Commit graph

239 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Rich Churcher
f326705cab
Remove OrthographicProjection.scale (adopted) (#15075)
# Objective

Hello! I am adopting #11022 to resolve conflicts with `main`. tldr: this
removes `scale` in favour of `scaling_mode`. Please see the original PR
for explanation/discussion.

Also relates to #2580.

## Migration Guide

Replace all uses of `scale` with `scaling_mode`, keeping in mind that
`scale` is (was) a multiplier. For example, replace
```rust
    scale: 2.0,
    scaling_mode: ScalingMode::FixedHorizontal(4.0),

```
with
```rust
    scaling_mode: ScalingMode::FixedHorizontal(8.0),
```

---------

Co-authored-by: Stepan Koltsov <stepan.koltsov@gmail.com>
2024-09-09 22:34:58 +00:00
Alix Bott
82e416dc48
Split OrthographicProjection::default into 2d & 3d (Adopted) (#15073)
Adopted PR from dmlary, all credit to them!
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/9915

Original description:

# Objective

The default value for `near` in `OrthographicProjection` should be
different for 2d & 3d.

For 2d using `near = -1000` allows bevy users to build up scenes using
background `z = 0`, and foreground elements `z > 0` similar to css.
However in 3d `near = -1000` results in objects behind the camera being
rendered. Using `near = 0` works for 3d, but forces 2d users to assign
`z <= 0` for rendered elements, putting the background at some arbitrary
negative value.

There is no common value for `near` that doesn't result in a footgun or
usability issue for either 2d or 3d, so they should have separate
values.

There was discussion about other options in the discord
[0](https://discord.com/channels/691052431525675048/1154114310042292325),
but splitting `default()` into `default_2d()` and `default_3d()` seemed
like the lowest cost approach.

Related/past work https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/9138,
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/9214,
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/9310,
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/9537 (thanks to @Selene-Amanita
for the list)

## Solution

This commit splits `OrthographicProjection::default` into `default_2d`
and `default_3d`.

## Migration Guide

- In initialization of `OrthographicProjection`, change `..default()` to
`..OrthographicProjection::default_2d()` or
`..OrthographicProjection::default_3d()`

Example:
```diff
--- a/examples/3d/orthographic.rs
+++ b/examples/3d/orthographic.rs
@@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ fn setup(
         projection: OrthographicProjection {
             scale: 3.0,
             scaling_mode: ScalingMode::FixedVertical(2.0),
-            ..default()
+            ..OrthographicProjection::default_3d()
         }
         .into(),
         transform: Transform::from_xyz(5.0, 5.0, 5.0).looking_at(Vec3::ZERO, Vec3::Y),
```

---------

Co-authored-by: David M. Lary <dmlary@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jan Hohenheim <jan@hohenheim.ch>
2024-09-09 15:51:28 +00:00
BD103
6ec6a55645
Unify crate-level preludes (#15080)
# Objective

- Crate-level prelude modules, such as `bevy_ecs::prelude`, are plagued
with inconsistency! Let's fix it!

## Solution

Format all preludes based on the following rules:

1. All preludes should have brief documentation in the format of:
   > The _name_ prelude.
   >
> This includes the most common types in this crate, re-exported for
your convenience.
2. All documentation should be outer, not inner. (`///` instead of
`//!`.)
3. No prelude modules should be annotated with `#[doc(hidden)]`. (Items
within them may, though I'm not sure why this was done.)

## Testing

- I manually searched for the term `mod prelude` and updated all
occurrences by hand. 🫠

---------

Co-authored-by: Gino Valente <49806985+MrGVSV@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-08 17:10:57 +00:00
EdJoPaTo
938d810766
Apply unused_qualifications lint (#14828)
# Objective

Fixes #14782

## Solution

Enable the lint and fix all upcoming hints (`--fix`). Also tried to
figure out the false-positive (see review comment). Maybe split this PR
up into multiple parts where only the last one enables the lint, so some
can already be merged resulting in less many files touched / less
potential for merge conflicts?

Currently, there are some cases where it might be easier to read the
code with the qualifier, so perhaps remove the import of it and adapt
its cases? In the current stage it's just a plain adoption of the
suggestions in order to have a base to discuss.

## Testing

`cargo clippy` and `cargo run -p ci` are happy.
2024-08-21 12:29:33 +00:00
Sarthak Singh
2c4ef37b76
Changed Mesh::attributes* functions to return MeshVertexAttribute (#14394)
# Objective

Fixes #14365 

## Migration Guide

- When using the iterator returned by `Mesh::attributes` or
`Mesh::attributes_mut` the first value of the tuple is not the
`MeshVertexAttribute` instead of `MeshVertexAttributeId`. To access the
`MeshVertexAttributeId` use the `MeshVertexAttribute.id` field.

Signed-off-by: Sarthak Singh <sarthak.singh99@gmail.com>
2024-08-12 15:54:28 +00:00
barsoosayque
5f2570eb4c
Export glTF skins as a Gltf struct (#14343)
# Objective

- Make skin data of glTF meshes available for users, so it would be
possible to create skinned meshes without spawning a scene.
- I believe it contributes to
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/13681 ?

## Solution

- Add a new `GltfSkin`, representing skin data from a glTF file, new
member `skin` to `GltfNode` and both `skins` + `named_skins` to `Gltf`
(a la meshes/nodes).
- Rewrite glTF nodes resolution as an iterator which sorts nodes by
their dependencies (nodes without dependencies first). So when we create
`GltfNodes` with their associated `GltfSkin` while iterating, their
dependencies already have been loaded.
- Make a distinction between `GltfSkin` and
`SkinnedMeshInverseBindposes` in assets: prior to this PR,
`GltfAssetLabel::Skin(n)` was responsible not for a skin, but for one of
skin's components. Now `GltfAssetLabel::InverseBindMatrices(n)` will map
to `SkinnedMeshInverseBindposes`, and `GltfAssetLabel::Skin(n)` will map
to `GltfSkin`.

## Testing

- New test `skin_node` does just that; it tests whether or not
`GltfSkin` was loaded properly.

## Migration Guide

- Change `GltfAssetLabel::Skin(..)` to
`GltfAssetLabel::InverseBindMatrices(..)`.
2024-08-06 01:14:42 +00:00
Giacomo Stevanato
71c5f1e3e4
Generate links to definition in source code pages on docs.rs and dev-docs.bevyengine.org (#12965)
# Objective

- Fix issue #2611

## Solution

- Add `--generate-link-to-definition` to all the `rustdoc-args` arrays
in the `Cargo.toml`s (for docs.rs)
- Add `--generate-link-to-definition` to the `RUSTDOCFLAGS` environment
variable in the docs workflow (for dev-docs.bevyengine.org)
- Document all the workspace crates in the docs workflow (needed because
otherwise only the source code of the `bevy` package will be included,
making the argument useless)
- I think this also fixes #3662, since it fixes the bug on
dev-docs.bevyengine.org, while on docs.rs it has been fixed for a while
on their side.

