Give access to `App`.
---
## Changelog
- Added access to `App` within `LogPlugin::update_subscriber`
## Migration Guide
`LogPlugin::update_subscriber` now has a `&mut App` parameter. If you
don't need access to `App`, you can ignore the parameter with an
underscore (`_`).
```diff,rust
- fn update_subscriber(subscriber: BoxedSubscriber) -> BoxedSubscriber {
+ fn update_subscriber(_: &mut App, subscriber: BoxedSubscriber) -> BoxedSubscriber {
Box::new(subscriber.with(CustomLayer))
}
```
# Objective
- Allow users to read window events in the sequence they appeared. This
is important for precise input handling when there are multiple input
events in a single frame (e.g. click and release vs release and click).
## Solution
- Add a mega-enum `WinitEvent` that collects window events, and send
those alongside the existing more granular window events.
---
## Changelog
- Added `WinitEvent` event that aggregates all window events into a
synchronized event stream.
# Objective
Fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/11157.
## Solution
Stop using `BackgroundColor` as a color tint for `UiImage`. Add a
`UiImage::color` field for color tint instead. Allow a UI node to
simultaneously include a solid-color background and an image, with the
image rendered on top of the background (this is already how it works
for e.g. text).
![2024-02-29_1709239666_563x520](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/12173779/ec50c9ef-4c7f-4ab8-a457-d086ce5b3425)
---
## Changelog
- The `BackgroundColor` component now renders a solid-color background
behind `UiImage` instead of tinting its color.
- Removed `BackgroundColor` from `ImageBundle`, `AtlasImageBundle`, and
`ButtonBundle`.
- Added `UiImage::color`.
- Expanded `RenderUiSystem` variants.
- Renamed `bevy_ui::extract_text_uinodes` to `extract_uinodes_text` for
consistency.
## Migration Guide
- `BackgroundColor` no longer tints the color of UI images. Use
`UiImage::color` for that instead.
- For solid color buttons, replace `ButtonBundle { background_color:
my_color.into(), ... }` with `ButtonBundle { image:
UiImage::default().with_color(my_color), ... }`, and update button
interaction systems to use `UiImage::color` instead of `BackgroundColor`
as well.
- `bevy_ui::RenderUiSystem::ExtractNode` has been split into
`ExtractBackgrounds`, `ExtractImages`, `ExtractBorders`, and
`ExtractText`.
- `bevy_ui::extract_uinodes` has been split into
`bevy_ui::extract_uinode_background_colors` and
`bevy_ui::extract_uinode_images`.
- `bevy_ui::extract_text_uinodes` has been renamed to
`extract_uinode_text`.
# Objective
After the `TextureAtlas` changes that landed in 0.13,
`SpriteSheetBundle` is equivalent to `TextureAtlas` + `SpriteBundle` and
`AtlasImageBundle` is equivalent to `TextureAtlas` + `ImageBundle`. As
such, the atlas bundles aren't particularly useful / necessary additions
to the API anymore.
In addition, atlas bundles are inconsistent with `ImageScaleMode` (also
introduced in 0.13) which doesn't have its own version of each image
bundle.
## Solution
Deprecate `SpriteSheetBundle` and `AtlasImageBundle` in favor of
including `TextureAtlas` as a separate component alongside
`SpriteBundle` and `ImageBundle`, respectively.
---
## Changelog
- Deprecated `SpriteSheetBundle` and `AtlasImageBundle`.
## Migration Guide
- `SpriteSheetBundle` has been deprecated. Use `TextureAtlas` alongside
a `SpriteBundle` instead.
- `AtlasImageBundle` has been deprecated. Use `TextureAtlas` alongside
an `ImageBundle` instead.
# Objective
- Part of #9400.
- Add light gizmos for `SpotLight`, `PointLight` and `DirectionalLight`.
## Solution
- Add a `ShowLightGizmo` and its related gizmo group and plugin, that
shows a gizmo for all lights of an entities when inserted on it. Light
display can also be toggled globally through the gizmo config in the
same way it can already be done for `Aabb`s.
- Add distinct segment setters for height and base one `Cone3dBuilder`.
This allow having a properly rounded base without too much edges along
the height. The doc comments explain how to ensure height and base
connect when setting different values.
Gizmo for the three light types without radius with the depth bias set
to -1:
![without-radius](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/18357657/699d0154-f367-4727-9b09-8b458d96a0e2)
With Radius:
![with-radius](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/18357657/f3af003e-dbba-427a-a305-c5cc1676e340)
Possible future improvements:
- Add a billboarded sprite with a distinct sprite for each light type.
- Display the intensity of the light somehow (no idea how to represent
that apart from some text).
---
## Changelog
### Added
- The new `ShowLightGizmo`, part of the `LightGizmoPlugin` and
configurable globally with `LightGizmoConfigGroup`, allows drawing gizmo
for `PointLight`, `SpotLight` and `DirectionalLight`. The gizmos color
behavior can be controlled with the `LightGizmoColor` member of
`ShowLightGizmo` and `LightGizmoConfigGroup`.
- The cone gizmo builder (`Cone3dBuilder`) now allows setting a
differing number of segments for the base and height.
---------
Co-authored-by: Gino Valente <49806985+MrGVSV@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
Bevy's `Dir3` and `Dir3A` only implement `Mul<f32>` and not vice versa,
and `Dir2` can not be multiplied by `f32` at all. They all should
implement multiplication both ways, just like Glam's vector types.
## Solution
Implement `Mul<Dir2>`, `Mul<Dir3>`, and `Mul<Dir3A>` for `f32`, and
`Mul<f32>` for `Dir2`.
# Objective
Adoption of #2104 and #11843. The `Option<usize>` wastes 3-7 bytes of
memory per potential entry, and represents a scaling memory overhead as
the ID space grows.
The goal of this PR is to reduce memory usage without significantly
impacting common use cases.
Co-Authored By: @NathanSWard
Co-Authored By: @tygyh
## Solution
Replace `usize` in `SparseSet`'s sparse array with
`nonmax::NonMaxUsize`. NonMaxUsize wraps a NonZeroUsize, and applies a
bitwise NOT to the value when accessing it. This allows the compiler to
niche the value and eliminate the extra padding used for the `Option`
inside the sparse array, while moving the niche value from 0 to
usize::MAX instead.
Checking the [diff in x86 generated
assembly](6e4da653cc),
this change actually results in fewer instructions generated. One
potential downside is that it seems to have moved a load before a
branch, which means we may be incurring a cache miss even if the element
is not there.
Note: unlike #2104 and #11843, this PR only targets the metadata stores
for the ECS and not the component storage itself. Due to #9907 targeting
`Entity::generation` instead of `Entity::index`, `ComponentSparseSet`
storing only up to `u32::MAX` elements would become a correctness issue.
This will come with a cost when inserting items into the SparseSet, as
now there is a potential for a panic. These cost are really only
incurred when constructing a new Table, Archetype, or Resource that has
never been seen before by the World. All operations that are fairly cold
and not on any particular hotpath, even for command application.
---
## Changelog
Changed: `SparseSet` now can only store up to `usize::MAX - 1` elements
instead of `usize::MAX`.
Changed: `SparseSet` now uses 33-50% less memory overhead per stored
item.
Follow up to #11057
Implemented suggestions from reviewers from: a simpler
fit_canvas_to_parent leads to an explicit CSS setting to the canvas.
From my understanding, it has do be set after wgpu creation due to wgpu
overriding the canvas width/height:
4400a58470/examples/src/utils.rs (L68-L74)
# Changelog
- Re-enable a `fit_canvas_to_parent`, it's removal from
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/11057 was problematic. Still,
its inner working is more simple than before: bevy doesn't handle its
resizing, winit does.
## Migration Guide
- Cancels the migration from
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/11057
# Objective
Fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/11628
## Migration Guide
`Command` and `CommandQueue` have migrated from `bevy_ecs::system` to
`bevy_ecs::world`, so `use bevy_ecs::world::{Command, CommandQueue};`
when necessary.
# Objective
Fixes#11298. Make the use of bevy_log vs bevy_utils::tracing more
consistent.
## Solution
Replace all uses of bevy_log's logging macros with the reexport from
bevy_utils. Remove bevy_log as a dependency where it's no longer needed
anymore.
Ideally we should just be using tracing directly, but given that all of
these crates are already using bevy_utils, this likely isn't that great
of a loss right now.
# Objective
bevy_ecs has been developed with a de facto assumption that `Entity` is
to be treated as an opaque identifier by external users, and that its
internal representation is readable but in no way guaranteed to be
stable between versions of bevy_ecs.
This hasn't been clear to users, and the functions on the type that
expose its guts speak a different story.
## Solution
Explicitly document the lack of stability here and define internal
representation changes as a non-breaking change under SemVer. Give it
the same treatment that the standard lib gives `TypeId`.
# Objective
While mucking around with batch_and_prepare systems, it became apparent
that `GpuArrayBufferIndex::index` doesn't need to be a NonMaxU32.
## Solution
Replace it with a normal u32.
This likely has some potential perf benefit by avoiding panics and the
NOT operations, but I haven't been able to find any substantial gains,
so this is primarily for code quality.
---
## Changelog
Changed: `GpuArrayBufferIndex::index` is now a u32.
## Migration Guide
`GpuArrayBuferIndex::index` is now a u32 instead of a `NonMaxU32`.
Remove any calls to `NonMaxU32::get` on the member.
# Objective
- Fix mismatch between the `Component` trait method and the `World`
method.
## Solution
- Replace init_component_info with register_component_hooks.
# Objective
This PR unpins `web-sys` so that unrelated projects that have
`bevy_render` in their workspace can finally update their `web-sys`.
More details in and fixes#12246.
## Solution
* Update `wgpu` from 0.19.1 to 0.19.3.
* Remove the `web-sys` pin.
* Update docs and wasm helper to remove the now-stale
`--cfg=web_sys_unstable_apis` Rust flag.
---
## Changelog
Updated `wgpu` to v0.19.3 and removed `web-sys` pin.
This is an implementation within `bevy_window::window` that fixes
#12229.
# Objective
Fixes#12229, allow users to retrieve the window's size and physical
size as Vectors without having to manually construct them using
`height()` and `width()` or `physical_height()` and `physical_width()`
## Solution
As suggested in #12229, created two public functions within `window`:
`size() -> Vec` and `physical_size() -> UVec` that return the needed
Vectors ready-to-go.
### Discussion
My first FOSS PRQ ever, so bear with me a bit. I'm new to this.
- I replaced instances of ```Vec2::new(window.width(),
window.height());``` or `UVec2::new(window.physical_width(),
window.physical_height());` within bevy examples be replaced with their
`size()`/`physical_size()` counterparts?
- Discussion within #12229 still holds: should these also be added to
WindowResolution?
Although we cached hashes of `MeshVertexBufferLayout`, we were paying
the cost of `PartialEq` on `InnerMeshVertexBufferLayout` for every
entity, every frame. This patch changes that logic to place
`MeshVertexBufferLayout`s in `Arc`s so that they can be compared and
hashed by pointer. This results in a 28% speedup in the
`queue_material_meshes` phase of `many_cubes`, with frustum culling
disabled.
Additionally, this patch contains two minor changes:
1. This commit flattens the specialized mesh pipeline cache to one level
of hash tables instead of two. This saves a hash lookup.
2. The example `many_cubes` has been given a `--no-frustum-culling`
flag, to aid in benchmarking.
See the Tracy profile:
<img width="1064" alt="Screenshot 2024-02-29 144406"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/157897/18632f1d-1fdd-4ac7-90ed-2d10306b2a1e">
## Migration guide
* Duplicate `MeshVertexBufferLayout`s are now combined into a single
object, `MeshVertexBufferLayoutRef`, which contains an
atomically-reference-counted pointer to the layout. Code that was using
`MeshVertexBufferLayout` may need to be updated to use
`MeshVertexBufferLayoutRef` instead.
# Objective
- Provide a reliable and performant mechanism to allows users to keep
components synchronized with external sources: closing/opening sockets,
updating indexes, debugging etc.
- Implement a generic mechanism to provide mutable access to the world
without allowing structural changes; this will not only be used here but
is a foundational piece for observers, which are key for a performant
implementation of relations.
## Solution
- Implement a new type `DeferredWorld` (naming is not important,
`StaticWorld` is also suitable) that wraps a world pointer and prevents
user code from making any structural changes to the ECS; spawning
entities, creating components, initializing resources etc.
- Add component lifecycle hooks `on_add`, `on_insert` and `on_remove`
that can be assigned callbacks in user code.
---
## Changelog
- Add new `DeferredWorld` type.
- Add new world methods: `register_component::<T>` and
`register_component_with_descriptor`. These differ from `init_component`
in that they provide mutable access to the created `ComponentInfo` but
will panic if the component is already in any archetypes. These
restrictions serve two purposes:
1. Prevent users from defining hooks for components that may already
have associated hooks provided in another plugin. (a use case better
served by observers)
2. Ensure that when an `Archetype` is created it gets the appropriate
flags to early-out when triggering hooks.
- Add methods to `ComponentInfo`: `on_add`, `on_insert` and `on_remove`
to be used to register hooks of the form `fn(DeferredWorld, Entity,
ComponentId)`
- Modify `BundleInserter`, `BundleSpawner` and `EntityWorldMut` to
trigger component hooks when appropriate.
- Add bit flags to `Archetype` indicating whether or not any contained
components have each type of hook, this can be expanded for other flags
as needed.
- Add `component_hooks` example to illustrate usage. Try it out! It's
fun to mash keys.
## Safety
The changes to component insertion, removal and deletion involve a large
amount of unsafe code and it's fair for that to raise some concern. I
have attempted to document it as clearly as possible and have confirmed
that all the hooks examples are accepted by `cargo miri` as not causing
any undefined behavior. The largest issue is in ensuring there are no
outstanding references when passing a `DeferredWorld` to the hooks which
requires some use of raw pointers (as was already happening to some
degree in those places) and I have taken some time to ensure that is the
case but feel free to let me know if I've missed anything.
## Performance
These changes come with a small but measurable performance cost of
between 1-5% on `add_remove` benchmarks and between 1-3% on `insert`
benchmarks. One consideration to be made is the existence of the current
`RemovedComponents` which is on average more costly than the addition of
`on_remove` hooks due to the early-out, however hooks doesn't completely
remove the need for `RemovedComponents` as there is a chance you want to
respond to the removal of a component that already has an `on_remove`
hook defined in another plugin, so I have not removed it here. I do
intend to deprecate it with the introduction of observers in a follow up
PR.
## Discussion Questions
- Currently `DeferredWorld` implements `Deref` to `&World` which makes
sense conceptually, however it does cause some issues with rust-analyzer
providing autocomplete for `&mut World` references which is annoying.
There are alternative implementations that may address this but involve
more code churn so I have attempted them here. The other alternative is
to not implement `Deref` at all but that leads to a large amount of API
duplication.
- `DeferredWorld`, `StaticWorld`, something else?
- In adding support for hooks to `EntityWorldMut` I encountered some
unfortunate difficulties with my desired API. If commands are flushed
after each call i.e. `world.spawn() // flush commands .insert(A) //
flush commands` the entity may be despawned while `EntityWorldMut` still
exists which is invalid. An alternative was then to add
`self.world.flush_commands()` to the drop implementation for
`EntityWorldMut` but that runs into other problems for implementing
functions like `into_unsafe_entity_cell`. For now I have implemented a
`.flush()` which will flush the commands and consume `EntityWorldMut` or
users can manually run `world.flush_commands()` after using
`EntityWorldMut`.
- In order to allowing querying on a deferred world we need
implementations of `WorldQuery` to not break our guarantees of no
structural changes through their `UnsafeWorldCell`. All our
implementations do this, but there isn't currently any safety
documentation specifying what is or isn't allowed for an implementation,
just for the caller, (they also shouldn't be aliasing components they
didn't specify access for etc.) is that something we should start doing?
(see 10752)
Please check out the example `component_hooks` or the tests in
`bundle.rs` for usage examples. I will continue to expand this
description as I go.
See #10839 for a more ergonomic API built on top of this one that isn't
subject to the same restrictions and supports `SystemParam` dependency
injection.
# Objective
- We introduce a gizmo that displays coordinate axes relative to a
Transform*, primarily for debugging purposes.
- See #9400
## Solution
A new method, `Gizmos::axes`, takes a `Transform`* as input and displays
the standard coordinate axes, transformed according to it; its signature
looks like this:
````rust
pub fn axes(&mut self, transform: into TransformPoint, base_length: f32) { //... }
````
If my carefully placed asterisks hadn't already tipped you off, the
argument here is not actually a `Transform` but instead anything which
implements `TransformPoint`, which allows it to work also with
`GlobalTransform` (and also `Mat4` and `Affine3A`, if the user happens
to be hand-rolling transformations in some way).
The `base_length` parameter is a scaling factor applied to the
coordinate vectors before the transformation takes place; in other
words, the caller can use this to help size the coordinate axes
appropriately for the entity that they are attached to.
An example invocation of this method looks something like this:
````rust
fn draw_axes_system(
mut gizmos: Gizmos,
query: Query<&Transform, With<MyMarkerComponent>>,
) {
for &transform in &query {
gizmos.axes(transform, 2.);
}
}
````
The result is the three coordinate axes, X, Y, Z (colored red, green,
and blue, respectively), drawn onto the entity:
<img width="206" alt="Screenshot 2024-02-29 at 2 41 45 PM"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/2975848/789d1703-29ae-4295-80ab-b87459cf8037">
Note that, if scaling was applied as part of the given transformation,
it shows up in scaling on the axes as well:
<img width="377" alt="Screenshot 2024-02-29 at 2 43 53 PM"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/2975848/6dc1caf4-8b3e-47f7-a86a-8906d870fa72">
---
## Changelog
- Added `Gizmos::axes` in bevy_gizmos/src/arrows.rs
- Fixed a minor issue with `ArrowBuilder::with_tip_length` not correctly
implementing builder style (no external impact)
---
## Discussion
### Design considerations
I feel pretty strongly that having no default length scale is for the
best, at least for the time being, since it's very easy for the length
scale to be too small, leading to the axes being hidden inside the body
of the object they are associated with. That is, if the API instead
looked like this:
````rust
gizmos.axes(transform); // or
gizmos.axes(transform).with_length_scale(3.0);
````
then I think it's a reasonable expectation that the first thing would
"just work" for most applications, and it wouldn't, which would be kind
of a footgun.
### Future steps
There are a few directions that this might expand in the future:
1. Introduce additional options via the standard builder pattern; i.e.
introducing `AxesBuilder<T: TransformPoint>` so that people can
configure the axis colors, normalize all axes to a fixed length
independent of scale deformations, etc.
2. Fold this functionality into a plugin (like AabbGizmoPlugin) so that
the functionality becomes more-or-less automatic based on certain fixed
marker components. This wouldn't be very hard to implement, and it has
the benefit of making the axes more frictionless to use. Furthermore, if
we coupled this to the AABB functionality we already have, we could also
ensure that the plugin automatically sizes the axes (by coupling their
size to the dimensions of the AABB, for example).
3. Implement something similar for 2d. Honestly, I have no idea if this
is desired/useful, but I could probably just implement it in this PR if
that's the case.
# Objective
- As part of the migration process we need to a) see the end effect of
the migration on user ergonomics b) check for serious perf regressions
c) actually migrate the code
- To accomplish this, I'm going to attempt to migrate all of the
remaining user-facing usages of `LegacyColor` in one PR, being careful
to keep a clean commit history.
- Fixes#12056.
## Solution
I've chosen to use the polymorphic `Color` type as our standard
user-facing API.
- [x] Migrate `bevy_gizmos`.
- [x] Take `impl Into<Color>` in all `bevy_gizmos` APIs
- [x] Migrate sprites
- [x] Migrate UI
- [x] Migrate `ColorMaterial`
- [x] Migrate `MaterialMesh2D`
- [x] Migrate fog
- [x] Migrate lights
- [x] Migrate StandardMaterial
- [x] Migrate wireframes
- [x] Migrate clear color
- [x] Migrate text
- [x] Migrate gltf loader
- [x] Register color types for reflection
- [x] Remove `LegacyColor`
- [x] Make sure CI passes
Incidental improvements to ease migration:
- added `Color::srgba_u8`, `Color::srgba_from_array` and friends
- added `set_alpha`, `is_fully_transparent` and `is_fully_opaque` to the
`Alpha` trait
- add and immediately deprecate (lol) `Color::rgb` and friends in favor
of more explicit and consistent `Color::srgb`
- standardized on white and black for most example text colors
- added vector field traits to `LinearRgba`: ~~`Add`, `Sub`,
`AddAssign`, `SubAssign`,~~ `Mul<f32>` and `Div<f32>`. Multiplications
and divisions do not scale alpha. `Add` and `Sub` have been cut from
this PR.
- added `LinearRgba` and `Srgba` `RED/GREEN/BLUE`
- added `LinearRgba_to_f32_array` and `LinearRgba::to_u32`
## Migration Guide
Bevy's color types have changed! Wherever you used a
`bevy::render::Color`, a `bevy::color::Color` is used instead.
These are quite similar! Both are enums storing a color in a specific
color space (or to be more precise, using a specific color model).
However, each of the different color models now has its own type.
TODO...
- `Color::rgba`, `Color::rgb`, `Color::rbga_u8`, `Color::rgb_u8`,
`Color::rgb_from_array` are now `Color::srgba`, `Color::srgb`,
`Color::srgba_u8`, `Color::srgb_u8` and `Color::srgb_from_array`.
- `Color::set_a` and `Color::a` is now `Color::set_alpha` and
`Color::alpha`. These are part of the `Alpha` trait in `bevy_color`.
- `Color::is_fully_transparent` is now part of the `Alpha` trait in
`bevy_color`
- `Color::r`, `Color::set_r`, `Color::with_r` and the equivalents for
`g`, `b` `h`, `s` and `l` have been removed due to causing silent
relatively expensive conversions. Convert your `Color` into the desired
color space, perform your operations there, and then convert it back
into a polymorphic `Color` enum.
- `Color::hex` is now `Srgba::hex`. Call `.into` or construct a
`Color::Srgba` variant manually to convert it.
- `WireframeMaterial`, `ExtractedUiNode`, `ExtractedDirectionalLight`,
`ExtractedPointLight`, `ExtractedSpotLight` and `ExtractedSprite` now
store a `LinearRgba`, rather than a polymorphic `Color`
- `Color::rgb_linear` and `Color::rgba_linear` are now
`Color::linear_rgb` and `Color::linear_rgba`
- The various CSS color constants are no longer stored directly on
`Color`. Instead, they're defined in the `Srgba` color space, and
accessed via `bevy::color::palettes::css`. Call `.into()` on them to
convert them into a `Color` for quick debugging use, and consider using
the much prettier `tailwind` palette for prototyping.