---

## Changelog

- The source code viewer on docs.rs now includes links to the
definitions.
2024-07-29 23:10:16 +00:00
BD103
ee4ed231da
Fix bevy_gltf PBR features not enabling corresponding bevy_pbr flags (#14486)
# Objective

- `bevy_gltf` does not build with only the
`pbr_multi_layer_material_textures` or `pbr_anisotropy_texture`
features.
- Caught by [`flag-frenzy`](https://github.com/TheBevyFlock/flag-frenzy)
in [this
run](https://github.com/TheBevyFlock/flag-frenzy/actions/runs/10087486444/job/27891723948).

## Solution

- This error was due to the feature not enabling the corresponding
feature in `bevy_pbr`. Adding these flags as a dependency fixes this
error.

## Testing

The following commands fail on `main`, but pass with this PR:

```bash
cargo check -p bevy_gltf --no-default-features -F pbr_multi_layer_material_textures
cargo check -p bevy_gltf --no-default-features -F pbr_anisotropy_texture
```
2024-07-26 17:11:38 +00:00
Coder-Joe458
8f5345573c
Remove manual --cfg docsrs (#14376)
# Objective

- Fixes #14132 

## Solution

- Remove the cfg docsrs
2024-07-22 18:58:04 +00:00
François Mockers
c0b35d07f3
fix building cargo_gltf with feature dds (#14360)
# Objective

- Building bevy_gltf with feature dds fails:
```
> cargo build -p bevy_gltf --features dds
   Compiling bevy_core_pipeline v0.15.0-dev (crates/bevy_core_pipeline)
error[E0061]: this function takes 7 arguments but 6 arguments were supplied
   --> crates/bevy_core_pipeline/src/tonemapping/mod.rs:442:5
    |
442 |     Image::from_buffer(
    |     ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
...
445 |         bytes,
    |         ----- an argument of type `std::string::String` is missing
    |
note: associated function defined here
   --> crates/bevy_render/src/texture/image.rs:709:12
    |
709 |     pub fn from_buffer(
    |            ^^^^^^^^^^^
help: provide the argument
    |
442 |     Image::from_buffer(/* std::string::String */, bytes, image_type, CompressedImageFormats::NONE, false, image_sampler, RenderAssetUsages::RENDER_WORLD)
    |                       ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0061`.
error: could not compile `bevy_core_pipeline` (lib) due to 1 previous error
```
- If you're fixing a specific issue, say "Fixes #X".

## Solution

- enable dds feature in bevy_core_pipeline

## Testing

- `cargo build -p bevy_gltf --features dds`
2024-07-20 17:55:25 +00:00
Patrick Walton
2a6dd3e2e0
Make the GltfNode::children links actually point to children. (#14390)
Due to a bug in `load_gltf`, the `GltfNode::children` links of each node
actually point to the node itself, rather than to the node's children.
This commit fixes that bug.

Note that this didn't affect the scene hierarchy of the instantiated
glTF, only the hierarchy as present in the `GltfNode` assets. This is
likely why the bug was never noticed until now.
2024-07-19 11:24:06 +00:00
github-actions[bot]
8df10d2713
Bump Version after Release (#14219)
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 Mockers <mockersf@gmail.com>
2024-07-08 12:54:08 +00:00
François Mockers
c994c15d5e
EmptyPathStream is only used in android/wasm32 (#14200)
# Objective

- `EmptyPathStream` is only used in android and wasm32
- This now makes rust nightly warn

## Solution

- flag the struct to only be present when needed
- also change how `MorphTargetNames` is used because that makes rust
happier?
2024-07-07 19:54:53 +00:00
Gagnus
a47b91cccc
Added feature switch to default Standard Material's new anisotropy texture to off (#14048)
# Objective

- Standard Material is starting to run out of samplers (currently uses
13 with no additional features off, I think in 0.13 it was 12).
- This change adds a new feature switch, modelled on the other ones
which add features to Standard Material, to turn off the new anisotropy
feature by default.

## Solution

- feature + texture define

## Testing

- Anisotropy example still works fine
- Other samples work fine
- Standard Material now takes 12 samplers by default on my Mac instead
of 13

## Migration Guide

- Add feature pbr_anisotropy_texture if you are using that texture in
any standard materials.

---------

Co-authored-by: John Payne <20407779+johngpayne@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-07-02 18:02:05 +00:00
Joseph
5876352206
Optimize common usages of AssetReader (#14082)
# Objective

The `AssetReader` trait allows customizing the behavior of fetching
bytes for an `AssetPath`, and expects implementors to return `dyn
AsyncRead + AsyncSeek`. This gives implementors of `AssetLoader` great
flexibility to tightly integrate their asset loading behavior with the
asynchronous task system.

However, almost all implementors of `AssetLoader` don't use the async
functionality at all, and just call `AsyncReadExt::read_to_end(&mut
Vec<u8>)`. This is incredibly inefficient, as this method repeatedly
calls `poll_read` on the trait object, filling the vector 32 bytes at a
time. At my work we have assets that are hundreds of megabytes which
makes this a meaningful overhead.

## Solution

Turn the `Reader` type alias into an actual trait, with a provided
method `read_to_end`. This provided method should be more efficient than
the existing extension method, as the compiler will know the underlying
type of `Reader` when generating this function, which removes the
repeated dynamic dispatches and allows the compiler to make further
optimizations after inlining. Individual implementors are able to
override the provided implementation -- for simple asset readers that
just copy bytes from one buffer to another, this allows removing a large
amount of overhead from the provided implementation.

Now that `Reader` is an actual trait, I also improved the ergonomics for
implementing `AssetReader`. Currently, implementors are expected to box
their reader and return it as a trait object, which adds unnecessary
boilerplate to implementations. This PR changes that trait method to
return a pseudo trait alias, which allows implementors to return `impl
Reader` instead of `Box<dyn Reader>`. Now, the boilerplate for boxing
occurs in `ErasedAssetReader`.

## Testing

I made identical changes to my company's fork of bevy. Our app, which
makes heavy use of `read_to_end` for asset loading, still worked
properly after this. I am not aware if we have a more systematic way of
testing asset loading for correctness.