- The `LIME_GREEN` color has been renamed to `LIMEGREEN` to comply with
the standard naming.
- Vector field arithmetic operations on `Color` (add, subtract, multiply
and divide by a f32) have been removed. Instead, convert your colors
into `LinearRgba` space, and perform your operations explicitly there.
This is particularly relevant when working with emissive or HDR colors,
whose color channel values are routinely outside of the ordinary 0 to 1
range.
- `Color::as_linear_rgba_f32` has been removed. Call
`LinearRgba::to_f32_array` instead, converting if needed.
- `Color::as_linear_rgba_u32` has been removed. Call
`LinearRgba::to_u32` instead, converting if needed.
- Several other color conversion methods to transform LCH or HSL colors
into float arrays or `Vec` types have been removed. Please reimplement
these externally or open a PR to re-add them if you found them
particularly useful.
- Various methods on `Color` such as `rgb` or `hsl` to convert the color
into a specific color space have been removed. Convert into
`LinearRgba`, then to the color space of your choice.
- Various implicitly-converting color value methods on `Color` such as
`r`, `g`, `b` or `h` have been removed. Please convert it into the color
space of your choice, then check these properties.
- `Color` no longer implements `AsBindGroup`. Store a `LinearRgba`
internally instead to avoid conversion costs.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecil@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Afonso Lage <lage.afonso@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Rob Parrett <robparrett@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Zachary Harrold <zac@harrold.com.au>
# Objective
Just some mild annoyances:
- The `Color::Oklaba`, `Color::Oklcha` and `oklaba::Oklaba` doc comments
were inconsistent with the others
- The crate-level docs didn't include `Oklch` in the list of
representations and misspelt it in a later paragraph
## Solution
- Fix 'em
# Objective
- Cull 2D text outside the view frustum.
- Part of #11081.
## Solution
- Compute AABBs for entities with a `Text2DBundle` to enable culling
them.
`text2d` example with AABB gizmos on the text entities:
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/18357657/52ed3ddc-2274-4480-835b-a7cf23338931
---
## Changelog
### Added
- 2D text outside the view are now culled with the
`calculate_bounds_text2d` system adding the necessary AABBs.
# Objective
`bevy_tasks` provides utilities for parallel mapping over slices. It can
be useful to have a chunk index available in the iteration function to
know which part of the original slice is being processed.
## Solution
Adds an index argument to the parallel map functions in `bevy_tasks`.
---
## Changelog
### Changed
- `par_chunk_map`, `par_splat_map`, `par_chunk_map_mut`, and
`par_splat_map_mut` now provide a chunk index during iteration.
## Migration Guide
Functions passed as arguments to `par_chunk_map`, `par_splat_map`,
`par_chunk_map_mut`, and `par_splat_map_mut` must now take an additional
index argument.
# Objective
Split up from #12017, rename Bevy's direction types.
Currently, Bevy has the `Direction2d`, `Direction3d`, and `Direction3dA`
types, which provide a type-level guarantee that their contained vectors
remain normalized. They can be very useful for a lot of APIs for safety,
explicitness, and in some cases performance, as they can sometimes avoid
unnecessary normalizations.
However, many consider them to be inconvenient to use, and opt for
standard vector types like `Vec3` because of this. One reason is that
the direction type names are a bit long and can be annoying to write (of
course you can use autocomplete, but just typing `Vec3` is still nicer),
and in some intances, the extra characters can make formatting worse.
The naming is also inconsistent with Glam's shorter type names, and
results in names like `Direction3dA`, which (in my opinion) are
difficult to read and even a bit ugly.
This PR proposes renaming the types to `Dir2`, `Dir3`, and `Dir3A`.
These names are nice and easy to write, consistent with Glam, and work
well for variants like the SIMD aligned `Dir3A`. As a bonus, it can also
result in nicer formatting in a lot of cases, which can be seen from the
diff of this PR.
Some examples of what it looks like: (copied from #12017)
```rust
// Before
let ray_cast = RayCast2d::new(Vec2::ZERO, Direction2d::X, 5.0);
// After
let ray_cast = RayCast2d::new(Vec2::ZERO, Dir2::X, 5.0);
```
```rust
// Before (an example using Bevy XPBD)
let hit = spatial_query.cast_ray(
Vec3::ZERO,
Direction3d::X,
f32::MAX,
true,
SpatialQueryFilter::default(),
);
// After
let hit = spatial_query.cast_ray(
Vec3::ZERO,
Dir3::X,
f32::MAX,
true,
SpatialQueryFilter::default(),
);
```
```rust
// Before
self.circle(
Vec3::new(0.0, -2.0, 0.0),
Direction3d::Y,
5.0,
Color::TURQUOISE,
);
// After (formatting is collapsed in this case)
self.circle(Vec3::new(0.0, -2.0, 0.0), Dir3::Y, 5.0, Color::TURQUOISE);
```
## Solution
Rename `Direction2d`, `Direction3d`, and `Direction3dA` to `Dir2`,
`Dir3`, and `Dir3A`.
---
## Migration Guide
The `Direction2d` and `Direction3d` types have been renamed to `Dir2`
and `Dir3`.
## Additional Context
This has been brought up on the Discord a few times, and we had a small
[poll](https://discord.com/channels/691052431525675048/1203087353850364004/1212465038711984158)
on this. `Dir2`/`Dir3`/`Dir3A` was quite unanimously chosen as the best
option, but of course it was a very small poll and inconclusive, so
other opinions are certainly welcome too.
---------
Co-authored-by: IceSentry <c.giguere42@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Fixes#12170
## Solution
- Moved the existing `color_from_entity` internals into
`Hsla::sequence_dispersed` which generates a randomly distributed but
deterministic color sequence based.
- Replicated the method for `Lcha` and `Oklcha` as well.
## Examples
### Getting a few colours for a quick palette
```rust
let palette = Hsla::sequence_dispersed().take(5).collect::<Vec<_>>();
/*[
Hsla::hsl(0.0, 1., 0.5),
Hsla::hsl(222.49225, 1., 0.5),
Hsla::hsl(84.984474, 1., 0.5),
Hsla::hsl(307.4767, 1., 0.5),
Hsla::hsl(169.96895, 1., 0.5),
]*/
```
### Getting a colour from an `Entity`
```rust
let color = Oklcha::sequence_dispersed().nth(entity.index() as u32).unwrap();
```
## Notes
This was previously a private function exclusively for `Entity` types.
I've decided it should instead be public and operate on a `u32`
directly, since this function may have broader uses for debugging
purposes.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/11929
- make sysinfo plugin optional
## Solution
- added features to allow for conditional compilation
---
## Migration Guide
- For users who disable default features of bevy and wish to enable the
diagnostic plugin, add `sysinfo_plugin` to your bevy features list.
---------
Co-authored-by: ebola <dev@axiomatic>
Co-authored-by: François <mockersf@gmail.com>
# Objective
fix#12182
- extract (or default) target camera for ui material nodes in the same
way as for other material nodes
- render ui material nodes only to their specified target
# Objective
Improve the `bevy::math::cubic_splines` module by making it more
flexible and adding new curve types.
Closes#10220
## Solution
Added new spline types and improved existing
---
## Changelog
### Added
- `CubicNurbs` rational cubic curve generator, allows setting the knot
vector and weights associated with every point
- `LinearSpline` curve generator, allows generating a linearly
interpolated curve segment
- Ability to push additional cubic segments to `CubicCurve`
- `IntoIterator` and `Extend` implementations for `CubicCurve`
### Changed
- `Point` trait has been implemented for more types: `Quat` and `Vec4`.
- `CubicCurve::coefficients` was moved to `CubicSegment::coefficients`
because the function returns `CubicSegment`, so it seems logical to be
associated with `CubicSegment` instead. The method is still not public.
### Fixed
- `CubicBSpline::new` was referencing Cardinal spline instead of
B-Spline
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: IQuick 143 <IQuick143cz@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Miles Silberling-Cook <nth.tensor@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Joona Aalto <jondolf.dev@gmail.com>
# Objective
- #12165 recently added links to Bevy errors in error messages.
- The links were in the form of `See:
https://bevyengine.org/learn/errors/#b000N`
- B0004 does not have the colon separating `See` and the link, unlike
the rest of the error messages
## Solution
- Add a colon, for consistency :)
# Objective
- More reflection
## Solution
- More. Reflection.
(not sure what bevy's policy on `derive(Debug)` is given that reflection
already lets you accomplish something largely equivalent; maybe
`derive(Reflect)` should generate a `Debug` impl that goes through
`Reflect::debug` unless you opt out?)
# Objective
The `css` contains all of the `basic` colors. Rather than defining them
twice, we can re-export them.
Suggested by @viridia <3
## Solution
- Re-export basic color palette within the css color palette.
- Remove the duplicate colors
- Fix alphabetization of the basic color palette file while I'm here
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecil@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Complete compatibility with CSS Module 4
## Solution
- Added `Oklcha` which implements the Oklch color model.
- Updated `Color` and `LegacyColor` accordingly.
## Migration Guide
- Convert `Oklcha` to `Oklaba` using the provided `From` implementations
and then handle accordingly.
## Notes
This is the _last_ color space missing from the CSS Module 4 standard,
and is also the one I believe we should recommend users actually work
with for hand-crafting colours. It has all the uniformity benefits of
Oklab combined with the intuition chroma and hue provide (when compared
to a-axis and b-axis parameters).
# Objective
- Implement grid gizmos, suggestion of #9400
## Solution
- Added `gizmos.grid(...) ` and `gizmos.grid_2d(...)`
- The grids may be configured using `.outer_edges(...)` to specify
whether to draw the outer border/edges of the grid and `.skew(...)`to
specify the skew of the grid along the x or y directions.
---
## Changelog
- Added a `grid` module to `bevy_gizmos` containing `gizmos.grid(...) `
and `gizmos.grid_2d(...)` as well as assorted items.
- Updated the `2d_gizmos` and `3d_gizmos` examples to use grids.
## Additional
The 2D and 3D examples now look like this:
<img width="1440" alt="Screenshot 2024-02-20 at 15 09 40"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/62256001/ce04191e-d839-4faf-a6e3-49b6bb4b922b">
<img width="1440" alt="Screenshot 2024-02-20 at 15 10 07"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/62256001/317459ba-d452-42eb-ae95-7c84cdbd569b">
# Objective
As suggested in #12163 by @cart, we should add convenience constructors
to `bevy_color::Color` to match the existing API (easing migration pain)
and generally improve ergonomics.
## Solution
- Add `const fn Color::rgba(red, green, blue, alpha)` and friends, which
directly construct the appropriate variant.
- Add `const fn Color::rgb(red, green, blue)` and friends, which impute
and alpha value of 1.0.
- Add `const BLACK, WHITE, NONE` to `Color`. These are stored in
`LinearRgba` to reduce pointless conversion costs and inaccuracy.
- Changed the default `Color` from `Srgba::WHITE` to the new linear
equivalent for the same reason.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecil@gmail.com>
# Objective
As we start to migrate to `bevy_color` in earnest (#12056), we should
make it visible to Bevy users, and usable in examples.
## Solution
1. Add a prelude to `bevy_color`: I've only excluded the rarely used
`ColorRange` type and the testing-focused color distance module. I
definitely think that some color spaces are less useful than others to
end users, but at the same time the types used there are very unlikely
to conflict with user-facing types.
2. Add `bevy_color` to `bevy_internal` as an optional crate.
3. Re-export `bevy_color`'s prelude as part of `bevy::prelude`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecil@gmail.com>
# Objective
- In #9623 I forgot to change the `FromWorld` requirement for
`ReflectResource`, fix that;
- Fix#12129
## Solution
- Use the same approach as in #9623 to try using `FromReflect` and
falling back to the `ReflectFromWorld` contained in the `TypeRegistry`
provided
- Just reflect `Resource` on `State<S>` since now that's possible
without introducing new bounds.
---
## Changelog
- `ReflectResource`'s `FromType<T>` implementation no longer requires
`T: FromWorld`, but instead now requires `FromReflect`.
- `ReflectResource::insert`, `ReflectResource::apply_or_insert` and
`ReflectResource::copy` now take an extra `&TypeRegistry` parameter.
## Migration Guide
- Users of `#[reflect(Resource)]` will need to also implement/derive
`FromReflect` (should already be the default).
- Users of `#[reflect(Resource)]` may now want to also add `FromWorld`
to the list of reflected traits in case their `FromReflect`
implementation may fail.
- Users of `ReflectResource` will now need to pass a `&TypeRegistry` to
its `insert`, `apply_or_insert` and `copy` methods.
# Objective
`downcast-rs` is not used within bevy_ecs. This is probably a remnant
from before Schedule v3 landed, since stages needed the downcasting.
## Solution
Remove it.
Shows relationships between color spaces and explains what files should
contain which conversions.
# Objective
- Provide documentation for maintainers and users on how color space
conversion is implemented.
## Solution
- Created a mermaid diagram documenting the relationships between
various color spaces. This diagram also includes links to defining
articles, and edges include links to conversion formulae.
- Added a `conversion.md` document which is included in the
documentation of each of the color spaces. This ensures it is readily
visible in all relevant contexts.
## Notes
The diagram is in the Mermaid (`.mmd`) format, and must be converted
into an SVG file (or other image format) prior to use in Rust
documentation. I've included a link to
[mermaid.live](https://mermaid.live) as an option for doing such
conversion in an appropriate README.
Below is a screenshot of the documentation added.
![Capture](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/2217286/370a65f2-6dd4-4af7-a99b-3763832d1b8a)
# Objective
`FromWorld` is often used to group loading and creation of assets for
resources.
With this setup, users often end up repetitively calling
`.resource::<AssetServer>` and `.resource_mut::<Assets<T>>`, and may
have difficulties handling lifetimes of the returned references.
## Solution
Add extension methods to `World` to add and load assets, through a new
extension trait defined in `bevy_asset`.
### Other considerations
* This might be a bit too "magic", as it makes implicit the resource
access.
* We could also implement `DirectAssetAccessExt` on `App`, but it didn't
feel necessary, as `FromWorld` is the principal use-case here.
---
## Changelog
* Add the `DirectAssetAccessExt` trait, which adds the `add_asset`,
`load_asset` and `load_asset_with_settings` method to the `World` type.
# Objective
This PR arose as part of the migration process for `bevy_color`: see
#12056.
While examining how `bevy_gizmos` stores color types internally, I found
that rather than storing a `Color` internally, it actually stores a
`[f32;4]` for a linear RGB, type aliased to a `ColorItem`.
While we don't *have* to clean this up to complete the migration, now
that we have explicit strong typing for linear color types we should use
them rather than replicating this idea throughout the codebase.
## Solution
- Added `LinearRgba::NAN`, for when you want to do cursed rendering
things.
- Replaced the internal color representation in `bevy_gizmo`: this was
`ColorItem`, but is now `LinearRgba`.
- `LinearRgba` is now `Pod`, enabling us to use the same fast `bytemuck`
bit twiddling tricks that we were using before. This requires:
1. Forcing `LinearRgba` to be `repr(C)`
2. Implementing `Zeroable`, and unsafe trait which defines what the
struct looks like when all values are zero.
3. Implementing `Pod`, a marker trait with stringent safety requirements
that is required for "plain old data".
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecil@gmail.com>
# Objective
- LinearRgba is the color type intended for shaders but using it for
shaders is currently not easy because it doesn't implement ShaderType
## Solution
- add encase as a dependency and impl the required traits.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Zachary Harrold <zac@harrold.com.au>
# Objective
- Improve compatibility with CSS Module 4
- Simplify `Lcha` conversion functions
## Solution
- Added `Laba` which implements the Lab color model.
- Updated `Color` and `LegacyColor` accordingly.
## Migration Guide
- Convert `Laba` to either `Xyza` or `Lcha` using the provided `From`
implementations and then handle accordingly.
## Notes
The Lab color space is a required stepping stone when converting between
XYZ and Lch, therefore we already use the Lab color model, just in an
nameless fashion prone to errors.
This PR also includes a slightly broader refactor of the `From`
implementations between the various colour spaces to better reflect the
graph of definitions. My goal was to keep domain specific knowledge of
each colour space contained to their respective files (e.g., the
`From<Oklaba> for LinearRgba` definition was in `linear_rgba.rs` when it
probably belongs in `oklaba.rs`, since Linear sRGB is a fundamental
space and Oklab is defined in its relation to it)
# Objective
The `AssetIndex` cannot be carried across boundaries that do not allow
explicit rust types.
For context, I ran into this issue while trying to implent an
improvement for bevy_egui which leverages the not-so-new custom loader
API. Passing through a handle directly isn't possible, but instead it
requires stringified URI s. I had to work around the lack of this API s
existance using reflection, which is rather dirty.
## Solution
- Add `to_bits` and `from_bits` functions to `AssetIndex` to allow
moving this type through such boundaries.
---------
Co-authored-by: Rob Parrett <robparrett@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Make these types usable in reflection-based workflows.
## Solution
- The usual. Also reflect `Default` and `Component` behaviors so that
the types can be constructed, inserted, and removed.
# Objective
Added reflect support for `std::HashSet`, `BTreeSet` and `BTreeMap`.
The set support is limited to `reflect_value` since that's the level of
support prior art `bevy_util::HashSet` got.
## Changelog
Dropped `Hash` Requirement on `MapInfo` since it's not needed on
`BTreeMap`s.
# Objective
Memory usage optimisation
## Solution
`HashMap` and `HashSet`'s keys are immutable. So using mutable types
like `String`, `Vec<T>`, or `PathBuf` as a key is a waste of memory:
they have an extra `usize` for their capacity and may have spare
capacity.
This PR replaces these types by their immutable equivalents `Box<str>`,
`Box<[T]>`, and `Box<Path>`.
For more context, I recommend watching the [Use Arc Instead of
Vec](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A4cKi7PTJSs) video.
---------
Co-authored-by: James Liu <contact@jamessliu.com>
# Objective
- Avoid misspellings throughout the codebase by using
[`typos`](https://github.com/crate-ci/typos) in CI
Inspired by https://github.com/gfx-rs/wgpu/pull/5191
Typos is a minimal code speller written in rust that finds and corrects
spelling mistakes among source code.
- Fast enough to run on monorepos
- Low false positives so you can run on PRs
## Solution
- Use
[typos-action](https://github.com/marketplace/actions/typos-action) in
CI
- Add how to use typos in the Contribution Guide
---------
Co-authored-by: François <mockersf@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Joona Aalto <jondolf.dev@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Fixes#12001.
- Note this PR doesn't change any feature flags, however flaky the issue
revealed they are.
## Solution
- Use `FromReflect` to convert proxy types to concrete ones in
`ReflectSerialize::get_serializable`.
- Use `get_represented_type_info() -> type_id()` to get the correct type
id to interact with the registry in
`bevy_reflect::serde::ser::get_serializable`.
---
## Changelog
- Registering `ReflectSerialize` now imposes additional `FromReflect`
and `TypePath` bounds.
## Migration Guide
- If `ReflectSerialize` is registered on a type, but `TypePath` or
`FromReflect` implementations are omitted (perhaps by
`#[reflect(type_path = false)` or `#[reflect(from_reflect = false)]`),
the traits must now be implemented.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Gino Valente <49806985+MrGVSV@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
Fix#11845.
## Solution
Remove the `UpdateAssets` and `AssetEvents` schedules. Moved the
`UpdateAssets` systems to `PreUpdate`, and `AssetEvents` systems into
`First`. The former is meant to run before any of the event flushes.
## Future Work
It'd be ideal if we could manually flush the events for assets to avoid
needing two, sort of redundant, systems. This should at least let them
potentially run in parallel with all of the systems in the schedules
they were moved to.
---
## Changelog
Removed: `UpdateAssets` schedule from the main schedule. All systems
have been moved to `PreUpdate`.
Removed: `AssetEvents` schedule from the main schedule. All systems have
been move to `First` with the same system sets.
## Migration Guide
TODO
# Objective
- Partially addresses https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/11470
(I'd like to add Spatiotemporal Blue Noise in the future, but that's a
bit more controversial).
- Fix cluster_debug_visualization which has not compiled for a while
---
## Changelog
- Added random white noise shader functions to `bevy_pbr::utils`
## Migration Guide
- The `bevy_pbr::utils::random1D` shader function has been replaced by
the similar `bevy_pbr::utils::rand_f`.
# Objective
- During rendering of different gizmo groups, the ordering is random
between executions
## Solution
- Make the ordering stable
- It's using a `TypeIdMap`, its iteration order depends on the insertion
order. so insert when adding a group instead of when adding a gizmo
- Also changed `extract_gizmo_data` to not be group dependent. there
will be only one of those systems, no matter the number of gizmo groups
added
---------
Co-authored-by: pablo-lua <126117294+pablo-lua@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
`CameraProjectionPlugin<T>`'s bounds are `T: CameraProjection`. But the
bounds for `CameraProjectionPlugin` implementing `Plugin` are `T:
CameraProjection + Component + GetTypeRegistration`. This means that if
`T` is valid for `CameraProjectionPlugin`'s bounds, but not the plugin
implementation's bounds, then `CameraProjectionPlugin` would not
implement `Plugin`. Which is weird because you'd expect a struct with
`Plugin` in the name to implement `Plugin`.
## Solution
Make `CameraProjectionPlugin<T>`'s bounds `T: CameraProjection +
Component + GetTypeRegistration`. I also rearranged some of the code.
---
## Changelog
- Changed `CameraProjectionPlugin<T>`'s bounds to `T: CameraProjection +
Component + GetTypeRegistration`
## Migration Guide
`CameraProjectionPlugin<T>`'s trait bounds now require `T` to implement
`CameraProjection`, `Component`, and `GetTypeRegistration`. This
shouldn't affect most existing code as `CameraProjectionPlugin<T>` never
implemented `Plugin` unless those bounds were met.
# Objective
Split up from #12017, add an aligned version of `Direction3d` for SIMD,
and move direction types out of `primitives`.
## Solution
Add `Direction3dA` and move direction types into a new `direction`
module.
---
## Migration Guide
The `Direction2d`, `Direction3d`, and `InvalidDirectionError` types have
been moved out of `bevy::math::primitives`.
Before:
```rust
use bevy::math::primitives::Direction3d;
```
After:
```rust
use bevy::math::Direction3d;
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Improve compatibility with CSS Module 4
- Simplify `Hsla` conversion functions
## Solution
- Added `Hsva` which implements the HSV color model.
- Added `Hwba` which implements the HWB color model.
- Updated `Color` and `LegacyColor` accordingly.
## Migration Guide
- Convert `Hsva` / `Hwba` to either `Hsla` or `Srgba` using the provided
`From` implementations and then handle accordingly.