---

## Migration Guide

The trait method `bevy_asset::io::AssetReader::read` (and `read_meta`)
now return an opaque type instead of a boxed trait object. Implementors
of these methods should change the type signatures appropriately

```rust
impl AssetReader for MyReader {
    // Before
    async fn read<'a>(&'a self, path: &'a Path) -> Result<Box<Reader<'a>>, AssetReaderError> {
        let reader = // construct a reader
        Box::new(reader) as Box<Reader<'a>>
    }

    // After
    async fn read<'a>(&'a self, path: &'a Path) -> Result<impl Reader + 'a, AssetReaderError> {
        // create a reader
    }
}
```

`bevy::asset::io::Reader` is now a trait, rather than a type alias for a
trait object. Implementors of `AssetLoader::load` will need to adjust
the method signature accordingly

```rust
impl AssetLoader for MyLoader {
    async fn load<'a>(
        &'a self,
        // Before:
        reader: &'a mut bevy::asset::io::Reader,
        // After:
        reader: &'a mut dyn bevy::asset::io::Reader,
        _: &'a Self::Settings,
        load_context: &'a mut LoadContext<'_>,
    ) -> Result<Self::Asset, Self::Error> {
}
```

Additionally, implementors of `AssetReader` that return a type
implementing `futures_io::AsyncRead` and `AsyncSeek` might need to
explicitly implement `bevy::asset::io::Reader` for that type.

```rust
impl bevy::asset::io::Reader for MyAsyncReadAndSeek {}
```
2024-07-01 19:59:42 +00:00
Lura
856b39d821
Apply Clippy lints regarding lazy evaluation and closures (#14015)
# Objective

- Lazily evaluate
[default](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#/unwrap_or_default)~~/[or](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#/or_fun_call)~~
values where it makes sense
  - ~~`unwrap_or(foo())` -> `unwrap_or_else(|| foo())`~~
  - `unwrap_or(Default::default())` -> `unwrap_or_default()`
  - etc.
- Avoid creating [redundant
closures](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#/redundant_closure),
even for [method
calls](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#/redundant_closure_for_method_calls)
  - `map(|something| something.into())` -> `map(Into:into)`

## Solution

- Apply Clippy lints:
-
~~[or_fun_call](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#/or_fun_call)~~
-
[unwrap_or_default](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#/unwrap_or_default)
-
[redundant_closure_for_method_calls](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#/redundant_closure_for_method_calls)
([redundant
closures](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#/redundant_closure)
is already enabled)

## Testing

- Tested on Windows 11 (`stable-x86_64-pc-windows-gnu`, 1.79.0)
- Bevy compiles without errors or warnings and examples seem to work as
intended
  - `cargo clippy` 
  - `cargo run -p ci -- compile` 

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2024-07-01 15:54:40 +00:00
Al M
ace4eaaf0e
Merge BuildWorldChildren and BuildChildren traits. (#14052)
# Objective

The `BuildChildren` and `BuildWorldChildren` traits are mostly
identical, so I decided to try and merge them. I'm not sure of the
history, maybe they were added before GATs existed.

## Solution

- Add an associated type to `BuildChildren` which reflects the prior
differences between the `BuildChildren` and `BuildWorldChildren` traits.
- Add `ChildBuild` trait that is the bounds for
`BuildChildren::Builder`, with impls for `ChildBuilder` and
`WorldChildBuilder`.
- Remove `BuildWorldChildren` trait and replace it with an impl of
`BuildChildren` for `EntityWorldMut`.

## Testing

I ran several of the examples that use entity hierarchies, mainly UI.

---

## Changelog

n/a

## Migration Guide

n/a
2024-07-01 14:29:39 +00:00
Mikhail Novikov
cb4fe4ea9e
Make gLTF node children Handle instead of objects (#13707)
Part of #13681 

# Objective

gLTF Assets shouldn't be duplicated between Assets resource and node
children.

Also changed `asset_label` to be a method as [per previous PR
comment](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/13558).

## Solution

- Made GltfNode children be Handles instead of asset copies.

## Testing

- Added tests that actually test loading and hierarchy as previous ones
unit tested only one function and that makes little sense.
- Made circular nodes an actual loading failure instead of a warning
no-op. You [_MUST NOT_ have cycles in
gLTF](https://registry.khronos.org/glTF/specs/2.0/glTF-2.0.html#nodes-and-hierarchy)
according to the spec.
- IMO this is a bugfix, not a breaking change. But in an extremely
unlikely event in which you relied on invalid behavior for loading gLTF
with cyclic children, you will not be able to do that anymore. You
should fix your gLTF file as it's not valid according to gLTF spec. For
it to for work someone, it had to be bevy with bevy_animation flag off.

---

## Changelog

### Changed

- `GltfNode.children` are now `Vec<Handle<GltfNode>>` instead of
`Vec<GltfNode>`
- Having children cycles between gLTF nodes in a gLTF document is now an
explicit asset loading failure.

## Migration Guide

If accessing children, use `Assets<GltfNode>` resource to get the actual
child object.

#### Before

```rs
fn gltf_print_first_node_children_system(gltf_component_query: Query<Handle<Gltf>>, gltf_assets: Res<Assets<Gltf>>, gltf_nodes: Res<Assets<GltfNode>>) {
    for gltf_handle in gltf_component_query.iter() {
        let gltf_root = gltf_assets.get(gltf_handle).unwrap();
        let first_node_handle = gltf_root.nodes.get(0).unwrap();
        let first_node = gltf_nodes.get(first_node_handle).unwrap();
        let first_child = first_node.children.get(0).unwrap();
        println!("First nodes child node name is {:?)", first_child.name);
    }
}
```

#### After

```rs
fn gltf_print_first_node_children_system(gltf_component_query: Query<Handle<Gltf>>, gltf_assets: Res<Assets<Gltf>>, gltf_nodes: Res<Assets<GltfNode>>) {
    for gltf_handle in gltf_component_query.iter() {
        let gltf_root = gltf_assets.get(gltf_handle).unwrap();
        let first_node_handle = gltf_root.nodes.get(0).unwrap();
        let first_node = gltf_nodes.get(first_node_handle).unwrap();
        let first_child_handle = first_node.children.get(0).unwrap();
        let first_child = gltf_nodes.get(first_child_handle).unwrap();
        println!("First nodes child node name is {:?)", first_child.name);
    }
}
```
2024-07-01 14:05:16 +00:00
Mikhail Novikov
52215ce072
Add labels to Gltf Node and Mesh assets (#13558)
# Objective

Add labels to GltfNode and GltfMesh - they are missing from the assets
even though they are need if one wants to write a custom Gltf spawning
logic.

Eg AnimationPlayer relies on Name component of the node entities to
control the animation. There is no way to actually get names of the gltf
nodes, thus you can't manually spawn subtree from the scene and animate
it.