## Notes
While the HSL color space is older than HWB, the formulation for HWB is
more directly related to RGB. Likewise, HSV is more closely related to
HWB than HSL. This makes the conversion of HSL to/from RGB more
naturally represented as the compound operation HSL <-> HSV <-> HWB <->
RGB. All `From` implementations for HSL, HSV, and HWB have been designed
to take the shortest path between itself and the target space.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
- We should move towards a consistent use of the new `bevy_color` crate.
- As discussed in #12089, splitting this work up into small pieces makes
it easier to review.
## Solution
- Port all uses of `LegacyColor` in the `bevy_core_pipeline` to
`LinearRgba`
- `LinearRgba` is the correct type to use for internal rendering types
- Added `LinearRgba::BLACK` and `WHITE` (used during migration)
- Add `LinearRgba::grey` to more easily construct balanced grey colors
(used during migration)
- Add a conversion from `LinearRgba` to `wgpu::Color`. The converse was
not done at this time, as this is typically a user error.
I did not change the field type of the clear color on the cameras: as
this is user-facing, this should be done in concert with the other
configurable fields.
## Migration Guide
`ColorAttachment` now stores a `LinearRgba` color, rather than a Bevy
0.13 `Color`.
`set_blend_constant` now takes a `LinearRgba` argument, rather than a
Bevy 0.13 `Color`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecil@gmail.com>
# Objective
Right now when using egui, systems are inserted without any identifier
and to the root. I'd like to name those systems and insert them as
children to a root entity. This helps to keep the editor organized.
## Solution
- Although the `SystemId` is documented as an opaque type, examples
depicted above benefit from tear down of the abstraction.
---
## Changelog
### Added
- Implemented `From<SystemId>` for `Entity`
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
- followup to https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/11671
- I forgot to change the alpha masked phases.
## Solution
- Change the sorting for alpha mask phases to sort by pipeline+mesh
instead of distance, for much better batching for alpha masked
materials.
I also fixed some docs that I missed in the previous PR.
---
## Changelog
- Alpha masked materials are now sorted by pipeline and mesh.
Add Archetype::component_count utility method
# Objective
I wanted a method to count components on an archetype without iterating
over them.
## Solution
Added `Archetype::component_count`
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
The multi-threaded executor currently runs in a dedicated task on a
single thread. When a system finishes running, it needs to notify that
task and wait for the thread to be available and running before the
executor can process the completion.
See #8304
## Solution
Run the multi-threaded executor at the end of each system task. This
allows it to run immediately instead of needing to wait for the main
thread to wake up. Move the mutable executor state into a separate
struct and wrap it in a mutex so it can be shared among the worker
threads.
While this should be faster in theory, I don't actually know how to
measure the performance impact myself.
---------
Co-authored-by: James Liu <contact@jamessliu.com>
Co-authored-by: Mike <mike.hsu@gmail.com>
# Objective
Partially address #888. Gilrs is initialized on a separate thread, and
thus conditionally implements `Send`, and all platforms other than Wasm.
This means the `NonSend` resource constraint is likely too conservative.
## Solution
Relax the requirement, and conditionally derive Resource on a wrapper
around it, using `SyncCell` to satisfy the `Sync` requirement on it.
# Objective
- Fixes#12081
## Solution
Passing the `Affine2` as a neatly packed `mat3x2` breaks WebGL with
`drawElementsInstanced: Buffer for uniform block is smaller than
UNIFORM_BLOCK_DATA_SIZE.`
I fixed this by using a `mat3x3` instead.
Alternative solutions that come to mind:
- Pass in a `mat3x2` on non-webgl targets and a `mat3x3` otherwise. I
guess I could use `#ifdef SIXTEEN_BYTE_ALIGNMENT` for this, but it
doesn't seem quite right? This would be more efficient, but decrease
code quality.
- Do something about `UNIFORM_BLOCK_DATA_SIZE`. I don't know how, so I'd
need some guidance here.
@superdump let me know if you'd like me to implement other variants.
Otherwise, I vote for merging this as a quick fix for `main` and then
improving the packing in subsequent PRs :)
## Additional notes
Ideally we should merge this before @JMS55 rebases #10164 so that they
don't have to rebase everything a second time.
# Objective
- Fixes#12068
## Solution
- Split `bevy_render::color::colorspace` across the various space
implementations in `bevy_color` as appropriate.
- Moved `From` implementations involving
`bevy_render::color::LegacyColor` into `bevy_render::color`
## Migration Guide
###
`bevy_render::color::colorspace::SrgbColorSpace::<f32>::linear_to_nonlinear_srgb`
Use `bevy_color::color::gamma_function_inverse`
###
`bevy_render::color::colorspace::SrgbColorSpace::<f32>::nonlinear_to_linear_srgb`
Use `bevy_color::color::gamma_function`
###
`bevy_render::color::colorspace::SrgbColorSpace::<u8>::linear_to_nonlinear_srgb`
Modify the `u8` value to instead be an `f32` (`|x| x as f32 / 255.`),
use `bevy_color::color::gamma_function_inverse`, and back again.
###
`bevy_render::color::colorspace::SrgbColorSpace::<u8>::nonlinear_to_linear_srgb`
Modify the `u8` value to instead be an `f32` (`|x| x as f32 / 255.`),
use `bevy_color::color::gamma_function`, and back again.
###
`bevy_render::color::colorspace::HslRepresentation::hsl_to_nonlinear_srgb`
Use `Hsla`'s implementation of `Into<Srgba>`
###
`bevy_render::color::colorspace::HslRepresentation::nonlinear_srgb_to_hsl`
Use `Srgba`'s implementation of `Into<Hsla>`
###
`bevy_render::color::colorspace::LchRepresentation::lch_to_nonlinear_srgb`
Use `Lcha`'s implementation of `Into<Srgba>`
###
`bevy_render::color::colorspace::LchRepresentation::nonlinear_srgb_to_lch`
Use `Srgba`'s implementation of `Into<Lcha>`
# Objective
- The bloom effect is currently somewhat costly (in terms of GPU time
used), due to using fragment shaders for down- and upscaling (compute
shaders generally perform better for such tasks).
- Additionally, one might have a `BloomSettings` on a camera whose
`intensity` is only occasionally set to a non-zero value (eg. in outside
areas or areas with bright lighting). Currently, the cost of the bloom
shader is always incurred as long as the `BloomSettings` exists.
## Solution
- Bail out of the bloom render node when `intensity == 0.0`, making the
effect free as long as it is turned all the way down.
# Objective
- Fixes#751
## Solution
- Added `PluginGroupBuilder::add_group`, which accepts an owned `impl
PluginGroup` and adds those plugins to self, following
`PluginGroupBuilder::add`'s replacement rules.
- Split `PluginGroupBuilder::upsert_plugin_state` into two functions,
one of the same name, and
`PluginGroupBuilder::upsert_plugin_entry_state` which takes a
`PluginEntry` and `TypeId` directly. This allows for shared behaviour
between `add` and `add_group`.
- Added 2 unit tests documenting the replacement behaviour in
`PluginGroupBuilder::add_group`.
Co-authored-by: François <mockersf@gmail.com>
# Objective
- A tiny nit I noticed; I think the type of these function is
`EntityCommand`, not `Command`
Co-authored-by: Charles Bournhonesque <cbournhonesque@snapchat.com>
# Objective
#7348 added `bevy_utils::Parallel` and replaced the usage of the
`ThreadLocal<Cell<Vec<...>>>` in `check_visibility`, but we were also
using it in `extract_meshes`.
## Solution
Refactor the system to use `Parallel` instead.
# Objective
The physical width and height (pixels) of an image is always integers,
but for `GpuImage` bevy currently stores them as `Vec2` (`f32`).
Switching to `UVec2` makes this more consistent with the [underlying
texture data](https://docs.rs/wgpu/latest/wgpu/struct.Extent3d.html).
I'm not sure if this is worth the change in the surface level API. If
not, feel free to close this PR.
## Solution
- Replace uses of `Vec2` with `UVec2` when referring to texture
dimensions.
- Use integer types for the texture atlas dimensions and sections.
[`Sprite::rect`](a81a2d1da3/crates/bevy_sprite/src/sprite.rs (L29))
remains unchanged, so manually specifying a sub-pixel region of an image
is still possible.
---
## Changelog
- `GpuImage` now stores its size as `UVec2` instead of `Vec2`.
- Texture atlases store their size and sections as `UVec2` and `URect`
respectively.
- `UiImageSize` stores its size as `UVec2`.
## Migration Guide
- Change floating point types (`Vec2`, `Rect`) to their respective
unsigned integer versions (`UVec2`, `URect`) when using `GpuImage`,
`TextureAtlasLayout`, `TextureAtlasBuilder`,
`DynamicAtlasTextureBuilder` or `FontAtlas`.
# Objective
- I hit an issue using the `file_watcher` feature to hot reload assets
for my game. The change in this PR allows me to now hot reload assets.
- The issue stemmed from my project being a multi crate workspace
project structured like so:
```
└── my_game
├── my_game_core
│ ├── src
│ └── assets
├── my_game_editor
│ └── src/main.rs
└── my_game
└── src/main.rs
```
- `my_game_core` is a crate that holds all my game logic and assets
- `my_game` is the crate that creates the binary for my game (depends on
the game logic and assets in `my_game_core`)
- `my_game_editor` is an editor tool for my game (it also depends on the
game logic and assets in `my_game_core`)
Whilst running `my_game` and `my_game_editor` from cargo during
development I would use `AssetPlugin` like so:
```rust
default_plugins.set(AssetPlugin {
watch_for_changes_override: Some(true),
file_path: "../my_game_core/assets".to_string(),
..Default::default()
})
```
This works fine; bevy picks up the assets. However on saving an asset I
would get the following panic from `file_watcher`. It wouldn't kill the
app, but I wouldn't see the asset hot reload:
```
thread 'notify-rs debouncer loop' panicked at /Users/ian/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/bevy_asset-0.12.1/src/io/file/file_watcher.rs:48:58:
called `Result::unwrap()` on an `Err` value: StripPrefixError(())
note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace
```
## Solution
- The solution is to collapse dot segments in the root asset path
`FileWatcher` is using
- There was already bevy code to do this in `AssetPath`, so I extracted
that code so it could be reused in `FileWatcher`
# Objective
- Simplify `Srgba` hex string parsing using std hex parsing functions
and removing loops in favor of bitwise ops.
This is a follow-up of the `bevy_color` upstream PR review:
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/12013#discussion_r1497408114
## Solution
- Reworked `Srgba::hex` to use `from_str_radix` and some bitwise ops;
---------
Co-authored-by: Rob Parrett <robparrett@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Sometimes, it is useful to get a `Handle<T>` from an `AssetId<T>`. For
example, when iterating `Assets` to find a specific asset. So much so
that it's possible to do so with `AssetServer::get_id_handle`
- However, `AssetServer::get_id_handle` doesn't work with assets
directly added to `Assets` using `Assets::add`.
- Fixes#12087
## Solution
- Add `Assets::get_strong_handle` to convert an `AssetId` into an
`Handle`
- Document `AssetServer::get_id_handle` to explain its limitation and
point to `get_strong_handle`.
- Add a test for `get_strong_handle`
- Add a `duplicate_handles` field to `Assets` to avoid dropping assets
with a live handle generated by `get_strong_handle` (more reference
counting yay…)
- Fix typos in `Assets` docs
---
## Changelog
- Add `Assets::get_strong_handle` to convert an `AssetId` into an
`Handle`
# Objective
- Add the new `-Zcheck-cfg` checks to catch more warnings
- Fixes#12091
## Solution
- Create a new `cfg-check` to the CI that runs `cargo check -Zcheck-cfg
--workspace` using cargo nightly (and fails if there are warnings)
- Fix all warnings generated by the new check
---
## Changelog
- Remove all redundant imports
- Fix cfg wasm32 targets
- Add 3 dead code exceptions (should StandardColor be unused?)
- Convert ios_simulator to a feature (I'm not sure if this is the right
way to do it, but the check complained before)
## Migration Guide
No breaking changes
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Make `GizmoConfigStore` play well with reflection-based workflows like
editors.
## Solution
- `#[derive(Reflect)]` and call `.register_type()`.
# Objective
The migration process for `bevy_color` (#12013) will be fairly involved:
there will be hundreds of affected files, and a large number of APIs.
## Solution
To allow us to proceed granularly, we're going to keep both
`bevy_color::Color` (new) and `bevy_render::Color` (old) around until
the migration is complete.
However, simply doing this directly is confusing! They're both called
`Color`, making it very hard to tell when a portion of the code has been
ported.
As discussed in #12056, by renaming the old `Color` type, we can make it
easier to gradually migrate over, one API at a time.
## Migration Guide
THIS MIGRATION GUIDE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK.
This change should not be shipped to end users: delete this section in
the final migration guide!
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecil@gmail.com>
# Objective
Add XYZ colour space. This will be most useful as a conversion step when
working with other (more common) colour spaces. See
[Wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CIE_1931_color_space) for
details on this space.
## Solution
- Added `Xyza` to `Color` and as its own type.
---
## Changelog
- Added `Xyza` type.
- Added `Color::Xyza` variant.
## Migration Guide
- `Color` enum now has an additional member, `Xyza`. Convert it to any
other type to handle this case in match statements.
# Objective
- Fix a wrongly named type
## Solution
- Rename it properly
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Nicola Papale <nicopap@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
Fixes#11821.
## Solution
* Run `System::apply_deferred` in `System::run` after executing the
system.
* Switch to using `System::run_unsafe` in `SingleThreadedExecutor` to
preserve the current behavior.
* Remove the `System::apply_deferred` in `SimpleExecutor` as it's now
redundant.
* Remove the `System::apply_deferred` when running one-shot systems, as
it's now redundant.
---
## Changelog
Changed: `System::run` will now immediately apply deferred system params
after running the system.
## Migration Guide
`System::run` will now always run `System::apply_deferred` immediately
after running the system now. If you were running systems and then
applying their deferred buffers at a later point in time, you can
eliminate the latter.
```rust
// in 0.13
system.run(world);
// .. sometime later ...
system.apply_deferred(world);
// in 0.14
system.run(world);
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
Since #9822, `SimpleExecutor` panics when an automatic sync point is
inserted:
```rust
let mut sched = Schedule::default();
sched.set_executor_kind(ExecutorKind::Simple);
sched.add_systems((|_: Commands| (), || ()).chain());
sched.run(&mut World::new());
```
```
System's param_state was not found. Did you forget to initialize this system before running it?
note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace
Encountered a panic in system `bevy_ecs::schedule::executor::apply_deferred`!
```
## Solution
Don't try to run the `apply_deferred` system.
# Objective
Fixes Skyboxes on WebGL, which broke in Bevy 0.13 due to the addition of
the `brightness` uniform, when previously the skybox pipeline only had
view and global uniforms.
```ignore
panicked at ~/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/wgpu-0.19.1/src/backend/wgpu_core.rs:3009:5:
wgpu error: Validation Error
Caused by:
In Device::create_render_pipeline
note: label = `skybox_pipeline`
In the provided shader, the type given for group 0 binding 3 has a size of 4. As the device does not support `DownlevelFlags::BUFFER_BINDINGS_NOT_16_BYTE_ALIGNED`, the type must have a size that is a multiple of 16 bytes.
```
It would be nice if this could be backported to a 0.13.1 patch as well
if possible. I'm needing to rely on my own fork for now.
## Solution
Similar to the Globals uniform solution here:
d31de3f139/crates/bevy_render/src/globals.rs (L59-L60)
I've added 3 conditional fields to `SkyboxUniforms`.
# Objective
`Scope::spawn`, `Scope::spawn_on_external`, and `Scope::spawn_on_scope`
have different signatures depending on whether the `multi-threaded`
feature is enabled. The single-threaded version has a stricter signature
that prevents sending the `Scope` itself to spawned tasks.
## Solution
Changed the lifetime constraints in the single-threaded signatures from
`'env` to `'scope` to match the multi-threaded version.
This was split off from #11906.
# Objective
- Assist Bevy contributors in the creation of `bevy_color` spaces by
ensuring consistent API implementation.
## Solution
Created a `pub(crate)` trait `StandardColor` which has all the
requirements for a typical color space (e.g, `Srgba`, `Color`, etc.).
---
## Changelog
- Implemented traits missing from certain color spaces.
## Migration Guide
_No migration required_
# Objective
Improve code quality and prevent bugs.
## Solution
I removed the unnecessary wildcards from `<LogPlugin as Plugin>::build`.
I also changed the warnings that would occur if the subscriber/logger
was already set into errors.
# Objective
This provides a new set of color types and operations for Bevy.
Fixes: #10986#1402
## Solution
The new crate provides a set of distinct types for various useful color
spaces, along with utilities for manipulating and converting colors.
This is not a breaking change, as no Bevy APIs are modified (yet).
---------
Co-authored-by: François <mockersf@gmail.com>
# Objective
When dealing with custom asset sources it can be a bit tricky to get
asset roots combined with relative paths correct.
It's even harder when it isn't mentioned which path was problematic.
## Solution
Mention which path failed for the file watcher.
Signed-off-by: Torstein Grindvik <torstein.grindvik@muybridge.com>
Co-authored-by: Torstein Grindvik <torstein.grindvik@muybridge.com>
# Objective
- Fixes#11977 - user defined shaders don't work in wasm
- After investigation, it won't work if the shader is not yet available
when compiling the pipeline on all platforms, for example if you load
many assets
## Solution
- Set the pipeline state to queued when it errs waiting for the shader
so that it's retried
# Objective
- Some properties of public types are private but sometimes it's useful
to be able to set those
## Solution
- Make more stuff pub
---
## Changelog
- `MaterialBindGroupId` internal id is now pub and added a new()
constructor
- `ExtractedPointLight` and `ExtractedDirectionalLight` properties are
now all pub
---------
Co-authored-by: James Liu <contact@jamessliu.com>
This PR closes#11978
# Objective
Fix rendering on iOS Simulators.
iOS Simulator doesn't support the capability CUBE_ARRAY_TEXTURES, since
0.13 this started to make iOS Simulator not render anything with the
following message being outputted:
```
2024-02-19T14:59:34.896266Z ERROR bevy_render::render_resource::pipeline_cache: failed to create shader module: Validation Error
Caused by:
In Device::create_shader_module
Shader validation error:
Type [40] '' is invalid
Capability Capabilities(CUBE_ARRAY_TEXTURES) is required
```
## Solution
- Split up NO_ARRAY_TEXTURES_SUPPORT into both NO_ARRAY_TEXTURES_SUPPORT
and NO_CUBE_ARRAY_TEXTURES_SUPPORT and correctly apply
NO_ARRAY_TEXTURES_SUPPORT for iOS Simulator using the cfg flag
introduced in #10178.
---
## Changelog
### Fixed
- Rendering on iOS Simulator due to missing CUBE_ARRAY_TEXTURES support.
---------
Co-authored-by: Sam Pettersson <sam.pettersson@geoguessr.com>
# Objective
- Taplo in CI is not running. The link used to download taplo doesn't
work anymore.
## Solution
- Compile taplo directly with cargo
- Improve docs a little
- Run taplo
---------
Co-authored-by: François <mockersf@gmail.com>
# Objective
- The `touch_screen_input_system` system runs on every tick.
- It unconditionally calls `update(&mut self)`, on the `Touches`
resource.
- This blocks the usage of a `resource_changed::<Touches>` run
condition.
## Solution
- Remove `update(&mut self)` as it's only used in this one system, and
in-lining the method implementation removes an indirection to an
ambiguously named method.
- Add conditional checks around the calls to clearing the internal maps.
---------
Signed-off-by: Jean Mertz <git@jeanmertz.com>
# Objective
- Some members of `bevy_dynamic_plugin` are not documented.
- Part of #3492.
## Solution
- Add documentation to members missing it in `bevy_dynamic_plugin`.
- Update existing documentation for clarity and formatting.
---
## Changelog
- Completely document `bevy_dynamic_plugin`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: James Liu <contact@jamessliu.com>
# Objective
- Part of #11590
- Fix `unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn` for trivial cases in bevy_ecs
## Solution
Fix `unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn` in bevy_ecs for trivial cases, i.e., add an
`unsafe` block when the safety comment already exists or add a comment
like "The invariants are uphold by the caller".
---------
Co-authored-by: James Liu <contact@jamessliu.com>
## Objective
Always have `some_system.into_system().type_id() ==
some_system.into_system_set().system_type().unwrap()`.
System sets have a `fn system_type() -> Option<TypeId>` that is
implemented by `SystemTypeSet` to returning the TypeId of the system's
function type. This was implemented in
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/7715 and is used in
`bevy_mod_debugdump` to handle `.after(function)` constraints.
Back then, `System::type_id` always also returned the type id of the
function item, not of `FunctionSystem<M, F>`.
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/11728 changes the behaviour of
`System::type_id` so that it returns the id of the
`FunctionSystem`/`ExclusiveFunctionSystem` wrapper, but it did not
change `SystemTypeSet::system_type`, so doing the lookup breaks in
`bevy_mod_debugdump`.
## Solution
Change `IntoSystemSet` for functions to return a
`SystemTypeSet<FunctionSystem>` /
`SystemTypeSet<ExclusiveFunctionSystem>` instead of `SystemTypeSet<F>`.
# Objective
- Globals are supposed to be available in vertex shader but that was
mistakenly removed in 0.13
## Solution
- Configure the visibility of the globals correctly
Fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/12015
# Objective
- The file asset source currently creates the `imported_assets/Default`
directory with relative path, which leads to wrongly created directories
when the executable is run with a working directory different from the
project root.
## Solution
- Use the full path instead.
# Objective
This PR adds some missing mime types to the
`ImageFormat::from_mime_type` method. As discussed [in this comment on
the Discord Bevy
community](https://discord.com/channels/691052431525675048/691052431974465548/1209904290227949729):
> It's strange that Bevy supports parsing `ImageFormat::WebP` from a
.webp str extension in the method below, but not from the mime type.
>
> In comparison, the image crate does parse it:
https://github.com/image-rs/image/blob/master/src/image.rs#L170
# Solution
For each of the missing mime types, I added them based on the
`ImageFormat::from_mime_type` of the image crate:
https://github.com/image-rs/image/blob/master/src/image.rs#L209, except
for `ImageFormat::Basis` and `ImageFormat::Ktx2` which are not present
in the image crate, and I ignore if they have a mime type or not*
\* apparently nowadays there is an official mime type: `image/ktx2`
https://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/image/ktx2
Any feedback is welcome! I thought of refactoring a bit more and
delegating the mime type parsing to the image crate (and possibly the
same for extensions), let me know if that's desired 🙂
Fixes#12016.