## Solution

- Add label field and make use of existing label creation logic to store
it there.

## Testing

- Ran all tests
- Fixed tests for node_hierarchy to use lable now

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: François Mockers <francois.mockers@vleue.com>
2024-06-05 23:10:33 +00:00
Patrick Walton
df8ccb8735
Implement PBR anisotropy per KHR_materials_anisotropy. (#13450)
This commit implements support for physically-based anisotropy in Bevy's
`StandardMaterial`, following the specification for the
[`KHR_materials_anisotropy`] glTF extension.

[*Anisotropy*] (not to be confused with [anisotropic filtering]) is a
PBR feature that allows roughness to vary along the tangent and
bitangent directions of a mesh. In effect, this causes the specular
light to stretch out into lines instead of a round lobe. This is useful
for modeling brushed metal, hair, and similar surfaces. Support for
anisotropy is a common feature in major game and graphics engines;
Unity, Unreal, Godot, three.js, and Blender all support it to varying
degrees.

Two new parameters have been added to `StandardMaterial`:
`anisotropy_strength` and `anisotropy_rotation`. Anisotropy strength,
which ranges from 0 to 1, represents how much the roughness differs
between the tangent and the bitangent of the mesh. In effect, it
controls how stretched the specular highlight is. Anisotropy rotation
allows the roughness direction to differ from the tangent of the model.

In addition to these two fixed parameters, an *anisotropy texture* can
be supplied. Such a texture should be a 3-channel RGB texture, where the
red and green values specify a direction vector using the same
conventions as a normal map ([0, 1] color values map to [-1, 1] vector
values), and the the blue value represents the strength. This matches
the format that the [`KHR_materials_anisotropy`] specification requires.
Such textures should be loaded as linear and not sRGB. Note that this
texture does consume one additional texture binding in the standard
material shader.

The glTF loader has been updated to properly parse the
`KHR_materials_anisotropy` extension.

A new example, `anisotropy`, has been added. This example loads and
displays the barn lamp example from the [`glTF-Sample-Assets`]
repository. Note that the textures were rather large, so I shrunk them
down and converted them to a mixture of JPEG and KTX2 format, in the
interests of saving space in the Bevy repository.

[*Anisotropy*]:
https://google.github.io/filament/Filament.md.html#materialsystem/anisotropicmodel

[anisotropic filtering]:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anisotropic_filtering

[`KHR_materials_anisotropy`]:
https://github.com/KhronosGroup/glTF/blob/main/extensions/2.0/Khronos/KHR_materials_anisotropy/README.md

[`glTF-Sample-Assets`]:
https://github.com/KhronosGroup/glTF-Sample-Assets/

## Changelog

### Added

* Physically-based anisotropy is now available for materials, which
enhances the look of surfaces such as brushed metal or hair. glTF scenes
can use the new feature with the `KHR_materials_anisotropy` extension.

## Screenshots

With anisotropy:
![Screenshot 2024-05-20
233414](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/157897/379f1e42-24e9-40b6-a430-f7d1479d0335)

Without anisotropy:
![Screenshot 2024-05-20
233420](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/157897/aa220f05-b8e7-417c-9671-b242d4bf9fc4)
2024-06-03 23:46:06 +00:00
Ricky Taylor
9b9d3d81cb
Normalise matrix naming (#13489)
# Objective
- Fixes #10909
- Fixes #8492

## Solution
- Name all matrices `x_from_y`, for example `world_from_view`.

## Testing
- I've tested most of the 3D examples. The `lighting` example
particularly should hit a lot of the changes and appears to run fine.

---

## Changelog
- Renamed matrices across the engine to follow a `y_from_x` naming,
making the space conversion more obvious.

## Migration Guide
- `Frustum`'s `from_view_projection`, `from_view_projection_custom_far`
and `from_view_projection_no_far` were renamed to
`from_clip_from_world`, `from_clip_from_world_custom_far` and
`from_clip_from_world_no_far`.
- `ComputedCameraValues::projection_matrix` was renamed to
`clip_from_view`.
- `CameraProjection::get_projection_matrix` was renamed to
`get_clip_from_view` (this affects implementations on `Projection`,
`PerspectiveProjection` and `OrthographicProjection`).
- `ViewRangefinder3d::from_view_matrix` was renamed to
`from_world_from_view`.
- `PreviousViewData`'s members were renamed to `view_from_world` and
`clip_from_world`.
- `ExtractedView`'s `projection`, `transform` and `view_projection` were
renamed to `clip_from_view`, `world_from_view` and `clip_from_world`.
- `ViewUniform`'s `view_proj`, `unjittered_view_proj`,
`inverse_view_proj`, `view`, `inverse_view`, `projection` and
`inverse_projection` were renamed to `clip_from_world`,
`unjittered_clip_from_world`, `world_from_clip`, `world_from_view`,
`view_from_world`, `clip_from_view` and `view_from_clip`.
- `GpuDirectionalCascade::view_projection` was renamed to
`clip_from_world`.
- `MeshTransforms`' `transform` and `previous_transform` were renamed to
`world_from_local` and `previous_world_from_local`.
- `MeshUniform`'s `transform`, `previous_transform`,
`inverse_transpose_model_a` and `inverse_transpose_model_b` were renamed
to `world_from_local`, `previous_world_from_local`,
`local_from_world_transpose_a` and `local_from_world_transpose_b` (the
`Mesh` type in WGSL mirrors this, however `transform` and
`previous_transform` were named `model` and `previous_model`).
- `Mesh2dTransforms::transform` was renamed to `world_from_local`.
- `Mesh2dUniform`'s `transform`, `inverse_transpose_model_a` and
`inverse_transpose_model_b` were renamed to `world_from_local`,
`local_from_world_transpose_a` and `local_from_world_transpose_b` (the
`Mesh2d` type in WGSL mirrors this).
- In WGSL, in `bevy_pbr::mesh_functions`, `get_model_matrix` and
`get_previous_model_matrix` were renamed to `get_world_from_local` and
`get_previous_world_from_local`.
- In WGSL, `bevy_sprite::mesh2d_functions::get_model_matrix` was renamed
to `get_world_from_local`.
2024-06-03 16:56:53 +00:00
Mark Moissette
d26900a9ea
add handling of all missing gltf extras: scene, mesh & materials (#13453)
# Objective

- fixes #4823 

## Solution

As outlined in the discussion in the linked issue as the best current
solution, this PR adds specific GltfExtras for
 - scenes 
 - meshes
 - materials

- As it is , it is not a breaking change, I hesitated to rename the
current "GltfExtras" component to "PrimitiveGltfExtras", but that would
result in a breaking change and might be a bit confusing as to what
"primitive" that refers to.
 

## Testing

- I included a bare-bones example & asset (exported gltf file from
Blender) with gltf extras at all the relevant levels : scene, mesh,
material

---

## Changelog
- adds "SceneGltfExtras" injected at the scene level if any
- adds "MeshGltfExtras", injected at the mesh level if any
- adds "MaterialGltfExtras", injected at the mesh level if any: ie if a
mesh has a material that has gltf extras, the component will be injected
there.
2024-06-03 13:16:38 +00:00
François Mockers
5559632977
glTF labels: add enum to avoid misspelling and keep up-to-date list documented (#13586)
# Objective

- Followup to #13548
- It added a list of all possible labels to documentation. This seems
hard to keep up and doesn't stop people from making spelling mistake

## Solution

- Add an enum that can create all the labels possible, and encourage its
use rather than manually typed labels

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Rob Parrett <robparrett@gmail.com>
2024-05-31 23:25:57 +00:00
IceSentry
29d6575e22
Add docs to bevy_gltf about loading parts of a Gltf asset (#13548)
# Objective

- The Gltf loader has a ton of features to load parts of an asset that
are essentially undocumented.

## Solution

- Add some docs to explain some of those features
- The docs is definitely inspired by the bevy cheatbook page on the
subject but it goes in a lot less details

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: François Mockers <francois.mockers@vleue.com>
2024-05-28 22:45:22 +00:00
andristarr
44c0325ecd
Emissive is now LinearRgba on StandardMaterial (#13352)
StandardMaterial stores a LinearRgba instead of a Color for emissive

Fixes #13212
2024-05-24 17:23:35 +00:00
Ricky Taylor
efcb6d6c11
Make LoadContext use the builder pattern for loading dependent assets (#13465)
# Objective
- Fixes #13445.

## Solution
- Removes all `load_` methods from `LoadContext`.
- Introduces `fn loader()` which returns a builder.

## Testing
- I've tested with `cargo test --package=bevy_asset` and run the two
relevant examples (`asset_processing` & `asset_decompression`).

---

## Changelog
- Replaced all `load_` methods on `LoadContext` with the new `loader()`
pattern.

## Migration Guide
- Several LoadContext method calls will need to be updated:
- `load_context.load_with_settings(path, settings)` =>
`load_context.loader().with_settings(settings).load(path)`
- `load_context.load_untyped(path)` =>
`load_context.loader().untyped().load(path)`
- `load_context.load_direct(path)` =>
`load_context.loader().direct().load(path)`
- `load_context.load_direct_untyped(path)` =>
`load_context.loader().direct().untyped().load(path)`
- `load_context.load_direct_with_settings(path, settings)` =>
`load_context.loader().with_settings(settings).direct().load(path)`
- `load_context.load_direct_with_reader(reader, path)` =>
`load_context.loader().direct().with_reader(reader).load(path)`
- `load_context.load_direct_with_reader_and_settings(reader, path,
settings)` =>
`load_context.loader().with_settings(settings).direct().with_reader(reader).load(path)`
- `load_context.load_direct_untyped_with_reader(reader, path)` =>
`load_context.loader().direct().with_reader(reader).untyped().load(path)`

---

CC @alice-i-cecile / @bushrat011899 

Examples:
```rust
load_context.loader()
    .with_asset_type::<A>()
    .with_asset_type_id(TypeId::of::<A>())
    .with_settings(|mut settings| { settings.key = value; })
    // Then, for a Handle<A>:
    .load::<A>()
    // Or, for a Handle<LoadedUntypedAsset>:
    .untyped()
    .load()
    // Or, to load an `A` directly:
    .direct()
    .load::<A>()
    .await
    // Or, to load an `ErasedLoadedAsset` directly:
    .direct()
    .untyped()
    .load()
    .await
```
2024-05-22 23:35:41 +00:00
François Mockers
a55e0e31e8
fix normals computation for gltf (#13396)
# Objective

- some gltf files are broken since #13333 

```
thread 'IO Task Pool (2)' panicked at crates/bevy_render/src/mesh/mesh/mod.rs:581:9:
`compute_flat_normals` can't work on indexed geometry. Consider calling either `Mesh::compute_smooth_normals` or `Mesh::duplicate_vertices` followed by `Mesh::compute_flat_normals`.
```

- test with example `custom_gltf_vertex_attribute` or
`gltf_skinned_mesh`


## Solution

- Call the wrapper function for normals that will either call
`compute_flat_normals` or `compute_smooth_normals` as appropriate

## Testing

- Ran the two examples mentioned above
2024-05-18 12:07:27 +00:00
Johannes Hackel
3f5a090b1b
Add UV channel selection to StandardMaterial (#13200)
# Objective

- The StandardMaterial always uses ATTRIBUTE_UV_0 for each texture
except lightmap. This is not flexible enough for a lot of gltf Files.
- Fixes #12496
- Fixes #13086
- Fixes #13122
- Closes #13153

## Solution

- The StandardMaterial gets extended for each texture by an UvChannel
enum. It defaults to Uv0 but can also be set to Uv1.
- The gltf loader now handles the texcoord information. If the texcoord
is not supported it creates a warning.
- It uses StandardMaterial shader defs to define which attribute to use.

## Testing

This fixes #12496 for example:

![wall_fixed](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/688816/bc37c9e1-72ba-4e59-b092-5ee10dade603)

For testing of all kind of textures I used the TextureTransformMultiTest
from
https://github.com/KhronosGroup/glTF-Sample-Assets/tree/main/Models/TextureTransformMultiTest
Its purpose is to test multiple texture transfroms but it is also a good
test for different texcoords.
It also shows the issue with emission #13133.

Before:

![TextureTransformMultiTest_main](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/688816/aa701d04-5a3f-4df1-a65f-fc770ab6f4ab)

After:

![TextureTransformMultiTest_texcoord](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/688816/c3f91943-b830-4068-990f-e4f2c97771ee)
2024-05-13 18:23:09 +00:00
Patrick Walton
77ed72bc16
Implement clearcoat per the Filament and the KHR_materials_clearcoat specifications. (#13031)
Clearcoat is a separate material layer that represents a thin
translucent layer of a material. Examples include (from the [Filament
spec]) car paint, soda cans, and lacquered wood. This commit implements
support for clearcoat following the Filament and Khronos specifications,
marking the beginnings of support for multiple PBR layers in Bevy.

The [`KHR_materials_clearcoat`] specification describes the clearcoat
support in glTF. In Blender, applying a clearcoat to the Principled BSDF
node causes the clearcoat settings to be exported via this extension. As
of this commit, Bevy parses and reads the extension data when present in
glTF. Note that the `gltf` crate has no support for
`KHR_materials_clearcoat`; this patch therefore implements the JSON
semantics manually.