Bump version after release
This PR has been auto-generated
Co-authored-by: Bevy Auto Releaser <41898282+github-actions[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: François <mockersf@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Closes#11985
## Solution
- alpha.rs has been moved from bevy_pbr into bevy_render; bevy_pbr and
bevy_gltf now access `AlphaMode` through bevy_render.
---
## Migration Guide
In the present implementation, external consumers of `AlphaMode` will
have to access it through bevy_render rather than through bevy_pbr,
changing their import from `bevy_pbr::AlphaMode` to
`bevy_render::alpha::AlphaMode` (or the corresponding glob import from
`bevy_pbr::prelude::*` to `bevy_render::prelude::*`).
## Uncertainties
Some remaining things from this that I am uncertain about:
- Here, the `app.register_type<AlphaMode>()` call has been moved from
`PbrPlugin` to `RenderPlugin`; I'm not sure if this is quite right, and
I was unable to find any direct relationship between `PbrPlugin` and
`RenderPlugin`.
- `AlphaMode` was placed in the prelude of bevy_render. I'm not certain
that this is actually appropriate.
- bevy_pbr does not re-export `AlphaMode`, which makes this a breaking
change for external consumers.
Any of these things could be easily changed; I'm just not confident that
I necessarily adopted the right approach in these (known) ways since
this codebase and ecosystem is quite new to me.
Adopted #8266, so copy-pasting the description from there:
# Objective
Support the KHR_texture_transform extension for the glTF loader.
- Fixes#6335
- Fixes#11869
- Implements part of #11350
- Implements the GLTF part of #399
## Solution
As is, this only supports a single transform. Looking at Godot's source,
they support one transform with an optional second one for detail, AO,
and emission. glTF specifies one per texture. The public domain
materials I looked at seem to share the same transform. So maybe having
just one is acceptable for now. I tried to include a warning if multiple
different transforms exist for the same material.
Note the gltf crate doesn't expose the texture transform for the normal
and occlusion textures, which it should, so I just ignored those for
now. (note by @janhohenheim: this is still the case)
Via `cargo run --release --example scene_viewer
~/src/clone/glTF-Sample-Models/2.0/TextureTransformTest/glTF/TextureTransformTest.gltf`:
![texture_transform](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/283864/228938298-aa2ef524-555b-411d-9637-fd0dac226fb0.png)
## Changelog
Support for the
[KHR_texture_transform](https://github.com/KhronosGroup/glTF/tree/main/extensions/2.0/Khronos/KHR_texture_transform)
extension added. Texture UVs that were scaled, rotated, or offset in a
GLTF are now properly handled.
---------
Co-authored-by: Al McElrath <hello@yrns.org>
Co-authored-by: Kanabenki <lucien.menassol@gmail.com>
# Objective
If multiple cameras render to the same target with MSAA enabled, only
the first and the last camera output will appear in the final output*.
This is because each camera maintains a separate flag to track the
active main texture. The first camera renders to texture A and all
subsequent cameras first write-back from A and then render into texture
B. Hence, camera 3 onwards will overwrite the work of the previous
camera.
\* This would manifest slightly differently if there were other calls to
post_process_write() in a more complex setup.
The is a functional regression from Bevy 0.12.
## Solution
The flag which tracks the active main texture should be shared between
cameras with the same `NormalizedRenderTarget`. Add the
`Arc<AtomicUsize>` to the existing per-target cache.
# Objective
- Save 16 bytes per MeshUniform in uniform/storage buffers.
## Solution
- Reorder members of MeshUniform to capitalise on alignment and size
rules for tighter data packing. Before the size of a MeshUniform was 160
bytes, and after it is 144 bytes, saving 16 bytes of unused padding for
alignment.
---
## Changelog
- Reduced the size of MeshUniform by 16 bytes.
# Objective
The derive macro wasn't doc-commented, so it showed up in the generated
doc as follow:
```rust
#[derive(Asset, TypePath)]
let shader = asset_server.load::<Shader>("embedded://bevy_rock/render/rock.wgsl");
```
Which is very confusing
## Solution
Comment the `derive` attribute as well
# Objective
We deprecated quite a few APIs in 0.13. 0.13 has shipped already. It
should be OK to remove them in 0.14's release. Fixes#4059. Fixes#9011.
## Solution
Remove them.
# Objective
- Some workspace members do not inherit the global lints.
## Solution
- Add a `[lints]` entry for all files returned by `rg
--files-without-match -F "[lints]" **/Cargo.toml`, except the compile
failure tests since these aren't part of the workspace.
- Add some docstrings where needed.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
* Fixes#11932 (performance impact when stepping is disabled)
## Solution
The `Option<FixedBitSet>` argument added to `ScheduleExecutor::run()` in
#8453 caused a measurable performance impact even when stepping is
disabled. This can be seen by the benchmark of running `Schedule:run()`
on an empty schedule in a tight loop
(https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/11932#issuecomment-1950970236).
I was able to get the same performance results as on 0.12.1 by changing
the argument
`ScheduleExecutor::run()` from `Option<FixedBitSet>` to
`Option<&FixedBitSet>`. The down-side of this change is that
`Schedule::run()` now takes about 6% longer (3.7319 ms vs 3.9855ns) when
stepping is enabled
---
## Changelog
* Change `ScheduleExecutor::run()` `_skipped_systems` from
`Option<FixedBitSet>` to `Option<&FixedBitSet>`
* Added a few benchmarks to measure `Schedule::run()` performance with
various executors
# Objective
- Gltf loader now shows which file is missing pre baked tangents
- Fixes#11831
## Solution
- The file name is shown in the error message
- What changed as a result of this PR?
### Changed:
- Gltf loader now shows which file is missing pre baked tangents
- If this PR is a breaking change (relative to the last release of
Bevy), describe how a user might need to migrate their code to support
these changes
- Simply adding new functionality is not a breaking change.
- Fixing behavior that was definitely a bug, rather than a questionable
design choice is not a breaking change.
# Objective
Currently, the `ambiguous_names` hash set in `TypeRegistry` is used to
keep track of short type names that are ambiguous, and to require the
use of long type names for these types.
However, there's no way for the consumer of `TypeRegistry` to known
whether a given call to `get_with_short_type_path()` or
`get_with_short_type_path_mut()` failed because a type was not
registered at all, or because the short name is ambiguous.
This can be used, for example, for better error reporting to the user by
an editor tool. Here's some code that uses this, from my remote protocol
exploration branch:
```rust
let type_registration = type_registry
.get_with_type_path(component_name)
.or_else(|| registry.get_with_short_type_path(component_name))
.ok_or_else(|| {
if type_registry.is_ambiguous(component_name) {
BrpError::ComponentAmbiguous(component_name.clone())
} else {
BrpError::MissingTypeRegistration(component_name.clone())
}
})?
```
## Solution
- Introduces a `is_ambiguous()` method.
- Also drive-by fixes two documentation comments that had broken links.
---
## Changelog
- Added a `TypeRegistry::is_ambiguous()` method, for checking whether a
given short type path is ambiguous (e.g. `MyType` potentially matching
either `some_crate::MyType` or `another_crate::MyType`)
---------
Co-authored-by: François <mockersf@gmail.com>
# Objective
- On some devices, UI buttons are not responsive
## Solution
- On device with a slower frame rate, touch event can start and end in
the frame rate
- When looking for a touch position, also look into the `just_pressed`
touches that are not cleared by the end event but only at the end of the
frame
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
Implement Debug trait for SpriteBundle and SpriteSheetBundle
It's helpful and other basic bundles like TransformBundle and
VisibilityBundle already implement this trait
# Objective
There's a repeating pattern of `ThreadLocal<Cell<Vec<T>>>` which is very
useful for low overhead, low contention multithreaded queues that have
cropped up in a few places in the engine. This pattern is surprisingly
useful when building deferred mutation across multiple threads, as noted
by it's use in `ParallelCommands`.
However, `ThreadLocal<Cell<Vec<T>>>` is not only a mouthful, it's also
hard to ensure the thread-local queue is replaced after it's been
temporarily removed from the `Cell`.
## Solution
Wrap the pattern into `bevy_utils::Parallel<T>` which codifies the
entire pattern and ensures the user follows the contract. Instead of
fetching indivdual cells, removing the value, mutating it, and replacing
it, `Parallel::get` returns a `ParRef<'a, T>` which contains the
temporarily removed value and a reference back to the cell, and will
write the mutated value back to the cell upon being dropped.
I would like to use this to simplify the remaining part of #4899 that
has not been adopted/merged.
---
## Changelog
TODO
---------
Co-authored-by: Joseph <21144246+JoJoJet@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
Bevy's animation system currently does tree traversals based on `Name`
that aren't necessary. Not only do they require in unsafe code because
tree traversals are awkward with parallelism, but they are also somewhat
slow, brittle, and complex, which manifested itself as way too many
queries in #11670.
# Solution
Divide animation into two phases: animation *advancement* and animation
*evaluation*, which run after one another. *Advancement* operates on the
`AnimationPlayer` and sets the current animation time to match the game
time. *Evaluation* operates on all animation bones in the scene in
parallel and sets the transforms and/or morph weights based on the time
and the clip.
To do this, we introduce a new component, `AnimationTarget`, which the
asset loader places on every bone. It contains the ID of the entity
containing the `AnimationPlayer`, as well as a UUID that identifies
which bone in the animation the target corresponds to. In the case of
glTF, the UUID is derived from the full path name to the bone. The rule
that `AnimationTarget`s are descendants of the entity containing
`AnimationPlayer` is now just a convention, not a requirement; this
allows us to eliminate the unsafe code.
# Migration guide
* `AnimationClip` now uses UUIDs instead of hierarchical paths based on
the `Name` component to refer to bones. This has several consequences:
- A new component, `AnimationTarget`, should be placed on each bone that
you wish to animate, in order to specify its UUID and the associated
`AnimationPlayer`. The glTF loader automatically creates these
components as necessary, so most uses of glTF rigs shouldn't need to
change.
- Moving a bone around the tree, or renaming it, no longer prevents an
`AnimationPlayer` from affecting it.
- Dynamically changing the `AnimationPlayer` component will likely
require manual updating of the `AnimationTarget` components.
* Entities with `AnimationPlayer` components may now possess descendants
that also have `AnimationPlayer` components. They may not, however,
animate the same bones.
* As they aren't specific to `TypeId`s,
`bevy_reflect::utility::NoOpTypeIdHash` and
`bevy_reflect::utility::NoOpTypeIdHasher` have been renamed to
`bevy_reflect::utility::NoOpHash` and
`bevy_reflect::utility::NoOpHasher` respectively.
# Objective
- having different field names for `Camera2dBundle` and `Camera3dBundle`
implies that there is something different between these fields when
there is not
## Solution
- rename the field in `Camera3dBundle` to align with `Camera2dBundle`
## Migration Guide
- use the new `deband_dither` field name with `Camera3dBundle`, rather
than the old field name, `dither`
# Objective
Do #11829, but without breaking CI.
## Solution
Update to `toml_edit` v0.22, replace the deprecated function with the
the newer equivalent.
# Objective
Fixes#11964.
## Solution
Adds the `serde` feature to `bitflags` for `bevy_render`. This makes
`bevy_render` compile correctly when used alone.
---
## Changelog
- Fixed an issue where depending on `bevy_render` alone would fail to
compile.
# Objective
Improve code quality and performance
## Solution
Instead of using `plugin.downcast_ref::<T>().is_some()` in
`App::is_plugin_added`, use `plugin.is::<T>()`. Which is more performant
and cleaner.
# Objective
- Fixes#11960
- The compilation of `bevy_core_pipeline` failed with the `dds` feature
enabled
## Solution
- Enable the `dds` feature of `bevy_render` when enabling it for
`bevy_core_pipeline`
# Objective
`update_archetype_component_access` was removed from queries in #9774,
but some documentation still refers to it.
## Solution
Update the documentation. Since a bunch of these were in SAFETY comments
it would be nice if someone who knows the details better could check
that the rest of those comments are still valid.
# Objective
Right now, if you call `embedded_asset` with 2 arguments as a qualified
path it doesn't work (`bevy::asset::embedded_asset!(app, "foo.wgsl")` ->
"cannot find macro `embedded_asset` in this scope")
## Solution
Use `$crate::` in expansion for 2-arg case.
# Objective
- I hated having to do `Cuboid::new(1.0, 1.0, 1.0)` or
`Cuboid::from_size(Vec3::splat(1.0))` when there should be a much easier
way to do this.
## Solution
- Implemented a `from_length()` method that only takes in a single
float, and constructs a primitive of equal size in all directions.
- Ex:
```rs
// These:
Cuboid::new(1.0, 1.0, 1.0);
Cuboid::from_size(Vec3::splat(1.0));
// Are equivalent to this:
Cuboid::from_length(1.0);
```
- For the rest of the changed primitives:
```rs
Rectangle::from_length(1.0);
Plane3d::default().mesh().from_length(1.0);
```
# Objective
Another PR failed CI due to duplicate deps, and I noticed this one in
particular while scanning through the error messages.
I think this was missed in #11082.
## Solution
Bump `encase_derive_impl` dep in `bevy_encase_derive` to same version as
`encase` dep for `bevy_render`.
I spot-checked a few examples, and glanced at the
[changelog](<https://github.com/teoxoy/encase/blob/main/CHANGELOG.md#v070-2024-01-02>)
and I don't think there's anything to be concerned about, but I barely
know what this thing does.
# Objective
Fixes#11908
## Solution
- Remove the `naga_oil` dependency from `bevy_pbr`.
- We were doing a little dance to disable `glsl` support on not-wasm, so
incorporate that dance into `bevy_render`'s `Cargo.toml`.
They cause the number of texture bindings to overflow on those
platforms. Ultimately, we shouldn't unconditionally disable them, but
this fixes a crash blocking 0.13.
Closes#11885.
I did this during the prepass, but I neglected to do it during the
shadow map pass, causing a panic when directional lights with shadows
were enabled with lightmapped meshes present. This patch fixes the
issue.
Closes#11898.
# Objective
- Being able to build for WebGPU
```
error[E0061]: this function takes 1 argument but 3 arguments were supplied
--> .cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/wgpu-0.19.1/src/backend/webgpu.rs:375:22
|
375 | let mut mapped = web_sys::GpuDepthStencilState::new(
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
376 | map_compare_function(desc.depth_compare),
| ---------------------------------------- unexpected argument of type `GpuCompareFunction`
377 | desc.depth_write_enabled,
| ------------------------ unexpected argument of type `bool`
|
note: associated function defined here
--> .cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/web-sys-0.3.68/src/features/gen_GpuDepthStencilState.rs:27:12
|
27 | pub fn new(format: GpuTextureFormat) -> Self {
| ^^^
help: remove the extra arguments
|
376 - map_compare_function(desc.depth_compare),
376 + map_texture_format(desc.format),
|
error[E0061]: this function takes 1 argument but 2 arguments were supplied
--> .cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/wgpu-0.19.1/src/backend/webgpu.rs:1693:13
|
1693 | web_sys::GpuVertexState::new(desc.vertex.entry_point, &module.0);
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ -------------------------
| |
| unexpected argument of type `&str`
| help: remove the extra argument
|
note: associated function defined here
--> .cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/web-sys-0.3.68/src/features/gen_GpuVertexState.rs:27:12
|
27 | pub fn new(module: &GpuShaderModule) -> Self {
| ^^^
error[E0061]: this function takes 2 arguments but 3 arguments were supplied
--> .cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/wgpu-0.19.1/src/backend/webgpu.rs:1768:17
|
1768 | web_sys::GpuFragmentState::new(frag.entry_point, &module.0, &targets);
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ---------------- -------- unexpected argument of type `&js_sys::Array`
| |
| expected `&GpuShaderModule`, found `&str`
|
= note: expected reference `&GpuShaderModule`
found reference `&str`
note: associated function defined here
--> .cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/web-sys-0.3.68/src/features/gen_GpuFragmentState.rs:27:12
|
27 | pub fn new(module: &GpuShaderModule, targets: &::wasm_bindgen::JsValue) -> Self {
| ^^^
help: remove the extra argument
|
1768 - web_sys::GpuFragmentState::new(frag.entry_point, &module.0, &targets);
1768 + web_sys::GpuFragmentState::new(/* &GpuShaderModule */, &module.0);
|
error[E0061]: this function takes 1 argument but 2 arguments were supplied
--> .cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/wgpu-0.19.1/src/backend/webgpu.rs:1793:13
|
1793 | web_sys::GpuProgrammableStage::new(desc.entry_point, &shader_module.0);
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ------------------
| |
| unexpected argument of type `&str`
| help: remove the extra argument
|
note: associated function defined here
--> .cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/web-sys-0.3.68/src/features/gen_GpuProgrammableStage.rs:27:12
|
27 | pub fn new(module: &GpuShaderModule) -> Self {
| ^^^
error[E0599]: no method named `write_timestamp` found for struct `GpuCommandEncoder` in the current scope
--> .cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-6f17d22bba15001f/wgpu-0.19.1/src/backend/webgpu.rs:2505:14
|
2503 | / encoder_data
2504 | | .0
2505 | | .write_timestamp(&query_set_data.0, query_index);
| | -^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ method not found in `GpuCommandEncoder`
| |_____________|
|
Some errors have detailed explanations: E0061, E0599.
For more information about an error, try `rustc --explain E0061`.
```
## Solution
- `web-sys` doesn't follow semver for the WebGPU APIs as they are
unstable. Force using a compatible version
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
When registering and preregistering asset loaders, there would be a
`warn!` if multiple asset loaders use a given extension, and an `info!`
if multiple asset loaders load the same asset type. Since both of these
situations are individually fine, it was decided that these messages
should be removed.
## Solution
Replace both of these messages with a new `warn!` that notes that if
multiple asset loaders share the same asset type _and_ share extensions,
that the loader must be specified in the `.meta` file for those assets
in order to solve the ambiguity. This is a more useful message, since it
notes when a user must take special action / consideration.
# Objective
Fixes#11846
## Solution
Add a `synchronous_pipeline_compilation ` field to `RenderPlugin`,
defaulting to `false`.
Most of the diff is whitespace.
## Changelog
Added `synchronous_pipeline_compilation ` to `RenderPlugin` for
disabling async pipeline creation.
## Migration Guide
TODO: consider combining this with the guide for #11846
`RenderPlugin` has a new `synchronous_pipeline_compilation ` property.
The default value is `false`. Set this to `true` if you want to retain
the previous synchronous behavior.
---------
Co-authored-by: JMS55 <47158642+JMS55@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: François <mockersf@gmail.com>
This represents when the user has configured `ClearColorConfig::None` in
their application. If the clear color is `None`, we will always `Load`
instead of attempting to clear the attachment on the first call.
Fixes#11883.
# Objective
The new render graph labels do not (and cannot) implement normal
Reflect, which breaks spawning scenes with cameras (including GLTF
scenes). Likewise, the new `CameraMainTextureUsages` also does not (and
cannot) implement normal Reflect because it uses `wgpu::TextureUsages`
under the hood.
Fixes#11852
## Solution
This implements minimal "reflect value" for `CameraRenderGraph` and
`CameraMainTextureUsages` and registers the types, which satisfies our
spawn logic.
Note that this _does not_ fix scene serialization for these types, which
will require more significant changes. We will especially need to think
about how (and if) "interned labels" will fit into the scene system. For
the purposes of 0.13, I think this is the best we can do. Given that
this serialization issue is prevalent throughout Bevy atm, I'm ok with
adding a couple more to the pile. When we roll out the new scene system,
we will be forced to solve these on a case-by-case basis.
---
## Changelog
- Implement Reflect (value) for `CameraMainTextureUsages` and
`CameraRenderGraph`, and register those types.
# Objective
#10644 introduced nice "statically typed" labels that replace the old
strings. I would like to propose some changes to the names introduced:
* `SubGraph2d` -> `Core2d` and `SubGraph3d` -> `Core3d`. The names of
these graphs have been / should continue to be the "core 2d" graph not
the "sub graph 2d" graph. The crate is called `bevy_core_pipeline`, the
modules are still `core_2d` and `core_3d`, etc.
* `Labels2d` and `Labels3d`, at the very least, should not be plural to
follow naming conventions. A Label enum is not a "collection of labels",
it is a _specific_ Label. However I think `Label2d` and `Label3d` is
significantly less clear than `Node2d` and `Node3d`, so I propose those
changes here. I've done the same for `LabelsPbr` -> `NodePbr` and
`LabelsUi` -> `NodeUi`
Additionally, #10644 accidentally made one of the Camera2dBundle
constructors use the 3D graph instead of the 2D graph. I've fixed that
here.
---
## Changelog
* Renamed `SubGraph2d` -> `Core2d`, `SubGraph3d` -> `Core3d`, `Labels2d`
-> `Node2d`, `Labels3d` -> `Node3d`, `LabelsUi` -> `NodeUi`, `LabelsPbr`
-> `NodePbr`
# Objective
Provide a public replacement for `Into<MeshUniform>` trait impl which
was removed by #10231.
I made use of this in the `bevy_mod_outline` crate and will have to
duplicate this function if it's not accessible.
## Solution
Change the MeshUniform::new() method to be public.
# Objective
After adding configurable exposure, we set the default ev100 value to
`7` (indoor). This brought us out of sync with Blender's configuration
and defaults. This PR changes the default to `9.7` (bright indoor or
very overcast outdoors), as I calibrated in #11577. This feels like a
very reasonable default.
The other changes generally center around tweaking Bevy's lighting
defaults and examples to play nicely with this number, alongside a few
other tweaks and improvements.
Note that for artistic reasons I have reverted some examples, which
changed to directional lights in #11581, back to point lights.
Fixes#11577
---
## Changelog
- Changed `Exposure::ev100` from `7` to `9.7` to better match Blender
- Renamed `ExposureSettings` to `Exposure`
- `Camera3dBundle` now includes `Exposure` for discoverability
- Bumped `FULL_DAYLIGHT ` and `DIRECT_SUNLIGHT` to represent the
middle-to-top of those ranges instead of near the bottom
- Added new `AMBIENT_DAYLIGHT` constant and set that as the new
`DirectionalLight` default illuminance.
- `PointLight` and `SpotLight` now have a default `intensity` of
1,000,000 lumens. This makes them actually useful in the context of the
new "semi-outdoor" exposure and puts them in the "cinema lighting"
category instead of the "common household light" category. They are also
reasonably close to the Blender default.
- `AmbientLight` default has been bumped from `20` to `80`.
## Migration Guide
- The increased `Exposure::ev100` means that all existing 3D lighting
will need to be adjusted to match (DirectionalLights, PointLights,
SpotLights, EnvironmentMapLights, etc). Or alternatively, you can adjust
the `Exposure::ev100` on your cameras to work nicely with your current
lighting values. If you are currently relying on default intensity
values, you might need to change the intensity to achieve the same
effect. Note that in Bevy 0.12, point/spot lights had a different hard
coded ev100 value than directional lights. In Bevy 0.13, they use the
same ev100, so if you have both in your scene, the _scale_ between these
light types has changed and you will likely need to adjust one or both
of them.