Clearcoat is integrated with `StandardMaterial`, but the code is behind
a series of `#ifdef`s that only activate when clearcoat is present.
Additionally, the `pbr_feature_layer_material_textures` Cargo feature
must be active in order to enable support for clearcoat factor maps,
clearcoat roughness maps, and clearcoat normal maps. This approach
mirrors the same pattern used by the existing transmission feature and
exists to avoid running out of texture bindings on platforms like WebGL
and WebGPU. Note that constant clearcoat factors and roughness values
*are* supported in the browser; only the relatively-less-common maps are
disabled on those platforms.

This patch refactors the lighting code in `StandardMaterial`
significantly in order to better support multiple layers in a natural
way. That code was due for a refactor in any case, so this is a nice
improvement.

A new demo, `clearcoat`, has been added. It's based on [the
corresponding three.js demo], but all the assets (aside from the skybox
and environment map) are my original work.

[Filament spec]:
https://google.github.io/filament/Filament.html#materialsystem/clearcoatmodel

[`KHR_materials_clearcoat`]:
https://github.com/KhronosGroup/glTF/blob/main/extensions/2.0/Khronos/KHR_materials_clearcoat/README.md

[the corresponding three.js demo]:
https://threejs.org/examples/webgl_materials_physical_clearcoat.html

![Screenshot 2024-04-19
101143](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/157897/3444bcb5-5c20-490c-b0ad-53759bd47ae2)

![Screenshot 2024-04-19
102054](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/157897/6e953944-75b8-49ef-bc71-97b0a53b3a27)

## Changelog

### Added

* `StandardMaterial` now supports a clearcoat layer, which represents a
thin translucent layer over an underlying material.
* The glTF loader now supports the `KHR_materials_clearcoat` extension,
representing materials with clearcoat layers.

## Migration Guide

* The lighting functions in the `pbr_lighting` WGSL module now have
clearcoat parameters, if `STANDARD_MATERIAL_CLEARCOAT` is defined.

* The `R` reflection vector parameter has been removed from some
lighting functions, as it was unused.
2024-05-05 22:57:05 +00:00
Ycy
9d8f94d461
fix bevy_gltf crate build (#13202)
# Objective

Fixing `bevy_gltf` crate build fail when `bevy_animation` feature is
disabled

## Solution

Add missing `bevy_animation` feature
2024-05-03 13:00:18 +00:00
BD103
e357b63448
Add README.md to all crates (#13184)
# Objective

- `README.md` is a common file that usually gives an overview of the
folder it is in.
- When on <https://crates.io>, `README.md` is rendered as the main
description.
- Many crates in this repository are lacking `README.md` files, which
makes it more difficult to understand their purpose.

<img width="1552" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/59022059/78ebf91d-b0c4-4b18-9874-365d6310640f">

- There are also a few inconsistencies with `README.md` files that this
PR and its follow-ups intend to fix.

## Solution

- Create a `README.md` file for all crates that do not have one.
- This file only contains the title of the crate (underscores removed,
proper capitalization, acronyms expanded) and the <https://shields.io>
badges.
- Remove the `readme` field in `Cargo.toml` for `bevy` and
`bevy_reflect`.
- This field is redundant because [Cargo automatically detects
`README.md`
files](https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/manifest.html#the-readme-field).
The field is only there if you name it something else, like `INFO.md`.
- Fix capitalization of `bevy_utils`'s `README.md`.
- It was originally `Readme.md`, which is inconsistent with the rest of
the project.
- I created two commits renaming it to `README.md`, because Git appears
to be case-insensitive.
- Expand acronyms in title of `bevy_ptr` and `bevy_utils`.
- In the commit where I created all the new `README.md` files, I
preferred using expanded acronyms in the titles. (E.g. "Bevy Developer
Tools" instead of "Bevy Dev Tools".)
- This commit changes the title of existing `README.md` files to follow
the same scheme.
- I do not feel strongly about this change, please comment if you
disagree and I can revert it.
- Add <https://shields.io> badges to `bevy_time` and `bevy_transform`,
which are the only crates currently lacking them.

---

## Changelog

- Added `README.md` files to all crates missing it.
2024-05-02 18:56:00 +00:00
BD103
a362c278bb
Fix crates not building individually (#12948)
# Objective

- `cargo check --workspace` appears to merge features and dependencies
together, so it does not catch some issues where dependencies are not
properly feature-gated.
- The issues **are** caught, though, by running `cd $crate && cargo
check`.

## Solution

- Manually check each crate for issues.

```shell
# Script used
for i in crates/bevy_* do
    pushd $i
    cargo check
    popd
done
```

- `bevy_color` had an issue where it used `#[derive(Pod, Zeroable)]`
without using `bytemuck`'s `derive` feature.
- The `FpsOverlayPlugin` in `bevy_dev_tools` uses `bevy_ui`'s
`bevy_text` integration without properly enabling `bevy_text` as a
feature.
- `bevy_gizmos`'s `light` module was not properly feature-gated behind
`bevy_pbr`.
- ~~Lights appear to only be implemented in `bevy_pbr` and not
`bevy_sprite`, so I think this is the right call. Can I get a
confirmation by a gizmos person?~~ Confirmed :)
- `bevy_gltf` imported `SmallVec`, but only used it if `bevy_animation`
was enabled.
- There was another issue, but it was more challenging to solve than the
`smallvec` one. Run `cargo check -p bevy_gltf` and it will raise an
issue about `animation_roots`.

<details>
  <summary><code>bevy_gltf</code> errors</summary>

```shell
error[E0425]: cannot find value `animation_roots` in this scope
   --> crates/bevy_gltf/src/loader.rs:608:26
    |
608 |                         &animation_roots,
    |                          ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ not found in this scope

warning: variable does not need to be mutable
    --> crates/bevy_gltf/src/loader.rs:1015:5
     |
1015 |     mut animation_context: Option<AnimationContext>,
     |     ----^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
     |     |
     |     help: remove this `mut`
     |
     = note: `#[warn(unused_mut)]` on by default

For more information about this error, try `rustc --explain E0425`.
warning: `bevy_gltf` (lib) generated 1 warning
error: could not compile `bevy_gltf` (lib) due to 1 previous error; 1 warning emitted
```

</details> 

---

## Changelog

- Fixed `bevy_color`, `bevy_dev_tools`, and `bevy_gizmos` so they can
now compile by themselves.
2024-04-14 00:06:03 +00:00
Cameron
01649f13e2
Refactor App and SubApp internals for better separation (#9202)
# Objective

This is a necessary precursor to #9122 (this was split from that PR to
reduce the amount of code to review all at once).

Moving `!Send` resource ownership to `App` will make it unambiguously
`!Send`. `SubApp` must be `Send`, so it can't wrap `App`.

## Solution

Refactor `App` and `SubApp` to not have a recursive relationship. Since
`SubApp` no longer wraps `App`, once `!Send` resources are moved out of
`World` and into `App`, `SubApp` will become unambiguously `Send`.

There could be less code duplication between `App` and `SubApp`, but
that would break `App` method chaining.

## Changelog

- `SubApp` no longer wraps `App`.
- `App` fields are no longer publicly accessible.
- `App` can no longer be converted into a `SubApp`.
- Various methods now return references to a `SubApp` instead of an
`App`.
## Migration Guide

- To construct a sub-app, use `SubApp::new()`. `App` can no longer
convert into `SubApp`.
- If you implemented a trait for `App`, you may want to implement it for
`SubApp` as well.
- If you're accessing `app.world` directly, you now have to use
`app.world()` and `app.world_mut()`.
- `App::sub_app` now returns `&SubApp`.
- `App::sub_app_mut`  now returns `&mut SubApp`.
- `App::get_sub_app` now returns `Option<&SubApp>.`
- `App::get_sub_app_mut` now returns `Option<&mut SubApp>.`
2024-03-31 03:16:10 +00:00
James Liu
56bcbb0975
Forbid unsafe in most crates in the engine (#12684)
# Objective
Resolves #3824. `unsafe` code should be the exception, not the norm in
Rust. It's obviously needed for various use cases as it's interfacing
with platforms and essentially running the borrow checker at runtime in
the ECS, but the touted benefits of Bevy is that we are able to heavily
leverage Rust's safety, and we should be holding ourselves accountable
to that by minimizing our unsafe footprint.

## Solution
Deny `unsafe_code` workspace wide. Add explicit exceptions for the
following crates, and forbid it in almost all of the others.

* bevy_ecs - Obvious given how much unsafe is needed to achieve
performant results
* bevy_ptr - Works with raw pointers, even more low level than bevy_ecs.
 * bevy_render - due to needing to integrate with wgpu
 * bevy_window - due to needing to integrate with raw_window_handle
* bevy_utils - Several unsafe utilities used by bevy_ecs. Ideally moved
into bevy_ecs instead of made publicly usable.
 * bevy_reflect - Required for the unsafe type casting it's doing.
 * bevy_transform - for the parallel transform propagation
 * bevy_gizmos  - For the SystemParam impls it has.
* bevy_assets - To support reflection. Might not be required, not 100%
sure yet.
* bevy_mikktspace - due to being a conversion from a C library. Pending
safe rewrite.
* bevy_dynamic_plugin - Inherently unsafe due to the dynamic loading
nature.

Several uses of unsafe were rewritten, as they did not need to be using
them:

* bevy_text - a case of `Option::unchecked` could be rewritten as a
normal for loop and match instead of an iterator.
* bevy_color - the Pod/Zeroable implementations were replaceable with
bytemuck's derive macros.
2024-03-27 03:30:08 +00:00
Tygyh
e9343b052f
Support calculating normals for indexed meshes (#11654)
# Objective

- Finish #3987

## Solution

- Rebase and fix typo.

Co-authored-by: Robert Bragg <robert@sixbynine.org>
2024-03-25 19:09:24 +00:00
James Liu
f096ad4155
Set the logo and favicon for all of Bevy's published crates (#12696)
# Objective
Currently the built docs only shows the logo and favicon for the top
level `bevy` crate. This makes views like
https://docs.rs/bevy_ecs/latest/bevy_ecs/ look potentially unrelated to
the project at first glance.

## Solution
Reproduce the docs attributes for every crate that Bevy publishes.

Ideally this would be done with some workspace level Cargo.toml control,
but AFAICT, such support does not exist.
2024-03-25 18:52:50 +00:00
Ame
72c51cdab9
Make feature(doc_auto_cfg) work (#12642)
# Objective

- In #12366 `![cfg_attr(docsrs, feature(doc_auto_cfg))] `was added. But
to apply it it needs `--cfg=docsrs` in rustdoc-args.


## Solution

- Apply `--cfg=docsrs` to all crates and CI.

I also added `[package.metadata.docs.rs]` to all crates to avoid adding
code behind a feature and forget adding the metadata.

Before:

![Screenshot 2024-03-22 at 00 51
57](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/104745335/6a9dfdaa-8710-4784-852b-5f9b74e3522c)

After:
![Screenshot 2024-03-22 at 00 51
32](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/104745335/c5bd6d8e-8ddb-45b3-b844-5ecf9f88961c)
2024-03-23 02:22:52 +00:00
Arthur Brussee
ac49dce4ca
Use async-fn in traits rather than BoxedFuture (#12550)
# Objective

Simplify implementing some asset traits without Box::pin(async move{})
shenanigans.
Fixes (in part) https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/11308

## Solution
Use async-fn in traits when possible in all traits. Traits with return
position impl trait are not object safe however, and as AssetReader and
AssetWriter are both used with dynamic dispatch, you need a Boxed
version of these futures anyway.

In the future, Rust is [adding
](https://blog.rust-lang.org/2023/12/21/async-fn-rpit-in-traits.html)proc
macros to generate these traits automatically, and at some point in the
future dyn traits should 'just work'. Until then.... this seemed liked
the right approach given more ErasedXXX already exist, but, no clue if
there's plans here! Especially since these are public now, it's a bit of
an unfortunate API, and means this is a breaking change.

In theory this saves some performance when these traits are used with
static dispatch, but, seems like most code paths go through dynamic
dispatch, which boxes anyway.

I also suspect a bunch of the lifetime annotations on these function
could be simplified now as the BoxedFuture was often the only thing
returned which needed a lifetime annotation, but I'm not touching that
for now as traits + lifetimes can be so tricky.

This is a revival of
[pull/11362](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/11362) after a
spectacular merge f*ckup, with updates to the latest Bevy. Just to recap
some discussion:
- Overall this seems like a win for code quality, especially when
implementing these traits, but a loss for having to deal with ErasedXXX
variants.
- `ConditionalSend` was the preferred name for the trait that might be
Send, to deal with wasm platforms.
- When reviewing be sure to disable whitespace difference, as that's 95%
of the PR.


## Changelog
- AssetReader, AssetWriter, AssetLoader, AssetSaver and Process now use
async-fn in traits rather than boxed futures.