# Objective
Fix https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/11577.
## Solution
Fix the examples, add a few constants to make setting light values
easier, and change the default lighting settings to be more realistic.
(Now designed for an overcast day instead of an indoor environment)
---
I did not include any example-related changes in here.
## Changelogs (not including breaking changes)
### bevy_pbr
- Added `light_consts` module (included in prelude), which contains
common lux and lumen values for lights.
- Added `AmbientLight::NONE` constant, which is an ambient light with a
brightness of 0.
- Added non-EV100 variants for `ExposureSettings`'s EV100 constants,
which allow easier construction of an `ExposureSettings` from a EV100
constant.
## Breaking changes
### bevy_pbr
The several default lighting values were changed:
- `PointLight`'s default `intensity` is now `2000.0`
- `SpotLight`'s default `intensity` is now `2000.0`
- `DirectionalLight`'s default `illuminance` is now
`light_consts::lux::OVERCAST_DAY` (`1000.`)
- `AmbientLight`'s default `brightness` is now `20.0`
# Objective
- The current implementations for `&Visibility == Visibility` and
`Visibility == &Visibility` are ambiguous, so they raise a warning for
being unconditionally recursive.
- `TaskPool`'s `LOCAL_EXECUTOR` thread local calls a `const` constructor
in a non-`const` context.
## Solution
- Make `&Visibility == Visibility` and `Visibility == &Visibility`
implementations use `Visibility == Visibility`.
- Wrap `LocalExecutor::new` in a special `const` block supported by
[`thread_local`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/macro.thread_local.html).
---
This lints were found by running:
```shell
$ cargo clippy --workspace
```
There are a few other warnings that were more complicated, so I chose
not to include them in this PR.
<details>
<summary>Here they are...</summary>
```shell
warning: function cannot return without recursing
--> crates/bevy_utils/src/cow_arc.rs:92:5
|
92 | / fn eq(&self, other: &Self) -> bool {
93 | | self.deref().eq(other.deref())
94 | | }
| |_____^
|
note: recursive call site
--> crates/bevy_utils/src/cow_arc.rs:93:9
|
93 | self.deref().eq(other.deref())
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
warning: method `get_path` is never used
--> crates/bevy_reflect/src/serde/de.rs:26:8
|
25 | trait StructLikeInfo {
| -------------- method in this trait
26 | fn get_path(&self) -> &str;
| ^^^^^^^^
|
= note: `#[warn(dead_code)]` on by default
warning: methods `get_path` and `get_field` are never used
--> crates/bevy_reflect/src/serde/de.rs:34:8
|
33 | trait TupleLikeInfo {
| ------------- methods in this trait
34 | fn get_path(&self) -> &str;
| ^^^^^^^^
35 | fn get_field(&self, index: usize) -> Option<&UnnamedField>;
| ^^^^^^^^^
```
The other warnings are fixed by #11865.
</details>
# Objective
- There are multiple instances of `let Some(x) = ... else { None };`
throughout the project.
- Because `Option<T>` implements
[`Try`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/ops/trait.Try.html), it can
use the question mark `?` operator.
## Solution
- Use question mark operator instead of `let Some(x) = ... else { None
}`.
---
There was another PR that did a similar thing a few weeks ago, but I
couldn't find it.
# Objective
I tried using `insert_gizmo_group` to configure my physics gizmos in a
bevy_xpbd example, but was surprised to see that nothing happened. I
found out that the method does *not* overwrite gizmo groups that have
already been initialized (with `init_gizmo_group`). This is unexpected,
since methods like `insert_resource` *do* overwrite.
## Solution
Insert the configuration even if it has already been initialized.
# Objective
`RenderMeshInstance::material_bind_group_id` is only set from
`queue_material_meshes::<M>`. this field is used (only) for determining
batch groups, so some items may be batched incorrectly if they have
never been in the camera's view or if they don't use the Material
abstraction.
in particular, shadow views render more meshes than the main camera, and
currently batch some meshes where the object has never entered the
camera view together. this is quite hard to trigger, but should occur in
a scene with out-of-view alpha-mask materials (so that the material
instance actually affects the shadow) in the path of a light.
this is also a footgun for custom pipelines: failing to set the
material_bind_group_id will result in all meshes being batched together
and all using the closest/furthest material to the camera (depending on
sort order).
## Solution
- queue_shadows now sets the material_bind_group_id correctly
- `MeshPipeline` doesn't attempt to batch meshes if the
material_bind_group_id has not been set. custom pipelines still need to
set this field to take advantage of batching, but will at least render
correctly if it is not set
# Objective
sysinfo was updated to 0.30 in #11071. Ever since then the `cpu` field
of the `SystemInfo` struct that gets printed every time one starts an
bevy app has been empty. This is because the following part of the
sysinfo migration guide was overlooked:
---
### `Cpu` changes
Information like `Cpu::brand`, `Cpu::vendor_id` or `Cpu::frequency` are
not set on the "global" CPU.
---
## Solution
- Get the CPU brand information from a specific CPU instead. In this
case, just choose the first one. It's theoretically possible for
different CPUs to have different names, but in practice this doesn't
really happen I think. Even Intel's newer hybrid processors use a
uniform name for all CPUs in my experience.
- We can use this opportunity to also update our `sysinfo::System`
initialization here to only fetch the information we're interested in.
Make the renamings/changes regarding texture atlases a bit less
confusing by calling `TextureAtlasLayout` a layout, not a texture atlas.
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
It can sometimes be useful to combine several meshes into one. This
allows constructing more complex meshes out of simple primitives without
needing to use a 3D modeling program or entity hierarchies.
This could also be used internally to increase code reuse by using
existing mesh generation logic for e.g. circles and using that in
cylinder mesh generation logic to add the top and bottom of the
cylinder.
**Note**: This is *not* implementing CSGs (Constructive Solid Geometry)
or any boolean operations, as that is much more complex. This is simply
adding the mesh data of another mesh to a mesh.
## Solution
Add a `merge` method to `Mesh`. It appends the vertex attributes and
indices of `other` to `self`, resulting in a `Mesh` that is the
combination of the two.
For example, you could do this:
```rust
let mut cuboid = Mesh::from(shape::Box::default());
let mut cylinder = Mesh::from(shape::Cylinder::default());
let mut torus = Mesh::from(shape::Torus::default());
cuboid.merge(cylinder);
cuboid.merge(torus);
```
This would result in `cuboid` being a `Mesh` that also has the cylinder
mesh and torus mesh. In this case, they would just be placed on top of
each other, but by utilizing #11454 we can transform the cylinder and
torus to get a result like this:
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/57632562/557402c6-b896-4aba-bd95-312e7d1b5238
This is just a single entity and a single mesh.
# Objective
- Fixes#11782.
## Solution
- Remove the run condition for `apply_global_wireframe_material`, since
it prevent detecting when meshes are added or the `NoWireframe` marker
component is removed from an entity. Alternatively this could be done by
using a run condition like "added `Handle<Mesh>` or removed
`NoWireframe` or `WireframeConfig` changed" but this seems less clear to
me than directly letting the queries on
`apply_global_wireframe_material` do the filtering.
# Objective
-
[`crossbeam::scope`](https://docs.rs/crossbeam/latest/crossbeam/fn.scope.html)
is soft-deprecated in favor of the standard library's implementation.
## Solution
- Replace reference in `TaskPool`'s docs to mention `std:🧵:scope`
instead.
# Objective
- Fixes#11695
## Solution
- Added `delta: Option<Vec2>` to `bevy_window::CursorMoved`. `delta` is
an `Option` because the `CursorMoved` event does get fired when the
cursor was outside the window area in the last frame. In that case there
is no cursor position from the last frame to compare with the current
cursor position.
---
## Changelog
- Added `delta: Option<Vec2>` to `bevy_window::CursorMoved`.
## Migration Guide
- You need to add `delta` to any manually created `CursorMoved` struct.
---------
Co-authored-by: Kanabenki <lucien.menassol@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: James Liu <contact@jamessliu.com>
# Objective
- Fixes#11638
- See
[here](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/11638#issuecomment-1920508465)
for details on the cause of this issue.
## Solution
- Modified `AssetLoaders` to capture possibility of multiple
`AssetLoader` registrations operating on the same `Asset` type, but
different extensions.
- Added an algorithm which will attempt to resolve via `AssetLoader`
name, then `Asset` type, then by extension. If at any point multiple
loaders fit a particular criteria, the next criteria is used as a tie
breaker.
# Objective
At the start of every schedule run, there's currently a guaranteed piece
of overhead as the async executor spawns the MultithreadeExecutor task
onto one of the ComputeTaskPool threads.
## Solution
Poll the executor once to immediately schedule systems without waiting
for the async executor, then spawn the task if and only if the executor
does not immediately terminate.
On a similar note, having the executor task immediately start executing
a system in the same async task might yield similar results over a
broader set of cases. However, this might be more involved, and may need
a solution like #8304.
# Objective
When applying a command, we currently use double indirection for the
world reference `&mut Option<&mut World>`. Since this is used across a
`fn` pointer boundary, this can't get optimized away.
## Solution
Reborrow the world reference and pass `Option<&mut World>` instead.
# Objective
Scheduling low cost systems has significant overhead due to task pool
contention and the extra machinery to schedule and run them. Following
the example of #7728, `asset_events` is good example of this kind of
system, where there is no work to be done when there are no queued asset
events.
## Solution
Put a run condition on it that checks if there are any queued events.
## Performance
Tested against `many_foxes`, we can see a slight improvement in the
total time spent in `UpdateAssets`. Also noted much less volatility due
to not being at the whim of the OS thread scheduler.
![image](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/3137680/e0b282bf-27d0-4fe4-81b9-ecd72ab258e5)
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
The code in `bevy_reflect_derive` could use some cleanup.
## Solution
Took some of the changes in #11659 to create a dedicated PR for cleaning
up the field and container attribute logic.
#### Updated Naming
I renamed `ReflectTraits` and `ReflectFieldAttr` to
`ContainerAttributes` and `FieldAttributes`, respectively. I think these
are clearer.
#### Updated Parsing
##### Readability
The parsing logic wasn't too bad before, but it was getting difficult to
read. There was some duplicated logic between `Meta::List` and
`Meta::Path` attributes. Additionally, all the logic was kept inside a
large method.
To simply things, I replaced the nested meta parsing with `ParseStream`
parsing. In my opinion, this is easier to follow since it breaks up the
large match statement into a small set of single-line if statements,
where each if-block contains a single call to the appropriate attribute
parsing method.
##### Flexibility
On top of the added simplicity, this also makes our attribute parsing
much more flexible. It allows us to more elegantly handle custom where
clauses (i.e. `#[reflect(where T: Foo)]`) and it opens the door for more
non-standard attribute syntax (e.g. #11659).
##### Errors
This also allows us to automatically provide certain errors when
parsing. For example, since we can use `stream.lookahead1()`, we get
errors like the following for free:
```
error: expected one of: `ignore`, `skip_serializing`, `default`
--> crates/bevy_reflect/src/lib.rs:1988:23
|
1988 | #[reflect(foo)]
| ^^^
```
---
## Changelog
> [!note]
> All changes are internal to `bevy_reflect_derive` and should not
affect the public API[^1].
- Renamed `ReflectTraits` to `ContainerAttributes`
- Renamed `ReflectMeta::traits` to `ReflectMeta::attrs`
- Renamed `ReflectFieldAttr` to `FieldAttributes`
- Updated parsing logic for field/container attribute parsing
- Now uses a `ParseStream` directly instead of nested meta parsing
- General code cleanup of the field/container attribute modules for
`bevy_reflect_derive`
[^1]: Does not include errors, which may look slightly different.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
Bevy's change detection functionality is invaluable for writing robust
apps, but it only works in the context of systems and exclusive systems.
Oftentimes it is necessary to detect changes made in earlier code
without having to place the code in separate systems, but it is not
currently possible to do so since there is no way to set the value of
`World::last_change_tick`.
`World::clear_trackers` allows you to update the change tick, but this
has unintended side effects, since it irreversibly affects the behavior
of change and removal detection for the entire app.
## Solution
Add a method `World::last_change_tick_scope`. This allows you to set
`last_change_tick` to a specific value for a region of code. To ensure
that misuse doesn't break unrelated functions, we restore the world's
original change tick at the end of the provided scope.
### Example
A function that uses this to run an update loop repeatedly, allowing
each iteration of the loop to react to changes made in the previous loop
iteration.
```rust
fn update_loop(
world: &mut World,
mut update_fn: impl FnMut(&mut World) -> std::ops::ControlFlow<()>,
) {
let mut last_change_tick = world.last_change_tick();
// Repeatedly run the update function until it requests a break.
loop {
// Update once.
let control_flow = world.last_change_tick_scope(last_change_tick, |world| {
update_fn(world)
});
// End the loop when the closure returns `ControlFlow::Break`.
if control_flow.is_break() {
break;
}
// Increment the change tick so the next update can detect changes from this update.
last_change_tick = world.change_tick();
world.increment_change_tick();
}
}
```
---
## Changelog
+ Added `World::last_change_tick_scope`, which allows you to specify the
reference for change detection within a certain scope.
# Objective
- Part of #11590.
## Solution
- Fix `unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn` for `bevy_dynamic_plugin`.
---
## Changelog
- Added further restrictions to the safety requirements of
`bevy_dynamic_plugin::dynamically_load_plugin`.
---
I had a few issues, specifically with the safety comment on
`dynamically_load_plugin`. There are three different unsafe functions
called within the function body, and they all need their own
justification / message.
Also, would it be unsound to call `dynamically_load_plugin` multiple
times on the same file? I feel the documentation needs to be more clear.
# Objective
Reduce the size of `bevy_utils`
(https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/11478)
## Solution
Move `EntityHash` related types into `bevy_ecs`. This also allows us
access to `Entity`, which means we no longer need `EntityHashMap`'s
first generic argument.
---
## Changelog
- Moved `bevy::utils::{EntityHash, EntityHasher, EntityHashMap,
EntityHashSet}` into `bevy::ecs::entity::hash` .
- Removed `EntityHashMap`'s first generic argument. It is now hardcoded
to always be `Entity`.
## Migration Guide
- Uses of `bevy::utils::{EntityHash, EntityHasher, EntityHashMap,
EntityHashSet}` now have to be imported from `bevy::ecs::entity::hash`.
- Uses of `EntityHashMap` no longer have to specify the first generic
parameter. It is now hardcoded to always be `Entity`.
# Objective
Loading some textures from the days of yonder give me errors cause the
mipmap level is 0
## Solution
Set a minimum of 1
## Changelog
Make mipmap level at least 1
# Objective
Use `GamepadButtonType` with library that requires `Ord`.
## Motivation
`KeyCode` derives `Ord` that I'm using with a trie for recognizing
[input
sequences](https://github.com/shanecelis/bevy-input-sequence/tree/trie).
I would like to do the same for `GamepadButtonType` but am stymied by it
not deriving `Ord`.
## Solution
This PR add derivations PartialOrd and Ord for `GamepadButtonType`.
## Workaround
If deriving `Ord` is not possible, I'd be happy to know how I might
coerce `GamepadButtonType` into a `u32` or something else that is `Ord`,
so I can wrap `GamepadButtonType` in a newtype. I suppose serializing
with serde may work or reflect?
# Objective
- Get rid of unwraps in winit fullscreen handling code, which are the
source of some crashes.
- Fix#11275
## Solution
- Replace the unwraps with warnings. Ignore the fullscreen request, do
nothing instead.
# Objective
It would be useful to be able to inspect a `QueryState`'s accesses so we
can detect when the data it accesses changes without having to iterate
it. However there are two things preventing this:
* These accesses are unnecessarily encapsulated.
* `Has<T>` indirectly accesses `T`, but does not register it.
## Solution
* Expose accesses and matches used by `QueryState`.
* Add the notion of "archetypal" accesses, which are not accessed
directly, but whose presence in an archetype affects a query result.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
I want to keep track of despawned entities.
I am aware of
[`RemovedComponents`](https://docs.rs/bevy/0.12.1/bevy/ecs/prelude/struct.RemovedComponents.html).
However, the docs don't explicitly mention that despawned entities are
also included in this event iterator.
I searched through the bevy tests to find `removal_tracking` in
`crates/bevy_ecs/src/system/mod.rs` that confirmed the behavior:
```rust
...
assert_eq!(
removed_i32.read().collect::<Vec<_>>(),
&[despawned.0],
"despawning causes the correct entity to show up in the 'RemovedComponent' system parameter."
);
...
```
## Solution
- Explicitly mention this behavior in docs.
This fixes a `FIXME` in `extract_meshes` and results in a performance
improvement.
As a result of this change, meshes in the render world might not be
attached to entities anymore. Therefore, the `entity` parameter to
`RenderCommand::render()` is now wrapped in an `Option`. Most
applications that use the render app's ECS can simply unwrap the
`Option`.
Note that for now sprites, gizmos, and UI elements still use the render
world as usual.
## Migration guide
* For efficiency reasons, some meshes in the render world may not have
corresponding `Entity` IDs anymore. As a result, the `entity` parameter
to `RenderCommand::render()` is now wrapped in an `Option`. Custom
rendering code may need to be updated to handle the case in which no
`Entity` exists for an object that is to be rendered.
# Objective
`bevy_utils` only requires aHash 0.8.3, which is broken on Rust 1.7.6:
```
error: could not compile `ahash` (lib) due to 1 previous error
error[E0635]: unknown feature `stdsimd`
```
See https://github.com/tkaitchuck/aHash/issues/200
This is fixed in aHash 0.8.7, so require at least that version
(Cargo.lock is already up to date).
# Objective
The deprecation message of `bevy::render::mesh::shape::Quad` says that
you should use `bevy_math`'s `Quad` instead. But it doesn't exist.
## Solution
Mention the correct primitive: `Rectangle`
> Follow up to #11600 and #10588
@mockersf expressed some [valid
concerns](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/11600#issuecomment-1932796498)
about the current system this PR attempts to fix:
The `ComputedTextureSlices` reacts to asset change in both `bevy_sprite`
and `bevy_ui`, meaning that if the `ImageScaleMode` is inserted by
default in the bundles, we will iterate through most 2d items every time
an asset is updated.
# Solution
- `ImageScaleMode` only has two variants: `Sliced` and `Tiled`. I
removed the `Stretched` default
- `ImageScaleMode` is no longer part of any bundle, but the relevant
bundles explain that this additional component can be inserted
This way, the *absence* of `ImageScaleMode` means the image will be
stretched, and its *presence* will include the entity to the various
slicing systems
Optional components in bundles would make this more straigthfoward
# Additional work
Should I add new bundles with the `ImageScaleMode` component ?
# Objective
- Encoding many GPU commands (such as in a renderpass with many draws,
such as the main opaque pass) onto a `wgpu::CommandEncoder` is very
expensive, and takes a long time.
- To improve performance, we want to perform the command encoding for
these heavy passes in parallel.
## Solution
- `RenderContext` can now queue up "command buffer generation tasks"
which are closures that will generate a command buffer when called.
- When finalizing the render context to produce the final list of
command buffers, these tasks are run in parallel on the
`ComputeTaskPool` to produce their corresponding command buffers.
- The general idea is that the node graph will run in serial, but in a
node, instead of doing rendering work, you can add tasks to do render
work in parallel with other node's tasks that get ran at the end of the
graph execution.
## Nodes Parallelized
- `MainOpaquePass3dNode`
- `PrepassNode`
- `DeferredGBufferPrepassNode`
- `ShadowPassNode` (One task per view)
## Future Work
- For large number of draws calls, might be worth further subdividing
passes into 2+ tasks.
- Extend this to UI, 2d, transparent, and transmissive nodes?
- Needs testing - small command buffers are inefficient - it may be
worth reverting to the serial command encoder usage for render phases
with few items.
- All "serial" (traditional) rendering work must finish before parallel
rendering tasks (the new stuff) can start to run.
- There is still only one submission to the graphics queue at the end of
the graph execution. There is still no ability to submit work earlier.
## Performance Improvement
Thanks to @Elabajaba for testing on Bistro.
![image](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/47158642/be50dafa-85eb-4da5-a5cd-c0a044f1e76f)
TLDR: Without shadow mapping, this PR has no impact. _With_ shadow
mapping, this PR gives **~40 more fps** than main.
---
## Changelog
- `MainOpaquePass3dNode`, `PrepassNode`, `DeferredGBufferPrepassNode`,
and each shadow map within `ShadowPassNode` are now encoded in parallel,
giving _greatly_ increased CPU performance, mainly when shadow mapping
is enabled.
- Does not work on WASM or AMD+Windows+Vulkan.
- Added `RenderContext::add_command_buffer_generation_task()`.
- `RenderContext::new()` now takes adapter info
- Some render graph and Node related types and methods now have
additional lifetime constraints.
## Migration Guide
`RenderContext::new()` now takes adapter info
- Some render graph and Node related types and methods now have
additional lifetime constraints.
---------
Co-authored-by: Elabajaba <Elabajaba@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: François <mockersf@gmail.com>
# Objective
While profiling around to validate the results of #9172, I noticed that
`present_frames` can take a significant amount of time. Digging into the
cause, it seems like we're creating a new `QueryState` from scratch
every frame. This involves scanning the entire World's metadata instead
of just updating its view of the world.
## Solution
Use a `SystemState` argument to cache the `QueryState` to avoid this
construction cost.
## Performance
Against `many_foxes`, this seems to cut the time spent in
`present_frames` by nearly almost 2x. Yellow is this PR, red is main.
![image](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/3137680/2b02bbe0-6219-4255-958d-b690e37e7fba)
# Objective
#11431 and #11688 implemented meshing support for Bevy's new geometric
primitives. The next step is to deprecate the shapes in
`bevy_render::mesh::shape` and to later remove them completely for 0.14.
## Solution
Deprecate the shapes and reduce code duplication by utilizing the
primitive meshing API for the old shapes where possible.
Note that some shapes have behavior that can't be exactly reproduced
with the new primitives yet:
- `Box` is more of an AABB with min/max extents
- `Plane` supports a subdivision count
- `Quad` has a `flipped` property
These types have not been changed to utilize the new primitives yet.
---
## Changelog
- Deprecated all shapes in `bevy_render::mesh::shape`
- Changed all examples to use new primitives for meshing
## Migration Guide
Bevy has previously used rendering-specific types like `UVSphere` and
`Quad` for primitive mesh shapes. These have now been deprecated to use
the geometric primitives newly introduced in version 0.13.
Some examples:
```rust
let before = meshes.add(shape::Box::new(5.0, 0.15, 5.0));
let after = meshes.add(Cuboid::new(5.0, 0.15, 5.0));
let before = meshes.add(shape::Quad::default());
let after = meshes.add(Rectangle::default());
let before = meshes.add(shape::Plane::from_size(5.0));
// The surface normal can now also be specified when using `new`
let after = meshes.add(Plane3d::default().mesh().size(5.0, 5.0));
let before = meshes.add(
Mesh::try_from(shape::Icosphere {
radius: 0.5,
subdivisions: 5,
})
.unwrap(),
);
let after = meshes.add(Sphere::new(0.5).mesh().ico(5).unwrap());
```
# Objective
- Try not to drop the render world on the render thread, and drop the
main world after the render world.
- The render world has a drop check that will panic if it is dropped off
the main thread.
## Solution
- Keep track of where the render world is and wait for it to come back
when the channel resource is dropped.
---
## Changelog
- Wait for the render world when the main world is dropped.
## Migration Guide
- If you were using the pipelined rendering channels,
`MainToRenderAppSender` and `RenderToMainAppReceiver`, they have been
combined into the single resource `RenderAppChannels`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Friz64 <friz64@protonmail.com>
> Follow up to #10588
> Closes#11749 (Supersedes #11756)
Enable Texture slicing for the following UI nodes:
- `ImageBundle`
- `ButtonBundle`
<img width="739" alt="Screenshot 2024-01-29 at 13 57 43"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/26703856/37675681-74eb-4689-ab42-024310cf3134">
I also added a collection of `fantazy-ui-borders` from
[Kenney's](www.kenney.nl) assets, with the appropriate license (CC).
If it's a problem I can use the same textures as the `sprite_slice`
example
# Work done
Added the `ImageScaleMode` component to the targetted bundles, most of
the logic is directly reused from `bevy_sprite`.
The only additional internal component is the UI specific
`ComputedSlices`, which does the same thing as its spritee equivalent
but adapted to UI code.
Again the slicing is not compatible with `TextureAtlas`, it's something
I need to tackle more deeply in the future
# Fixes
* [x] I noticed that `TextureSlicer::compute_slices` could infinitely
loop if the border was larger that the image half extents, now an error
is triggered and the texture will fallback to being stretched
* [x] I noticed that when using small textures with very small *tiling*
options we could generate hundred of thousands of slices. Now I set a
minimum size of 1 pixel per slice, which is already ridiculously small,
and a warning will be sent at runtime when slice count goes above 1000
* [x] Sprite slicing with `flip_x` or `flip_y` would give incorrect
results, correct flipping is now supported to both sprites and ui image
nodes thanks to @odecay observation
# GPU Alternative
I create a separate branch attempting to implementing 9 slicing and
tiling directly through the `ui.wgsl` fragment shader. It works but
requires sending more data to the GPU:
- slice border
- tiling factors
And more importantly, the actual quad *scale* which is hard to put in
the shader with the current code, so that would be for a later iteration
[`ScheduleLabel`] derive macro uses "ScheduleName" as the trait name by
mistake. This only affects the error message when a user tries to use
the derive macro on a union type. No other code is affected.
# Objective
- This aims to fix#11755
- After #10812 some pipeline compilation can take more time than before
and all call to `get_render_pipeline` should check the result.
## Solution
- Check `get_render_pipeline` call result for msaa_writeback
- I checked that no other call to `get_render_pipeline` in bevy code
base is missng the checking on the result.
Don't try to create a uniform buffer for light probes if there are no
views.
Fixes the panic on examples that have no views, such as
`touch_input_events`.
# Objective
Fix https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/11657
## Solution
Add a `ReflectKind` enum, add `Reflect::reflect_kind` which returns a
`ReflectKind`, and add `kind` method implementions to `ReflectRef`,
`ReflectMut`, and `ReflectOwned`, which returns a `ReflectKind`.
I also changed `AccessError` to use this new struct instead of it's own
`TypeKind` struct.
---
## Changelog
- Added `ReflectKind`, an enumeration over the kinds of a reflected type
without its data.
- Added `Reflect::reflect_kind` (with default implementation)
- Added implementation for the `kind` method on `ReflectRef`,
`ReflectMut`, and `ReflectOwned` which gives their kind without any
information, as a `ReflectKind`
# Objective
- Fixes#11740
## Solution
- Turned `Mesh::set_indices` into `Mesh::insert_indices` and added
related methods for completeness.
---
## Changelog
- Replaced `Mesh::set_indices(indices: Option<Indices>)` with
`Mesh::insert_indices(indices: Indices)`
- Replaced `Mesh::with_indices(indices: Option<Indices>)` with
`Mesh::with_inserted_indices(indices: Indices)` and
`Mesh::with_removed_indices()` mirroring the API for inserting /
removing attributes.
- Updated the examples and internal uses of the APIs described above.
## Migration Guide
- Use `Mesh::insert_indices` or `Mesh::with_inserted_indices` instead of
`Mesh::set_indices` / `Mesh::with_indices`.
- If you have passed `None` to `Mesh::set_indices` or
`Mesh::with_indices` you should use `Mesh::remove_indices` or
`Mesh::with_removed_indices` instead.
---------
Co-authored-by: François <mockersf@gmail.com>
# Objective
- System `create_surfaces` needs to happen before `prepare_windows` or
we lose one frame at startup
## Solution
- Specify the ordering, remove the set as it doesn't mean anything there
# Objective
Bevy could benefit from *irradiance volumes*, also known as *voxel
global illumination* or simply as light probes (though this term is not
preferred, as multiple techniques can be called light probes).
Irradiance volumes are a form of baked global illumination; they work by
sampling the light at the centers of each voxel within a cuboid. At
runtime, the voxels surrounding the fragment center are sampled and
interpolated to produce indirect diffuse illumination.
## Solution
This is divided into two sections. The first is copied and pasted from
the irradiance volume module documentation and describes the technique.
The second part consists of notes on the implementation.
### Overview
An *irradiance volume* is a cuboid voxel region consisting of
regularly-spaced precomputed samples of diffuse indirect light. They're
ideal if you have a dynamic object such as a character that can move
about
static non-moving geometry such as a level in a game, and you want that
dynamic object to be affected by the light bouncing off that static
geometry.
To use irradiance volumes, you need to precompute, or *bake*, the
indirect
light in your scene. Bevy doesn't currently come with a way to do this.
Fortunately, [Blender] provides a [baking tool] as part of the Eevee
renderer, and its irradiance volumes are compatible with those used by
Bevy.
The [`bevy-baked-gi`] project provides a tool, `export-blender-gi`, that
can
extract the baked irradiance volumes from the Blender `.blend` file and
package them up into a `.ktx2` texture for use by the engine. See the
documentation in the `bevy-baked-gi` project for more details as to this
workflow.
Like all light probes in Bevy, irradiance volumes are 1×1×1 cubes that
can
be arbitrarily scaled, rotated, and positioned in a scene with the
[`bevy_transform::components::Transform`] component. The 3D voxel grid
will
be stretched to fill the interior of the cube, and the illumination from
the
irradiance volume will apply to all fragments within that bounding
region.
Bevy's irradiance volumes are based on Valve's [*ambient cubes*] as used
in
*Half-Life 2* ([Mitchell 2006], slide 27). These encode a single color
of
light from the six 3D cardinal directions and blend the sides together
according to the surface normal.
The primary reason for choosing ambient cubes is to match Blender, so
that
its Eevee renderer can be used for baking. However, they also have some
advantages over the common second-order spherical harmonics approach:
ambient cubes don't suffer from ringing artifacts, they are smaller (6
colors for ambient cubes as opposed to 9 for spherical harmonics), and
evaluation is faster. A smaller basis allows for a denser grid of voxels
with the same storage requirements.
If you wish to use a tool other than `export-blender-gi` to produce the
irradiance volumes, you'll need to pack the irradiance volumes in the
following format. The irradiance volume of resolution *(Rx, Ry, Rz)* is
expected to be a 3D texture of dimensions *(Rx, 2Ry, 3Rz)*. The
unnormalized
texture coordinate *(s, t, p)* of the voxel at coordinate *(x, y, z)*
with
side *S* ∈ *{-X, +X, -Y, +Y, -Z, +Z}* is as follows:
```text
s = x
t = y + ⎰ 0 if S ∈ {-X, -Y, -Z}
⎱ Ry if S ∈ {+X, +Y, +Z}
⎧ 0 if S ∈ {-X, +X}
p = z + ⎨ Rz if S ∈ {-Y, +Y}
⎩ 2Rz if S ∈ {-Z, +Z}
```
Visually, in a left-handed coordinate system with Y up, viewed from the
right, the 3D texture looks like a stacked series of voxel grids, one
for
each cube side, in this order:
| **+X** | **+Y** | **+Z** |
| ------ | ------ | ------ |
| **-X** | **-Y** | **-Z** |
A terminology note: Other engines may refer to irradiance volumes as
*voxel
global illumination*, *VXGI*, or simply as *light probes*. Sometimes
*light
probe* refers to what Bevy calls a reflection probe. In Bevy, *light
probe*
is a generic term that encompasses all cuboid bounding regions that
capture
indirect illumination, whether based on voxels or not.
Note that, if binding arrays aren't supported (e.g. on WebGPU or WebGL
2),
then only the closest irradiance volume to the view will be taken into
account during rendering.
[*ambient cubes*]:
https://advances.realtimerendering.com/s2006/Mitchell-ShadingInValvesSourceEngine.pdf
[Mitchell 2006]:
https://advances.realtimerendering.com/s2006/Mitchell-ShadingInValvesSourceEngine.pdf
[Blender]: http://blender.org/
[baking tool]:
https://docs.blender.org/manual/en/latest/render/eevee/render_settings/indirect_lighting.html
[`bevy-baked-gi`]: https://github.com/pcwalton/bevy-baked-gi
### Implementation notes
This patch generalizes light probes so as to reuse as much code as
possible between irradiance volumes and the existing reflection probes.
This approach was chosen because both techniques share numerous
similarities:
1. Both irradiance volumes and reflection probes are cuboid bounding
regions.
2. Both are responsible for providing baked indirect light.
3. Both techniques involve presenting a variable number of textures to
the shader from which indirect light is sampled. (In the current
implementation, this uses binding arrays.)
4. Both irradiance volumes and reflection probes require gathering and
sorting probes by distance on CPU.
5. Both techniques require the GPU to search through a list of bounding
regions.
6. Both will eventually want to have falloff so that we can smoothly
blend as objects enter and exit the probes' influence ranges. (This is
not implemented yet to keep this patch relatively small and reviewable.)
To do this, we generalize most of the methods in the reflection probes
patch #11366 to be generic over a trait, `LightProbeComponent`. This
trait is implemented by both `EnvironmentMapLight` (for reflection
probes) and `IrradianceVolume` (for irradiance volumes). Using a trait
will allow us to add more types of light probes in the future. In
particular, I highly suspect we will want real-time reflection planes
for mirrors in the future, which can be easily slotted into this
framework.
## Changelog
> This section is optional. If this was a trivial fix, or has no
externally-visible impact, you can delete this section.
### Added
* A new `IrradianceVolume` asset type is available for baked voxelized
light probes. You can bake the global illumination using Blender or
another tool of your choice and use it in Bevy to apply indirect
illumination to dynamic objects.
# Objective
Split up from #11007, fixing most of the remaining work for #10569.
Implement `Meshable` for `Cuboid`, `Sphere`, `Cylinder`, `Capsule`,
`Torus`, and `Plane3d`. This covers all shapes that Bevy has mesh
structs for in `bevy_render::mesh::shapes`.
`Cone` and `ConicalFrustum` are new shapes, so I can add them in a
follow-up, or I could just add them here directly if that's preferrable.
## Solution
Implement `Meshable` for `Cuboid`, `Sphere`, `Cylinder`, `Capsule`,
`Torus`, and `Plane3d`.
The logic is mostly just a copy of the the existing `bevy_render`
shapes, but `Plane3d` has a configurable surface normal that affects the
orientation. Some property names have also been changed to be more
consistent.
The default values differ from the old shapes to make them a bit more
logical:
- Spheres now have a radius of 0.5 instead of 1.0. The default capsule
is equivalent to the default cylinder with the sphere's halves glued on.
- The inner and outer radius of the torus are now 0.5 and 1.0 instead of
0.5 and 1.5 (i.e. the new minor and major radii are 0.25 and 0.75). It's
double the width of the default cuboid, half of its height, and the
default sphere matches the size of the hole.
- `Cuboid` is 1x1x1 by default unlike the dreaded `Box` which is 2x1x1.
Before, with "old" shapes:
![old](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/57632562/733f3dda-258c-4491-8152-9829e056a1a3)
Now, with primitive meshing:
![new](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/57632562/5a1af14f-bb98-401d-82cf-de8072fea4ec)
I only changed the `3d_shapes` example to use primitives for now. I can
change them all in this PR or a follow-up though, whichever way is
preferrable.
### Sphere API
Spheres have had separate `Icosphere` and `UVSphere` structs, but with
primitives we only have one `Sphere`.
We need to handle this with builders:
```rust
// Existing structs
let ico = Mesh::try_from(Icophere::default()).unwrap();
let uv = Mesh::from(UVSphere::default());
// Primitives
let ico = Sphere::default().mesh().ico(5).unwrap();
let uv = Sphere::default().mesh().uv(32, 18);
```
We could add methods on `Sphere` directly to skip calling `.mesh()`.
I also added a `SphereKind` enum that can be used with the `kind`
method:
```rust
let ico = Sphere::default()
.mesh()
.kind(SphereKind::Ico { subdivisions: 8 })
.build();
```
The default mesh for a `Sphere` is an icosphere with 5 subdivisions
(like the default `Icosphere`).
---
## Changelog
- Implement `Meshable` and `Default` for `Cuboid`, `Sphere`, `Cylinder`,
`Capsule`, `Torus`, and `Plane3d`
- Use primitives in `3d_shapes` example
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
- The exported hashtypes are just re-exports from hashbrown, we want to
drop that dependency and (in the future) let the user import their own
choice.
- Fixes#11717
## Solution
- Adding a deprecated tag on the re-exports, so in future releases these
can be safely removed.
# Objective
During my exploratory work on the remote editor, I found a couple of
types that were either not registered, or that were missing
`ReflectDefault`.
## Solution
- Added registration and `ReflectDefault` where applicable
- (Drive by fix) Moved `Option<f32>` registration to `bevy_core` instead
of `bevy_ui`, along with similar types.
---
## Changelog
- Fixed: Registered `FogSettings`, `FogFalloff`,
`ParallaxMappingMethod`, `OpaqueRendererMethod` structs for reflection
- Fixed: Registered `ReflectDefault` trait for `ColorGrading` and
`CascadeShadowConfig` structs
# Objective
Includes the UI node size as a parameter to the UiMaterial shader,
useful for SDF-based rendering, aspect ratio correction and other use
cases.
Fixes#11392
## Solution
Added the node size to the UiMaterial vertex shader params and also to
the data that is passed to the fragment shader.
## Migration Guide
This change should be backwards compatible, using the new field is
optional.
Note to reviewers: render pipelines are a bit outside my comfort zone,
so please make sure I haven't made any mistakes.
---------
Co-authored-by: Rob Parrett <robparrett@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Fixes#11679
## Solution
- Added `IntoSystem::system_type_id` which returns the equivalent of
`system.into_system().type_id()` without construction. This allows for
getting the `TypeId` of functions (a function is an unnamed type and
therefore you cannot call `TypeId::of::<apply_deferred::System>()`)
- Added default implementation of `System::type_id` to ensure
consistency between implementations. Some returned `Self`, while others
were returning an inner value instead. This ensures consistency with
`IntoSystem::system_type_id`.
## Migration Guide
If you use `System::type_id()` on function systems (exclusive or not),
ensure you are comparing its value to other `System::type_id()` calls,
or `IntoSystem::system_type_id()`.
This code wont require any changes, because `IntoSystem`'s are directly
compared to each other.
```rust
fn test_system() {}
let type_id = test_system.type_id();
// ...
// No change required
assert_eq!(test_system.type_id(), type_id);
```
Likewise, this code wont, because `System`'s are directly compared.
```rust
fn test_system() {}
let type_id = IntoSystem::into_system(test_system).type_id();
// ...
// No change required
assert_eq!(IntoSystem::into_system(test_system).type_id(), type_id);
```
The below _does_ require a change, since you're comparing a `System`
type to a `IntoSystem` type.
```rust
fn test_system() {}
// Before
assert_eq!(test_system.type_id(), IntoSystem::into_system(test_system).type_id());
// After
assert_eq!(test_system.system_type_id(), IntoSystem::into_system(test_system).type_id());
```
# Objective
- There are too many `NonSendMarker`
https://docs.rs/bevy/0.12.1/bevy/index.html?search=nonsendmarker
- There should be only one
## Solution
- Use the marker type from bevy_core in bevy_render
---
## Migration Guide
- If you were using `bevy::render::view::NonSendMarker` or
`bevy::render::view:🪟:NonSendMarker`, use
`bevy::core::NonSendMarker` instead
# Objective
Bevy does ridiculous amount of drawcalls, and our batching isn't very
effective because we sort by distance and only batch if we get multiple
of the same object in a row. This can give us slightly better GPU
performance when not using the depth prepass (due to less overdraw), but
ends up being massively CPU bottlenecked due to doing thousands of
unnecessary drawcalls.
## Solution
Change the sort functions to sort by pipeline key then by mesh id for
large performance gains in more realistic scenes than our stress tests.
Pipelines changed:
- Opaque3d
- Opaque3dDeferred
- Opaque3dPrepass
![image](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/177631/8c355256-ad86-4b47-81a0-f3906797fe7e)
---
## Changelog
- Opaque3d drawing order is now sorted by pipeline and mesh, rather than
by distance. This trades off a bit of GPU time in exchange for massively
better batching in scenes that aren't only drawing huge amounts of a
single object.
# Objective
- Change set of systems as I made a mistake in #11672
- Don't block main when not needed
- Fixes#11235
## Solution
- add a run condition so that the system won't run and block main if not
needed
# Objective
- Some places manually use a `bool` /`AtomicBool` to warn once.
## Solution
- Use the `warn_once` macro which internally creates an `AtomicBool`.
Downside: in some case the warning state would have been reset after
recreating the struct carrying the warn state, whereas now it will
always warn only once per program run (For example, if all
`MeshPipeline`s are dropped or the `World` is recreated for
`Local<bool>`/ a `bool` resource, which shouldn't happen over the course
of a standard `App` run).
---
## Changelog
### Removed
- `FontAtlasWarning` has been removed, but the corresponding warning is
still emitted.
# Objective
We currently over/underpromise hash stability:
- `HashMap`/`HashSet` use `BuildHasherDefault<AHasher>` instead of
`RandomState`. As a result, the hash is stable within the same run.
- [aHash isn't stable between devices (and
versions)](https://github.com/tkaitchuck/ahash?tab=readme-ov-file#goals-and-non-goals),
yet it's used for `StableHashMap`/`StableHashSet`
- the specialized hashmaps are stable
Interestingly, `StableHashMap`/`StableHashSet` aren't used by Bevy
itself (anymore).
## Solution
Add/fix documentation
## Alternatives
For `StableHashMap`/`StableHashSet`:
- remove them
- revive #7107
---
## Changelog
- added iteration stability guarantees for different hashmaps
This is just a minor fix extracted from #11697
A logic error. We tried to close the polygon shape, if the user
specifies an
unclosed polygon. The closing linestring previously didn't close the
polygon
though, but instead added a zero length line at the last coordinate.
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
I wanted to pass in a `String` to `DynamicStruct::insert_boxed` but it
took in a &str. That's fine but I also saw that it immediately converted
the `&str` to a `String`. Which is wasteful.
## Solution
I made `DynamicStruct::insert_boxed` take in a `impl Into<Cow<str>>`.
Same for `DynamicStruct::insert`.
---
## Changelog
- `DynamicStruct::insert_boxed` and `DynamicStruct::insert` now support
taking in anything that implements `impl Into<Cow<str>>`.
# Objective
Send `SceneInstanceReady` only once per scene.
## Solution
I assume that this was not intentional.
So I just changed it to only be sent once per scene.
---
## Changelog
### Fixed
- Fixed `SceneInstanceReady` being emitted for every `Entity` in a
scene.
# Objective
- Pipeline compilation is slow and blocks the frame
- Closes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/8224
## Solution
- Compile pipelines in a Task on the AsyncComputeTaskPool
---
## Changelog
- Render/compute pipeline compilation is now done asynchronously over
multiple frames when the multi-threaded feature is enabled and on
non-wasm and non-macOS platforms
- Added `CachedPipelineState::Creating`
- Added `PipelineCache::block_on_render_pipeline()`
- Added `bevy_utils::futures::check_ready`
- Added `bevy_render/multi-threaded` cargo feature
## Migration Guide
- Match on the new `Creating` variant for exhaustive matches of
`CachedPipelineState`
# Objective
- Fixes #4188, make users could set application ID for bevy apps.
## Solution
- Add `name` field to `bevy:🪟:Window`. Specifying this field adds
different properties to the window: application ID on `Wayland`,
`WM_CLASS` on `X11`, or window class name on Windows. It has no effect
on other platforms.
---
## Changelog
### Added
- Add `name` to `bevy:🪟:Window`.
## Migration Guide
- Set the `bevy_window::Window`'s `name` field when needed:
```rust
App::new()
.add_plugins(DefaultPlugins.set(WindowPlugin {
primary_window: Some(Window {
title: "I am a window!".into(),
name: Some("SpaceGameCompany.SpaceShooter".into()),
..default()
}),
..default()
}))
.run();
```
---------
Co-authored-by: François <mockersf@gmail.com>
# Objective
Fixes#11653
## Solution
- Just added the formats to the docstring, I played around with having
the format appear in the type somehow so that it didn't need to be
written manually in the docstring but it ended up being more trouble
than it was worth.
Co-authored-by: James Liu <contact@jamessliu.com>
Frustum computation is nontrivial amount of code private in
`update_frusta` system.
Make it public.
This is needed to decide which entities to spawn/despawn in `Update`
based on camera changes. But if `Update` also changed camera, frustum is
not yet recomputed.
Technically it is probably possible to run an iteration of
`update_frusta` system by a user in `Update` schedule after propagating
`GlobalTransform` to the cameras, but it is easier to just compute
frustum manually using API added in this PR.
Also replace two places where this code is used.
---------
Co-authored-by: vero <email@atlasdostal.com>
# Objective
- (Partially) Fixes#9904
- Acts on #9910
## Solution
- Deprecated the relevant methods from `Query`, cascading changes as
required across Bevy.