## Migration Guide
- Custom implementations of AssetReader, AssetWriter, AssetLoader,
AssetSaver and Process should switch to async fn rather than returning a
bevy_utils::BoxedFuture.
- Simultaniously, to use dynamic dispatch on these traits you should
instead use dyn ErasedXXX.
2024-03-18 17:56:57 +00:00
dependabot[bot]
5cf7d9213e
Update base64 requirement from 0.21.5 to 0.22.0 (#12552)
Updates the requirements on
[base64](https://github.com/marshallpierce/rust-base64) to permit the
latest version.
<details>
<summary>Changelog</summary>
<p><em>Sourced from <a
href="https://github.com/marshallpierce/rust-base64/blob/master/RELEASE-NOTES.md">base64's
changelog</a>.</em></p>
<blockquote>
<h1>0.22.0</h1>
<ul>
<li><code>DecodeSliceError::OutputSliceTooSmall</code> is now
conservative rather than precise. That is, the error will only occur if
the decoded output <em>cannot</em> fit, meaning that
<code>Engine::decode_slice</code> can now be used with exactly-sized
output slices. As part of this, <code>Engine::internal_decode</code> now
returns <code>DecodeSliceError</code> instead of
<code>DecodeError</code>, but that is not expected to affect any
external callers.</li>
<li><code>DecodeError::InvalidLength</code> now refers specifically to
the <em>number of valid symbols</em> being invalid (i.e. <code>len % 4
== 1</code>), rather than just the number of input bytes. This avoids
confusing scenarios when based on interpretation you could make a case
for either <code>InvalidLength</code> or <code>InvalidByte</code> being
appropriate.</li>
<li>Decoding is somewhat faster (5-10%)</li>
</ul>
<h1>0.21.7</h1>
<ul>
<li>Support getting an alphabet's contents as a str via
<code>Alphabet::as_str()</code></li>
</ul>
<h1>0.21.6</h1>
<ul>
<li>Improved introductory documentation and example</li>
</ul>
<h1>0.21.5</h1>
<ul>
<li>Add <code>Debug</code> and <code>Clone</code> impls for the general
purpose Engine</li>
</ul>
<h1>0.21.4</h1>
<ul>
<li>Make <code>encoded_len</code> <code>const</code>, allowing the
creation of arrays sized to encode compile-time-known data lengths</li>
</ul>
<h1>0.21.3</h1>
<ul>
<li>Implement <code>source</code> instead of <code>cause</code> on Error
types</li>
<li>Roll back MSRV to 1.48.0 so Debian can continue to live in a time
warp</li>
<li>Slightly faster chunked encoding for short inputs</li>
<li>Decrease binary size</li>
</ul>
<h1>0.21.2</h1>
<ul>
<li>Rollback MSRV to 1.57.0 -- only dev dependencies need 1.60, not the
main code</li>
</ul>
<h1>0.21.1</h1>
<ul>
<li>Remove the possibility of panicking during decoded length
calculations</li>
<li><code>DecoderReader</code> no longer sometimes erroneously ignores
padding <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/marshallpierce/rust-base64/issues/226">#226</a></li>
</ul>
<h2>Breaking changes</h2>
<ul>
<li><code>Engine.internal_decode</code> return type changed</li>
<li>Update MSRV to 1.60.0</li>
</ul>
<h1>0.21.0</h1>
<h2>Migration</h2>
<h3>Functions</h3>
<!-- raw HTML omitted -->
</blockquote>
<p>... (truncated)</p>
</details>
<details>
<summary>Commits</summary>
<ul>
<li><a
href="5d70ba7576"><code>5d70ba7</code></a>
Merge pull request <a
href="https://redirect.github.com/marshallpierce/rust-base64/issues/269">#269</a>
from marshallpierce/mp/decode-precisely</li>
<li><a
href="efb6c006c7"><code>efb6c00</code></a>
Release notes</li>
<li><a
href="2b91084a31"><code>2b91084</code></a>
Add some tests to boost coverage</li>
<li><a
href="9e9c7abe65"><code>9e9c7ab</code></a>
Engine::internal_decode now returns DecodeSliceError</li>
<li><a
href="a8a60f43c5"><code>a8a60f4</code></a>
Decode main loop improvements</li>
<li><a
href="a25be0667c"><code>a25be06</code></a>
Simplify leftover output writes</li>
<li><a
href="9979cc33bb"><code>9979cc3</code></a>
Keep morsels as separate bytes</li>
<li><a
href="37670c5ec2"><code>37670c5</code></a>
Bump dev toolchain version (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/marshallpierce/rust-base64/issues/268">#268</a>)</li>
<li><a
href="9652c78773"><code>9652c78</code></a>
v0.21.7</li>
<li><a
href="08deccf703"><code>08deccf</code></a>
provide as_str() method to return the alphabet characters (<a
href="https://redirect.github.com/marshallpierce/rust-base64/issues/264">#264</a>)</li>
<li>Additional commits viewable in <a
href="https://github.com/marshallpierce/rust-base64/compare/v0.21.5...v0.22.0">compare
view</a></li>
</ul>
</details>
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2024-03-18 06:42:58 +00:00
66OJ66
c7298599ee
Allow setting RenderAssetUsages for gLTF meshes & materials during load (#12302)
# 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>
2024-03-12 00:11:01 +00:00
Al M
52e3f2007b
Add "all-features = true" to docs.rs metadata for most crates (#12366)
# 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
2024-03-08 20:03:09 +00:00
James Liu
512b7463a3
Disentangle bevy_utils/bevy_core's reexported dependencies (#12313)
# 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.
2024-03-07 02:30:15 +00:00
James Liu
5619bd09d1
Replace bevy_log's tracing reexport with bevy_utils' (#12254)
# 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.
2024-03-02 18:38:04 +00:00
Alice Cecile
599e5e4e76
Migrate from LegacyColor to bevy_color::Color (#12163)
# 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>
2024-02-29 19:35:12 +00:00
Tristan Guichaoua
1cded6ac60
Use immutable key for HashMap and HashSet (#12086)
# 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>
2024-02-26 16:27:40 +00:00
Alice Cecile
de004da8d5
Rename bevy_render::Color to LegacyColor (#12069)
# 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>
2024-02-24 21:35:32 +00:00
github-actions[bot]
e7c3359c4b
Bump Version after Release (#12020)
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>
2024-02-21 20:58:59 +00:00
Matty
328008f904
Move AlphaMode into bevy_render (#12012)
# 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.
2024-02-21 19:34:10 +00:00
Jan Hohenheim
8531033b31
Add support for KHR_texture_transform (#11904)
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>
2024-02-21 01:11:28 +00:00
andristarr
e50e848b58
Gltf loader now shows which file is missing pre baked tangents (#11854)
# 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.
2024-02-19 16:49:32 +00:00