---
## Changelog
- Deprecated `QueryState::get_component_unchecked_mut` method
- Deprecated `Query::get_component` method
- Deprecated `Query::get_component_mut` method
- Deprecated `Query::component` method
- Deprecated `Query::component_mut` method
- Deprecated `Query::get_component_unchecked_mut` method
## Migration Guide
### `QueryState::get_component_unchecked_mut`
Use `QueryState::get_unchecked_manual` and select for the exact
component based on the structure of the exact query as required.
### `Query::(get_)component(_unchecked)(_mut)`
Use `Query::get` and select for the exact component based on the
structure of the exact query as required.
- For mutable access (`_mut`), use `Query::get_mut`
- For unchecked access (`_unchecked`), use `Query::get_unchecked`
- For panic variants (non-`get_`), add `.unwrap()`
## Notes
- `QueryComponentError` can be removed once these deprecated methods are
also removed. Due to an interaction with `thiserror`'s derive macro, it
is not marked as deprecated.
Use `TypeIdMap<T>` instead of `HashMap<TypeId, T>`
- ~~`TypeIdMap` was in `bevy_ecs`. I've kept it there because of
#11478~~
- ~~I haven't swapped `bevy_reflect` over because it doesn't depend on
`bevy_ecs`, but I'd also be happy with moving `TypeIdMap` to
`bevy_utils` and then adding a dependency to that~~
- ~~this is a slight change in the public API of
`DrawFunctionsInternal`, does this need to go in the changelog?~~
## Changelog
- moved `TypeIdMap` to `bevy_utils`
- changed `DrawFunctionsInternal::indices` to `TypeIdMap`
## Migration Guide
- `TypeIdMap` now lives in `bevy_utils`
- `DrawFunctionsInternal::indices` now uses a `TypeIdMap`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Update `tracing-tracy`.
- Closes#11598.
## Solution
- Bump `tracing-tracy` to 0.11.0 and `tracy-client` alongside it to
0.17.0 to avoid duplicating that dependency in the deps tree.
- `TracyLayer` is now configurable on creation, so use the default
config.
---------
Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com>
Co-authored-by: dependabot[bot] <49699333+dependabot[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
Currently the `missing_docs` lint is allowed-by-default and enabled at
crate level when their documentations is complete (see #3492).
This PR proposes to inverse this logic by making `missing_docs`
warn-by-default and mark crates with imcomplete docs allowed.
## Solution
Makes `missing_docs` warn at workspace level and allowed at crate level
when the docs is imcomplete.
# Objective
- Allow prepare windows to run off of the main thread on all platforms.
- Fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/9964 on all platforms.
## Solution
- Running `prepare_windows` on the main thread on apple platforms is
only mandatory to create surface, which is only needed during window
creation. Split that part into its own system that happens before
`prepare_windows`
- Tested on macOS and iOS
---
## Changelog
- Allow prepare windows to run off main thread on all platforms.
# Objective
Add interactive system debugging capabilities to bevy, providing
step/break/continue style capabilities to running system schedules.
* Original implementation: #8063
- `ignore_stepping()` everywhere was too much complexity
* Schedule-config & Resource discussion: #8168
- Decided on selective adding of Schedules & Resource-based control
## Solution
Created `Stepping` Resource. This resource can be used to enable
stepping on a per-schedule basis. Systems within schedules can be
individually configured to:
* AlwaysRun: Ignore any stepping state and run every frame
* NeverRun: Never run while stepping is enabled
- this allows for disabling of systems while debugging
* Break: If we're running the full frame, stop before this system is run
Stepping provides two modes of execution that reflect traditional
debuggers:
* Step-based: Only execute one system at a time
* Continue/Break: Run all systems, but stop before running a system
marked as Break
### Demo
https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/857742/233630981-99f3bbda-9ca6-4cc4-a00f-171c4946dc47.mov
Breakout has been modified to use Stepping. The game runs normally for a
couple of seconds, then stepping is enabled and the game appears to
pause. A list of Schedules & Systems appears with a cursor at the first
System in the list. The demo then steps forward full frames using the
spacebar until the ball is about to hit a brick. Then we step system by
system as the ball impacts a brick, showing the cursor moving through
the individual systems. Finally the demo switches back to frame stepping
as the ball changes course.
### Limitations
Due to architectural constraints in bevy, there are some cases systems
stepping will not function as a user would expect.
#### Event-driven systems
Stepping does not support systems that are driven by `Event`s as events
are flushed after 1-2 frames. Although game systems are not running
while stepping, ignored systems are still running every frame, so events
will be flushed.
This presents to the user as stepping the event-driven system never
executes the system. It does execute, but the events have already been
flushed.
This can be resolved by changing event handling to use a buffer for
events, and only dropping an event once all readers have read it.
The work-around to allow these systems to properly execute during
stepping is to have them ignore stepping:
`app.add_systems(event_driven_system.ignore_stepping())`. This was done
in the breakout example to ensure sound played even while stepping.
#### Conditional Systems
When a system is stepped, it is given an opportunity to run. If the
conditions of the system say it should not run, it will not.
Similar to Event-driven systems, if a system is conditional, and that
condition is only true for a very small time window, then stepping the
system may not execute the system. This includes depending on any sort
of external clock.
This exhibits to the user as the system not always running when it is
stepped.
A solution to this limitation is to ensure any conditions are consistent
while stepping is enabled. For example, all systems that modify any
state the condition uses should also enable stepping.
#### State-transition Systems
Stepping is configured on the per-`Schedule` level, requiring the user
to have a `ScheduleLabel`.
To support state-transition systems, bevy generates needed schedules
dynamically. Currently it’s very difficult (if not impossible, I haven’t
verified) for the user to get the labels for these schedules.
Without ready access to the dynamically generated schedules, and a
resolution for the `Event` lifetime, **stepping of the state-transition
systems is not supported**
---
## Changelog
- `Schedule::run()` updated to consult `Stepping` Resource to determine
which Systems to run each frame
- Added `Schedule.label` as a `BoxedSystemLabel`, along with supporting
`Schedule::set_label()` and `Schedule::label()` methods
- `Stepping` needed to know which `Schedule` was running, and prior to
this PR, `Schedule` didn't track its own label
- Would have preferred to add `Schedule::with_label()` and remove
`Schedule::new()`, but this PR touches enough already
- Added calls to `Schedule.set_label()` to `App` and `World` as needed
- Added `Stepping` resource
- Added `Stepping::begin_frame()` system to `MainSchedulePlugin`
- Run before `Main::run_main()`
- Notifies any `Stepping` Resource a new render frame is starting
## Migration Guide
- Add a call to `Schedule::set_label()` for any custom `Schedule`
- This is only required if the `Schedule` will be stepped
---------
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
# Objective
- In #9822 I forgot to disable auto sync points on the Extract Schedule.
We want to do this because the Commands on the Extract Schedule should
be applied on the render thread.
# Objective
- Allow prepare windows to run off of the main thread on platforms that
allow it.
- Fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/9964 on most
platforms.
## Solution
- Conditionally compile prepare windows for different OS's
- Seems like it's only the call to `create_surface` that needs to run on
the main thread here.
- I've only tested this on windows, but I do see prepare windows running
on other threads.
---
## Changelog
- Allow prepare windows to run off main thread on platforms that allow
it.
# Objective
Allow animation of types other than translation, scale, and rotation on
`Transforms`.
## Solution
Add a base trait for all values that can be animated by the animation
system. This provides the basic operations for sampling and blending
animation values for more than just translation, rotation, and scale.
This implements part of bevyengine/rfcs#51, but is missing the
implementations for `Range<T>` and `Color`. This also does not fully
integrate with the existing `AnimationPlayer` yet, just setting up the
trait.
---------
Co-authored-by: Kirillov Kirill <kirusfg@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: François <mockersf@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: irate <JustTheCoolDude@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecil@gmail.com>
# Objective
Fix an issue where events are not being dropped after being read. I
believe #10077 introduced this issue. The code currently works as
follows:
1. `EventUpdateSignal` is **shared for all event types**
2. During the fixed update phase, `EventUpdateSignal` is set to true
3. `event_update_system`, **unique per event type**, runs to update
Events<T>
4. `event_update_system` reads value of `EventUpdateSignal` to check if
it should update, and then **resets** the value to false
If there are multiple event types, the first `event_update_system` run
will reset the shared `EventUpdateSignal` signal, preventing other
events from being cleared.
## Solution
I've updated the code to have separate signals per event type and added
a shared signal to notify all systems that the time plugin is installed.
## Changelog
- Fixed bug where events were not being dropped
The PR is in a reviewable state now in the sense that the basic
implementations are there. There are still some ToDos that I'm aware of:
- [x] docs for all the new structs and traits
- [x] implement `Default` and derive other useful traits for the new
structs
- [x] Take a look at the notes again (Do this after a first round of
reviews)
- [x] Take care of the repetition in the circle drawing functions
---
# Objective
- TLDR: This PR enables us to quickly draw all the newly added
primitives from `bevy_math` in immediate mode with gizmos
- Addresses #10571
## Solution
- This implements the first design idea I had that covered everything
that was mentioned in the Issue
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/10571#issuecomment-1863646197
---
## Caveats
- I added the `Primitive(2/3)d` impls for `Direction(2/3)d` to make them
work with the current solution. We could impose less strict requirements
for the gizmoable objects and remove the impls afterwards if the
community doesn't like the current approach.
---
## Changelog
- implement capabilities to draw ellipses on the gizmo in general (this
was required to have some code which is able to draw the ellipse
primitive)
- refactored circle drawing code to use the more general ellipse drawing
code to keep code duplication low
- implement `Primitive2d` for `Direction2d` and impl `Primitive3d` for
`Direction3d`
- implement trait to draw primitives with specialized details with
gizmos
- `GizmoPrimitive2d` for all the 2D primitives
- `GizmoPrimitive3d` for all the 3D primitives
- (question while writing this: Does it actually matter if we split this
in 2D and 3D? I guess it could be useful in the future if we do
something based on the main rendering mode even though atm it's kinda
useless)
---
---------
Co-authored-by: nothendev <borodinov.ilya@gmail.com>
# Objective
Glyph positions don't account for padding added to the font texture
atlas, resulting in them being off by one physical pixel in both axis.
## Example
```rust
use bevy::{
prelude::*, window::WindowResolution
};
fn main() {
App::new()
.add_plugins(DefaultPlugins.set(WindowPlugin {
primary_window: Some(Window {
resolution: WindowResolution::default().with_scale_factor_override(1.),
..Default::default()
}),
..Default::default()
}))
.add_systems(Startup, setup)
.run();
}
fn setup(mut commands: Commands, asset_server: Res<AssetServer>) {
commands.spawn(Camera2dBundle::default());
commands.spawn(
TextBundle::from_section(
"QQQQQ",
TextStyle {
font: asset_server.load("FiraMono-Medium.ttf"),
font_size: 14.0,
..default()
},
)
.with_style(Style {
left:Val::Px(10.),
top: Val::Px(10.),
..default()
})
.with_background_color(Color::RED)
);
}
```
<img width="350" alt="QQQQQ-bad"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/27962798/6a509aee-64c8-4ee8-a8c1-77ee65355898">
The coordinates are off by one in physical coordinates, not logical. So
the difference only becomes obvious with `UiScale` and the window scale
factor set to low values.
## Solution
Translate glyph positions by -1 in both axes.
<img width="300" alt="QQQQQ-good"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/27962798/16e3f6d9-1223-48e0-9fdd-b682a3e8ade4">
---
## Changelog
* Translate the positions for each glyph by -1 in both axes in
`bevy_text::glyph_brush::process_glyphs`
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
Drawing a `Gizmos::circle` whose normal is derived from a Transform's
local axes now requires converting a Vec3 to a Direction3d and
unwrapping the result, and I think we shold move the conversion into
Bevy.
## Solution
We can make
`Transform::{left,right,up,down,forward,back,local_x,local_y,local_z}`
return a Direction3d, because they know that their results will be of
finite non-zero length (roughly 1.0).
---
## Changelog
`Transform::up()` and similar functions now return `Direction3d` instead
of `Vec3`.
## Migration Guide
Callers of `Transform::up()` and similar functions may have to
dereference the returned `Direction3d` to get to the inner `Vec3`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Joona Aalto <jondolf.dev@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Address #10338
## Solution
- When implementing specular and diffuse transmission, I inadvertently
introduced a performance regression. On high-end hardware it is barely
noticeable, but **for lower-end hardware it can be pretty brutal**. If I
understand it correctly, this is likely due to use of masking by the GPU
to implement control flow, which means that you still pay the price for
the branches you don't take;
- To avoid that, this PR introduces new shader defs (controlled via
`StandardMaterialKey`) that conditionally include the transmission
logic, that way the shader code for both types of transmission isn't
even sent to the GPU if you're not using them;
- This PR also renames ~~`STANDARDMATERIAL_NORMAL_MAP`~~ to
`STANDARD_MATERIAL_NORMAL_MAP` for consistency with the naming
convention used elsewhere in the codebase. (Drive-by fix)
---
## Changelog
- Added new shader defs, set when using transmission in the
`StandardMaterial`:
- `STANDARD_MATERIAL_SPECULAR_TRANSMISSION`;
- `STANDARD_MATERIAL_DIFFUSE_TRANSMISSION`;
- `STANDARD_MATERIAL_SPECULAR_OR_DIFFUSE_TRANSMISSION`.
- Fixed performance regression caused by the introduction of
transmission, by gating transmission shader logic behind the newly
introduced shader defs;
- Renamed ~~`STANDARDMATERIAL_NORMAL_MAP`~~ to
`STANDARD_MATERIAL_NORMAL_MAP` for consistency;
## Migration Guide
- If you were using `#ifdef STANDARDMATERIAL_NORMAL_MAP` on your shader
code, make sure to update the name to `STANDARD_MATERIAL_NORMAL_MAP`;
(with an underscore between `STANDARD` and `MATERIAL`)
# Objective
- `RayTest` vs `AabbCast` and `CircleCast` is inconsistent
## Solution
- Renaming the other two would only make the name more confusing, so we
rename `RayTest2d/3d` to `RayCast2d/3d`
# Objective
- `AssetTransformer` provides an input asset, and output an asset, but
provides no access to the `LabeledAsset`'s created by the `AssetLoader`.
Labeled sub assets are an extremely important piece of many assets, Gltf
in particular, and without them the amount of transformation on an asset
is limited. In order for `AssetTransformer`'s to be useful, they need to
have access to these sub assets.
- LabeledAsset's loaded by `AssetLoader`s are provided to `AssetSaver`s
in the `LoadAndSave` process, but the `LoadTransformAndSave` process
drops these values in the transform stage, and so `AssetSaver` is given
none.
- Fixes#11606
Ideally the AssetTransformer should not ignore labeled sub assets, and
they should be kept at least for the AssetSaver
## Solution
- I created a new struct similar to `SavedAsset` named
`TransformedAsset` which holds the input asset, and the HashMap of
`LabeledAsset`s. The transform function now takes as input a
`TransformedAsset`, and returns a `TransformedAsset::<AssetOutput>`.
This gives the transform function access to the labeled sub assets
created by the `AssetLoader`.
- I also created `TransformedSubAsset` which holds mutable references to
a sub asset and that sub assets HashMap of `LabeledAsset`s. This allows
you to travers the Tree of `LabeledAsset`s by reference relatively
easily.
- The `LoadTransformAndSave` processor was then reworked to use the new
structs, stopping the `LabeledAsset`s from being dropped.
---
## Changelog
- Created TransformedAsset struct and TransformedSubAsset struct.
- Changed `get_untyped_handle` to return a `UntypedHandle` directly
rather than a reference and added `get_handle` as a typed variant in
SavedAsset and TransformedAsset
- Added `SavedAsset::from_transformed` as a constructor from a
`TransformedAsset`
- Switched LoadTransformAndSave process code to work with new
`TransformedAsset` type
- Added a `ProcessError` for `AssetTransformer` in process.rs
- Switched `AssetTransformer::transform` to use `TransformedAsset` as
input and output.
- Switched `AssetTransformer` to use a `BoxedFuture` like `AssetLoader`
and `AssetSaver` to allow for async transformation code.
- Updated AssetTransformer example to use new structure.
# Objective
It's often necessary to rotate directions, but it currently has to be
done like this:
```rust
Direction3d::new_unchecked(quat * *direction)
```
It'd be nice if you could rotate `Direction3d` directly:
```rust
quat * direction
```
## Solution
Implement `Mul<Direction3d>` for `Quat` ~~and the other way around.~~
(Glam doesn't impl `Mul<Quat>` or `MulAssign<Quat>` for `Vec3`)
The quaternion must be a unit quaternion to keep the direction
normalized, so there is a `debug_assert!` to be sure. Almost all `Quat`
constructors produce unit quaternions, so there should only be issues if
doing something like `quat + quat` instead of `quat * quat`, using
`Quat::from_xyzw` directly, or when you have significant enough drift
caused by e.g. physics simulation that doesn't normalize rotation. In
general, these would probably cause unexpected results anyway.
I also moved tests around slightly to make `dim2` and `dim3` more
consistent (`dim3` had *two* separate `test` modules for some reason).
In the future, we'll probably want a `Rotation2d` type that would
support the same for `Direction2d`. I considered implementing
`Mul<Mat2>` for `Direction2d`, but that would probably be more
questionable since `Mat2` isn't as clearly associated with rotations as
`Quat` is.
# Objective
I'm working on a developer console plugin, and I wanted to get a
field/index of a struct/list/tuple. My command parser already parses
member expressions and all that, so I wanted to construct a `ParsedPath`
manually, but it's all private.
## Solution
Make the internals of `ParsedPath` public and add documentation for
everything, and I changed the boxed slice inside `ParsedPath` to a
vector for more flexibility.
I also did a bunch of code cleanup. Improving documentation, error
messages, code, type names, etc.
---
## Changelog
- Added the ability to manually create `ParsedPath`s from their
elements, without the need of string parsing.
- Improved `ReflectPath` error handling.
## Migration Guide
- `bevy::reflect::AccessError` has been refactored.
That should be it I think, everything else that was changed was private
before this PR.
---------
Co-authored-by: Nicola Papale <nicopap@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
- Deriving `Reflect` for some public ChangeDetection/Tick structs in
bevy_ecs
---------
Co-authored-by: Charles Bournhonesque <cbournhonesque@snapchat.com>
# Objective
- Add a basic form of shapecasting for bounding volumes
## Solution
- Implement AabbCast2d, AabbCast3d, BoundingCircleCast, and
BoundingSphereCast
- These are really just raycasts, but they modify the volumes the ray is
casting against
- The tests are slightly simpler, since they just use the raycast code
for the heavy lifting
# Objective
- Addresses **Support processing and loading files without extensions**
from #9714
- Addresses **More runtime loading configuration** from #9714
- Fixes#367
- Fixes#10703
## Solution
`AssetServer::load::<A>` and `AssetServer::load_with_settings::<A>` can
now use the `Asset` type parameter `A` to select a registered
`AssetLoader` without inspecting the provided `AssetPath`. This change
cascades onto `LoadContext::load` and `LoadContext::load_with_settings`.
This allows the loading of assets which have incorrect or ambiguous file
extensions.
```rust
// Allow the type to be inferred by context
let handle = asset_server.load("data/asset_no_extension");
// Hint the type through the handle
let handle: Handle<CustomAsset> = asset_server.load("data/asset_no_extension");
// Explicit through turbofish
let handle = asset_server.load::<CustomAsset>("data/asset_no_extension");
```
Since a single `AssetPath` no longer maps 1:1 with an `Asset`, I've also
modified how assets are loaded to permit multiple asset types to be
loaded from a single path. This allows for two different `AssetLoaders`
(which return different types of assets) to both load a single path (if
requested).
```rust
// Uses GltfLoader
let model = asset_server.load::<Gltf>("cube.gltf");
// Hypothetical Blob loader for data transmission (for example)
let blob = asset_server.load::<Blob>("cube.gltf");
```
As these changes are reflected in the `LoadContext` as well as the
`AssetServer`, custom `AssetLoaders` can also take advantage of this
behaviour to create more complex assets.
---
## Change Log
- Updated `custom_asset` example to demonstrate extension-less assets.
- Added `AssetServer::get_handles_untyped` and Added
`AssetServer::get_path_ids`
## Notes
As a part of that refactor, I chose to store `AssetLoader`s (within
`AssetLoaders`) using a `HashMap<TypeId, ...>` instead of a `Vec<...>`.
My reasoning for this was I needed to add a relationship between `Asset`
`TypeId`s and the `AssetLoader`, so instead of having a `Vec` and a
`HashMap`, I combined the two, removing the `usize` index from the
adjacent maps.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
The whole `Cow<'static, str>` naming for nodes and subgraphs in
`RenderGraph` is a mess.
## Solution
Replaces hardcoded and potentially overlapping strings for nodes and
subgraphs inside `RenderGraph` with bevy's labelsystem.
---
## Changelog
* Two new labels: `RenderLabel` and `RenderSubGraph`.
* Replaced all uses for hardcoded strings with those labels
* Moved `Taa` label from its own mod to all the other `Labels3d`
* `add_render_graph_edges` now needs a tuple of labels
* Moved `ScreenSpaceAmbientOcclusion` label from its own mod with the
`ShadowPass` label to `LabelsPbr`
* Removed `NodeId`
* Renamed `Edges.id()` to `Edges.label()`
* Removed `NodeLabel`
* Changed examples according to the new label system
* Introduced new `RenderLabel`s: `Labels2d`, `Labels3d`, `LabelsPbr`,
`LabelsUi`
* Introduced new `RenderSubGraph`s: `SubGraph2d`, `SubGraph3d`,
`SubGraphUi`
* Removed `Reflect` and `Default` derive from `CameraRenderGraph`
component struct
* Improved some error messages
## Migration Guide
For Nodes and SubGraphs, instead of using hardcoded strings, you now
pass labels, which can be derived with structs and enums.
```rs
// old
#[derive(Default)]
struct MyRenderNode;
impl MyRenderNode {
pub const NAME: &'static str = "my_render_node"
}
render_app
.add_render_graph_node::<ViewNodeRunner<MyRenderNode>>(
core_3d::graph::NAME,
MyRenderNode::NAME,
)
.add_render_graph_edges(
core_3d::graph::NAME,
&[
core_3d::graph::node::TONEMAPPING,
MyRenderNode::NAME,
core_3d::graph::node::END_MAIN_PASS_POST_PROCESSING,
],
);
// new
use bevy::core_pipeline::core_3d::graph::{Labels3d, SubGraph3d};
#[derive(Debug, Hash, PartialEq, Eq, Clone, RenderLabel)]
pub struct MyRenderLabel;
#[derive(Default)]
struct MyRenderNode;
render_app
.add_render_graph_node::<ViewNodeRunner<MyRenderNode>>(
SubGraph3d,
MyRenderLabel,
)
.add_render_graph_edges(
SubGraph3d,
(
Labels3d::Tonemapping,
MyRenderLabel,
Labels3d::EndMainPassPostProcessing,
),
);
```
### SubGraphs
#### in `bevy_core_pipeline::core_2d::graph`
| old string-based path | new label |
|-----------------------|-----------|
| `NAME` | `SubGraph2d` |
#### in `bevy_core_pipeline::core_3d::graph`
| old string-based path | new label |
|-----------------------|-----------|
| `NAME` | `SubGraph3d` |
#### in `bevy_ui::render`
| old string-based path | new label |
|-----------------------|-----------|
| `draw_ui_graph::NAME` | `graph::SubGraphUi` |
### Nodes
#### in `bevy_core_pipeline::core_2d::graph`
| old string-based path | new label |
|-----------------------|-----------|
| `node::MSAA_WRITEBACK` | `Labels2d::MsaaWriteback` |
| `node::MAIN_PASS` | `Labels2d::MainPass` |
| `node::BLOOM` | `Labels2d::Bloom` |
| `node::TONEMAPPING` | `Labels2d::Tonemapping` |
| `node::FXAA` | `Labels2d::Fxaa` |
| `node::UPSCALING` | `Labels2d::Upscaling` |
| `node::CONTRAST_ADAPTIVE_SHARPENING` |
`Labels2d::ConstrastAdaptiveSharpening` |
| `node::END_MAIN_PASS_POST_PROCESSING` |
`Labels2d::EndMainPassPostProcessing` |
#### in `bevy_core_pipeline::core_3d::graph`
| old string-based path | new label |
|-----------------------|-----------|
| `node::MSAA_WRITEBACK` | `Labels3d::MsaaWriteback` |
| `node::PREPASS` | `Labels3d::Prepass` |
| `node::DEFERRED_PREPASS` | `Labels3d::DeferredPrepass` |
| `node::COPY_DEFERRED_LIGHTING_ID` | `Labels3d::CopyDeferredLightingId`
|
| `node::END_PREPASSES` | `Labels3d::EndPrepasses` |
| `node::START_MAIN_PASS` | `Labels3d::StartMainPass` |
| `node::MAIN_OPAQUE_PASS` | `Labels3d::MainOpaquePass` |
| `node::MAIN_TRANSMISSIVE_PASS` | `Labels3d::MainTransmissivePass` |
| `node::MAIN_TRANSPARENT_PASS` | `Labels3d::MainTransparentPass` |
| `node::END_MAIN_PASS` | `Labels3d::EndMainPass` |
| `node::BLOOM` | `Labels3d::Bloom` |
| `node::TONEMAPPING` | `Labels3d::Tonemapping` |
| `node::FXAA` | `Labels3d::Fxaa` |
| `node::UPSCALING` | `Labels3d::Upscaling` |
| `node::CONTRAST_ADAPTIVE_SHARPENING` |
`Labels3d::ContrastAdaptiveSharpening` |
| `node::END_MAIN_PASS_POST_PROCESSING` |
`Labels3d::EndMainPassPostProcessing` |
#### in `bevy_core_pipeline`
| old string-based path | new label |
|-----------------------|-----------|
| `taa::draw_3d_graph::node::TAA` | `Labels3d::Taa` |
#### in `bevy_pbr`
| old string-based path | new label |
|-----------------------|-----------|
| `draw_3d_graph::node::SHADOW_PASS` | `LabelsPbr::ShadowPass` |
| `ssao::draw_3d_graph::node::SCREEN_SPACE_AMBIENT_OCCLUSION` |
`LabelsPbr::ScreenSpaceAmbientOcclusion` |
| `deferred::DEFFERED_LIGHTING_PASS` | `LabelsPbr::DeferredLightingPass`
|
#### in `bevy_render`
| old string-based path | new label |
|-----------------------|-----------|
| `main_graph::node::CAMERA_DRIVER` | `graph::CameraDriverLabel` |
#### in `bevy_ui::render`
| old string-based path | new label |
|-----------------------|-----------|
| `draw_ui_graph::node::UI_PASS` | `graph::LabelsUi::UiPass` |
---
## Future work
* Make `NodeSlot`s also use types. Ideally, we have an enum with unit
variants where every variant resembles one slot. Then to make sure you
are using the right slot enum and make rust-analyzer play nicely with
it, we should make an associated type in the `Node` trait. With today's
system, we can introduce 3rd party slots to a node, and i wasnt sure if
this was used, so I didn't do this in this PR.
## Unresolved Questions
When looking at the `post_processing` example, we have a struct for the
label and a struct for the node, this seems like boilerplate and on
discord, @IceSentry (sowy for the ping)
[asked](https://discord.com/channels/691052431525675048/743663924229963868/1175197016947699742)
if a node could automatically introduce a label (or i completely
misunderstood that). The problem with that is, that nodes like
`EmptyNode` exist multiple times *inside the same* (sub)graph, so there
we need extern labels to distinguish between those. Hopefully we can
find a way to reduce boilerplate and still have everything unique. For
EmptyNode, we could maybe make a macro which implements an "empty node"
for a type, but for nodes which contain code and need to be present
multiple times, this could get nasty...
# Objective
- [`thiserror`](https://docs.rs/thiserror/) is used to derive the error
type on `bevy_dynamic_plugin`'s
[`DynamicPluginLoadError`](https://docs.rs/bevy_dynamic_plugin/latest/bevy_dynamic_plugin/enum.DynamicPluginLoadError.html).
- It is an enum where each variant wraps a `libloading` error type.
- `thiserror` supports marking this internal error types as `#[source]`
so it can automatically fill out the
[`Error::source`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/error/trait.Error.html#method.source)
method.
- This allows other error handling libraries to get more information
about the error than what Bevy by default provides. It increases
interoperability between libraries.
## Solution
- Mark the internal `libloading::Error` of `DynamicPluginLoadError` with
`#[source]`.
---
## Changelog
- Implemented the
[`Error::source`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/error/trait.Error.html#method.source)
method for
[`DynamicPluginLoadError`](https://docs.rs/bevy_dynamic_plugin/latest/bevy_dynamic_plugin/enum.DynamicPluginLoadError.html).
---
Here is the output from `cargo-expand` before and after the change.
```rust
// Before
impl Error for DynamicPluginLoadError {}
```
```rust
// After
impl Error for DynamicPluginLoadError {
fn source(&self) -> Option<&(dyn Error + 'static)> {
use thiserror::__private::AsDynError as _;
match self {
DynamicPluginLoadError::Library { 0: source, .. } => {
Some(source.as_dyn_error())
}
DynamicPluginLoadError::Plugin { 0: source, .. } => {
Some(source.as_dyn_error())
}
}
}
}
```
# Objective
- SavedAsset's iter_labels returns ```&str```, however accessing
LabeledAssets requires ```CowArc<'static, str>```
- Although SavedAsset holds UntypedHandles in its hashmap of
LabeledAssets, they are inaccessible as LabeledAssets are casted to
SavedAsset or ErasedLoadedAsset, which don't contain their
UntypedHandles
- Adresses #11609
## Solution
- Used Trait bounds to allow for either ```CowArc<'static, str>``` or
```&str``` to be used as a label in get_labeled and get_erased_labeled.
- Added method get_untyped_handle to get UntypedHandle from the
LabeledAsset.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
- `impl_reflect_struct` doesn't cover tuple structs or enums.
- Problem brought up [on
Discord](https://discord.com/channels/691052431525675048/1002362493634629796/1190623345817960463).
## Solution
- Replaces `impl_reflect_struct` with the new `impl_reflect` which works
for tuple structs and enums too.
---
## Changelog
- Internally in `bevy_reflect_derive`, we have a new `ReflectProvenance`
type which is composed of `ReflectTraitToImpl` and `ReflectSource`.
- `impl_reflect_struct` is gone and totally superseded by
`impl_reflect`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Gino Valente <49806985+MrGVSV@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
- Allow `HashMap<Cow<'_, T>, _>` to use `&T` as key for `HashMap::get`
- Makes `CowArc` more like `Cow`
## Solution
Implements `Borrow<T>` and `AsRef<T>` for `CowArc<T>`.
# Objective
Right now, all assets in the main world get extracted and prepared in
the render world (if the asset's using the RenderAssetPlugin). This is
unfortunate for two cases:
1. **TextureAtlas** / **FontAtlas**: This one's huge. The individual
`Image` assets that make up the atlas are cloned and prepared
individually when there's no reason for them to be. The atlas textures
are built on the CPU in the main world. *There can be hundreds of images
that get prepared for rendering only not to be used.*
2. If one loads an Image and needs to transform it in a system before
rendering it, kind of like the [decompression
example](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/blob/main/examples/asset/asset_decompression.rs#L120),
there's a price paid for extracting & preparing the asset that's not
intended to be rendered yet.
------
* References #10520
* References #1782
## Solution
This changes the `RenderAssetPersistencePolicy` enum to bitflags. I felt
that the objective with the parameter is so similar in nature to wgpu's
[`TextureUsages`](https://docs.rs/wgpu/latest/wgpu/struct.TextureUsages.html)
and
[`BufferUsages`](https://docs.rs/wgpu/latest/wgpu/struct.BufferUsages.html),
that it may as well be just like that.
```rust
// This asset only needs to be in the main world. Don't extract and prepare it.
RenderAssetUsages::MAIN_WORLD
// Keep this asset in the main world and
RenderAssetUsages::MAIN_WORLD | RenderAssetUsages::RENDER_WORLD
// This asset is only needed in the render world. Remove it from the asset server once extracted.
RenderAssetUsages::RENDER_WORLD
```
### Alternate Solution
I considered introducing a third field to `RenderAssetPersistencePolicy`
enum:
```rust
enum RenderAssetPersistencePolicy {
/// Keep the asset in the main world after extracting to the render world.
Keep,
/// Remove the asset from the main world after extracting to the render world.
Unload,
/// This doesn't need to be in the render world at all.
NoExtract, // <-----
}
```
Functional, but this seemed like shoehorning. Another option is renaming
the enum to something like:
```rust
enum RenderAssetExtractionPolicy {
/// Extract the asset and keep it in the main world.
Extract,
/// Remove the asset from the main world after extracting to the render world.
ExtractAndUnload,
/// This doesn't need to be in the render world at all.
NoExtract,
}
```
I think this last one could be a good option if the bitflags are too
clunky.
## Migration Guide
* `RenderAssetPersistencePolicy::Keep` → `RenderAssetUsage::MAIN_WORLD |
RenderAssetUsage::RENDER_WORLD` (or `RenderAssetUsage::default()`)
* `RenderAssetPersistencePolicy::Unload` →
`RenderAssetUsage::RENDER_WORLD`
* For types implementing the `RenderAsset` trait, change `fn
persistence_policy(&self) -> RenderAssetPersistencePolicy` to `fn
asset_usage(&self) -> RenderAssetUsages`.
* Change any references to `cpu_persistent_access`
(`RenderAssetPersistencePolicy`) to `asset_usage` (`RenderAssetUsage`).
This applies to `Image`, `Mesh`, and a few other types.
# Objective
- Address a `TODO` item in `bevy_animation`.
## Solution
- Replace the `cubic_spline_interpolation` macro with a function.
The function isn't marked as `#[inline(always)]` but from what I checked
with `cargo asm` it gets inlined (even in debug, unless I explicitly add
`#[inline(never)]`), so this should be identical to the macro. If needed
I can add the attribute.
Updates the requirements on
[erased-serde](https://github.com/dtolnay/erased-serde) to permit the
latest version.
<details>
<summary>Release notes</summary>
<p><em>Sourced from <a
href="https://github.com/dtolnay/erased-serde/releases">erased-serde's
releases</a>.</em></p>
<blockquote>
<h2>0.4.2</h2>
<ul>
<li>Update proc-macro2 to fix caching issue when using a rustc-wrapper
such as sccache</li>
</ul>
</blockquote>
</details>
<details>
<summary>Commits</summary>
<ul>
<li><a
href="8f555a2db2"><code>8f555a2</code></a>
Release 0.4.2</li>
<li><a
href="450a9108fc"><code>450a910</code></a>
Pull in proc-macro2 sccache fix</li>
<li><a
href="4726cdb49d"><code>4726cdb</code></a>
Release 0.4.1</li>
<li><a
href="4e04e70902"><code>4e04e70</code></a>
Merge pull request <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dtolnay/erased-serde/issues/101">#101</a>
from dtolnay/sererror</li>
<li><a
href="c670c72da5"><code>c670c72</code></a>
Preserve error message of errors originated from Serialize impl</li>
<li><a
href="6893670cca"><code>6893670</code></a>
Ignore box_collection clippy lint</li>
<li><a
href="7ddf6aadd8"><code>7ddf6aa</code></a>
Merge pull request <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/dtolnay/erased-serde/issues/100">#100</a>
from KodrAus/fix/failing-serialize-impl</li>
<li><a
href="8227d20573"><code>8227d20</code></a>
handle the case where a Serialize fails without calling the
Serializer</li>
<li><a
href="160c15393e"><code>160c153</code></a>
Release 0.4.0</li>
<li><a
href="2e48977019"><code>2e48977</code></a>
Merge pull request <a
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# Objective
Revert the changes to type parameter bounds introduced in #9046,
improves the `#[reflect(where)]` attribute (also from #9046), and adds
the ability to opt out of field bounds.
This is based on suggestions by @soqb and discussion on
[Discord](https://discord.com/channels/691052431525675048/1002362493634629796/1201227833826103427).
## Solution
Reverts the changes to type parameter bounds when deriving `Reflect`,
introduced in #9046. This was originally done as a means of fixing a
recursion issue (#8965). However, as @soqb pointed out, we could achieve
the same result by simply making an opt-out attribute instead of messing
with the type parameter bounds.
This PR has four main changes:
1. Reverts the type parameter bounds from #9046
2. Includes `TypePath` as a default bound for active fields
3. Changes `#reflect(where)]` to be strictly additive
4. Adds `#reflect(no_field_bounds)]` to opt out of field bounds
Change 1 means that, like before, type parameters only receive at most
the `TypePath` bound (if `#[reflect(type_path = false)]` is not present)
and active fields receive the `Reflect` or `FromReflect` bound. And with
Change 2, they will also receive `TypePath` (since it's indirectly
required by `Typed` to construct `NamedField` and `UnnamedField`
instances).
Change 3 was made to make room for Change 4. By splitting out the
responsibility of `#reflect(where)]`, we can use it with or without
`#reflect(no_field_bounds)]` for various use cases.
For example, if we hadn't done this, the following would have failed:
```rust
// Since we're not using `#reflect(no_field_bounds)]`,
// `T::Assoc` is automatically given the required bounds
// of `FromReflect + TypePath`
#[derive(Reflect)]
#[reflect(where T::Assoc: OtherTrait)]
struct Foo<T: MyTrait> {
value: T::Assoc,
}
```
This provides more flexibility to the user while still letting them add
or remove most trait bounds.
And to solve the original recursion issue, we can do:
```rust
#[derive(Reflect)]
#[reflect(no_field_bounds)] // <-- Added
struct Foo {
foo: Vec<Foo>
}
```
#### Bounds
All in all, we now have four sets of trait bounds:
- `Self` gets the bounds `Any + Send + Sync`
- Type parameters get the bound `TypePath`. This can be opted out of
with `#[reflect(type_path = false)]`
- Active fields get the bounds `TypePath` and `FromReflect`/`Reflect`
bounds. This can be opted out of with `#reflect(no_field_bounds)]`
- Custom bounds can be added with `#[reflect(where)]`
---
## Changelog
- Revert some changes #9046
- `#reflect(where)]` is now strictly additive
- Added `#reflect(no_field_bounds)]` attribute to opt out of automatic
field trait bounds when deriving `Reflect`
- Made the `TypePath` requirement on fields when deriving `Reflect` more
explicit
## Migration Guide
> [!important]
> This PR shouldn't be a breaking change relative to the current version
of Bevy (v0.12). And since it removes the breaking parts of #9046, that
PR also won't need a migration guide.
# Objective
Currently, the `Capsule` primitive is technically dimension-agnostic in
that it implements both `Primitive2d` and `Primitive3d`. This seems good
on paper, but it can often be useful to have separate 2D and 3D versions
of primitives.
For example, one might want a two-dimensional capsule mesh. We can't
really implement both 2D and 3D meshing for the same type using the
upcoming `Meshable` trait (see #11431). We also currently don't
implement `Bounded2d` for `Capsule`, see
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/11336#issuecomment-1890797788.
Having 2D and 3D separate at a type level is more explicit, and also
more consistent with the existing primitives, as there are no other
types that implement both `Primitive2d` and `Primitive3d` at the same
time.
## Solution
Rename `Capsule` to `Capsule3d` and add `Capsule2d`. `Capsule2d`
implements `Bounded2d`.
For now, I went for `Capsule2d` for the sake of consistency and clarity.
Mathematically the more accurate term would be `Stadium` or `Pill` (see
[Wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stadium_(geometry))), but
those might be less obvious to game devs. For reference, Godot has
[`CapsuleShape2D`](https://docs.godotengine.org/en/stable/classes/class_capsuleshape2d.html).
I can rename it if others think the geometrically correct name is better
though.
---
## Changelog
- Renamed `Capsule` to `Capsule3d`
- Added `Capsule2d` with `Bounded2d` implemented
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
Fixes#11479
## Solution
- Remove `collide_aabb.rs`
- Re-implement the example-specific collision code in the example,
taking advantage of the new `IntersectsVolume` trait.
## Changelog
- Removed `sprite::collide_aabb::collide` and
`sprite::collide_aabb::Collision`.
## Migration Guide
`sprite::collide_aabb::collide` and `sprite::collide_aabb::Collision`
were removed.
```rust
// Before
let collision = bevy::sprite::collide_aabb::collide(a_pos, a_size, b_pos, b_size);
if collision.is_some() {
// ...
}
// After
let collision = Aabb2d::new(a_pos.truncate(), a_size / 2.)
.intersects(&Aabb2d::new(b_pos.truncate(), b_size / 2.));
if collision {
// ...
}
```
If you were making use `collide_aabb::Collision`, see the new
`collide_with_side` function in the [`breakout`
example](https://bevyengine.org/examples/Games/breakout/).
## Discussion
As discussed in the linked issue, maybe we want to wait on `bevy_sprite`
generally making use of `Aabb2b` so users don't need to construct it
manually. But since they **do** need to construct the bounding circle
for the ball manually, this doesn't seem like a big deal to me.
---------
Co-authored-by: IQuick 143 <IQuick143cz@gmail.com>
# Objective
When developing my game I realized `extract_clusters` and
`prepare_clusters` systems are taking a lot of time despite me creating
very little lights. Reducing number of clusters from the default 4096 to
2048 or less greatly improved performance and stabilized FPS (~300 ->
1000+). I debugged it and found out that the main reason for this is
cloning `VisiblePointLights` in `extract_clusters` system. It contains
light entities grouped by clusters that they affect. The problem is that
we clone 4096 (assuming the default clusters configuration) vectors
every frame. If many of them happen to be non-empty it starts to be a
bottleneck because there is a lot of heap allocation. It wouldn't be a
problem if we reused those vectors in following frames but we don't.
## Solution
Avoid cloning multiple vectors and instead build a single vector
containing data for all clusters.
I've recorded a trace in `3d_scene` example with disabled v-sync before
and after the change.
Mean FPS went from 424 to 990. Mean time for `extract_clusters` system
was reduced from 210 us to 24 us and `prepare_clusters` from 189 us to
87 us.
![image](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/160391/ab66aa9d-1fa7-4993-9827-8be76b530972)
---
## Changelog
- Improved performance of `extract_clusters` and `prepare_clusters`
systems for scenes where lights affect a big part of it.
# Objective
Fixes: https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/11549
Add a doctest example of what a custom implementation of an
`EntityMapper` would look like.
(need to wait until https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/11428 is
merged)
---------
Co-authored-by: Charles Bournhonesque <cbournhonesque@snapchat.com>
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Hennadii Chernyshchyk <genaloner@gmail.com>
# Objective
The first part of #10569, split up from #11007.
The goal is to implement meshing support for Bevy's new geometric
primitives, starting with 2D primitives. 3D meshing will be added in a
follow-up, and we can consider removing the old mesh shapes completely.
## Solution
Add a `Meshable` trait that primitives need to implement to support
meshing, as suggested by the
[RFC](https://github.com/bevyengine/rfcs/blob/main/rfcs/12-primitive-shapes.md#meshing).
```rust
/// A trait for shapes that can be turned into a [`Mesh`].
pub trait Meshable {
/// The output of [`Self::mesh`]. This can either be a [`Mesh`]
/// or a builder used for creating a [`Mesh`].
type Output;
/// Creates a [`Mesh`] for a shape.
fn mesh(&self) -> Self::Output;
}
```
This PR implements it for the following primitives:
- `Circle`
- `Ellipse`
- `Rectangle`
- `RegularPolygon`
- `Triangle2d`
The `mesh` method typically returns a builder-like struct such as
`CircleMeshBuilder`. This is needed to support shape-specific
configuration for things like mesh resolution or UV configuration:
```rust
meshes.add(Circle { radius: 0.5 }.mesh().resolution(64));
```
Note that if no configuration is needed, you can even skip calling
`mesh` because `From<MyPrimitive>` is implemented for `Mesh`:
```rust
meshes.add(Circle { radius: 0.5 });
```
I also updated the `2d_shapes` example to use primitives, and tweaked
the colors to have better contrast against the dark background.
Before:
![Old 2D
shapes](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/57632562/f1d8c2d5-55be-495f-8ed4-5890154b81ca)
After:
![New 2D
shapes](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/57632562/f166c013-34b8-4752-800a-5517b284d978)
Here you can see the UVs and different facing directions: (taken from
#11007, so excuse the 3D primitives at the bottom left)
![UVs and facing
directions](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/57632562/eaf0be4e-187d-4b6d-8fb8-c996ba295a8a)
---
## Changelog
- Added `bevy_render::mesh::primitives` module
- Added `Meshable` trait and implemented it for:
- `Circle`
- `Ellipse`
- `Rectangle`
- `RegularPolygon`
- `Triangle2d`
- Implemented `Default` and `Copy` for several 2D primitives
- Updated `2d_shapes` example to use primitives
- Tweaked colors in `2d_shapes` example to have better contrast against
the (new-ish) dark background
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Sending and receiving events of the same type in the same system is a
reasonably common need, generally due to event filtering.
- However, actually doing so is non-trivial, as the borrow checker
simultaneous hates mutable and immutable access.
## Solution
- Demonstrate two sensible patterns for doing so.
- Update the `ManualEventReader` docs to be more clear and link to this
example.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecil@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Joona Aalto <jondolf.dev@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: ickk <git@ickk.io>