After an inquiry on Reddit about support for Directional Lights and the unused properties on Light, I wanted to clean it up, to hopefully make it ever so slightly more clear for anyone wanting to add additional light types.
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
After #1697 I looked at all other Iterators from Bevy and added overrides for `size_hint` where it wasn't done.
Also implemented `ExactSizeIterator` where applicable.
I was looking into "lower level" rendering and I saw no example on how to do that. Yet, I think it's something relevant to show, so I set up a simple example on how to do that. I hope it's welcome.
I'm not confident about the code and a review is definitely nice to have, especially because there are a few things that are not great.
Specifically, I think it would be nice to see how to render with a completely custom set of attributes (position and color, in this case), but I couldn't manage to get it working without normals and uv.
It makes sense if bevy Meshes need these two attributes, but I'm not sure about it.
Co-authored-by: Alessandro Re <ale@ale-re.net>
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
This PR fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/1240, where the ball is escaping the playing field at low framerates. I did this by moving the movement and physics system into a Fixed Timestep system set and changing the movement steps to a constant. So we lose the example use of delta_time for changing position, but gain a use of FixedTimestep.
If this is accepted https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy-website/pull/102 will need to be updated to match.
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
This reduces the size of executables when using bevy as dylib by
ensuring that they get codegened in bevy_assets instead of the game
itself. This by extension avoids pulling in parts of bevy_tasks and
async_task.
Before this change the breakout example was 923k big after this change
it is only 775k big for cg_clif. For cg_llvm in release mode breakout
shrinks from 356k to 316k. For cg_llvm in debug mode breakout shrinks
from 3814k to 3057k.
In shaders, `vec3` should be avoided for `std140` layout, as they take the size of a `vec4` and won't support manual padding by adding an additional `float`.
This change is needed for 3D to work in WebGL2. With it, I get PBR to render
<img width="1407" alt="Screenshot 2021-04-02 at 02 57 14" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/8672791/113368551-5a3c2780-935f-11eb-8c8d-e9ba65b5ee98.png">
Without it, nothing renders... @cart Could this be considered for 0.5 release?
Also, I learned shaders 2 days ago, so don't hesitate to correct any issue or misunderstanding I may have
bevy_webgl2 PR in progress for Bevy 0.5 is here if you want to test: https://github.com/rparrett/bevy_webgl2/pull/1
fixes#1772
1st commit: the limit was at 11 as the macro was not using a range including the upper end. I changed that as it feels the purpose of the macro is clearer that way.
2nd commit: as suggested in the `// TODO`, I added a `Config` trait to go to 16 elements tuples. This means that if someone has a custom system parameter with a config that is not a tuple or an `Option`, they will have to implement `Config` for it instead of the standard `Default`.
I think [collection, thing_removed_from_collection] is a more natural order than [thing_removed_from_collection, collection]. Just a small tweak that I think we should include in 0.5.
This is a temporary fix for the CI (and anyone building for wasm) break until `wgpu` can update
* `syn` released a version that fixed a bug in how they parsed attributes
* `wasm_bindgen` released a version that uses that fix
* but we're stuck with old `wasm_bindgen` as `wgpu` uses a fixed version: c5ee9cd983/Cargo.toml (L118)
So, to fix this, either we update everyone to latest version of `wasm_bindgen` or we keep using old version of `syn`.
On Bevy side, it should be faster to fix the version of `syn` to one that works.
More details: https://github.com/rustwasm/wasm-bindgen/pull/2510 & https://github.com/rustwasm/wasm-bindgen/issues/2508
This PR adds normal maps on top of PBR #1554. Once that PR lands, the changes should look simpler.
Edit: Turned out to be so little extra work, I added metallic/roughness texture too. And occlusion and emissive.
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
The only API to add a parent/child relationship between existing entities is through commands, there is no easy way to do it from `World`. Manually inserting the components is not completely possible since `PreviousParent` has no public constructor.
This PR adds two methods to set entities as children of an `EntityMut`: `insert_children` and `push_children`. ~~The API is similar to the one on `Commands`, except that the parent is the `EntityMut`.~~ The API is the same as in #1703.
However, the `Parent` and `Children` components are defined in `bevy_transform` which depends on `bevy_ecs`, while `EntityMut` is defined in `bevy_ecs`, so the methods are added to the `BuildWorldChildren` trait instead.
If #1545 is merged this should be fixed too.
I'm aware cart was experimenting with entity hierarchies, but unless it's a coming soon this PR would be useful to have meanwhile.
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
Load textures from gltf as linear when needed.
This is for #1632, but can be done independently and won't have any visible impact before.
* during iteration over materials, register textures that need to be loaded as linear
* during iteration over textures
* directly load bytes from external files instead of adding them as dependencies in the load context
* configure the texture the same way for buffered and external textures
* if the texture is linear rgb, set as linear rgb
Fixes#1753.
The problem was introduced while reworking the logic around stages' own criteria. Before #1675 they used to be stored and processed inline with the systems' criteria, and systems without criteria used that of their stage. After, criteria-less systems think they should run, always. This PR more or less restores previous behavior; a less cludge solution can wait until after 0.5 - ideally, until stageless.
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
Frustum culling has some pretty major gaps right now (such as not supporting sprite transform scaling and not taking into account projections). It should be disabled by default until it provides a solid experience across all bevy use cases.
This is intended to help protect users against #1671. It doesn't resolve the issue, but I think its a good stop-gap solution for 0.5. A "full" fix would be very involved (and maybe not worth the added complexity).
Removing the checks on this line https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/blob/main/crates/bevy_sprite/src/frustum_culling.rs#L64 and running the "many_sprites" example revealed two corner case bugs in bevy_ecs. The first, a simple and honest missed line introduced in #1471. The other, an insidious monster that has been there since the ECS v2 rewrite, just waiting for the time to strike:
1. #1471 accidentally removed the "insert" line for sparse set components with the "mutated" bundle state. Re-adding it fixes the problem. I did a slight refactor here to make the implementation simpler and remove a branch.
2. The other issue is nastier. ECS v2 added an "archetype graph". When determining what components were added/mutated during an archetype change, we read the FromBundle edge (which encodes this state) on the "new" archetype. The problem is that unlike "add edges" which are guaranteed to be unique for a given ("graph node", "bundle id") pair, FromBundle edges are not necessarily unique:
```rust
// OLD_ARCHETYPE -> NEW_ARCHETYPE
// [] -> [usize]
e.insert(2usize);
// [usize] -> [usize, i32]
e.insert(1i32);
// [usize, i32] -> [usize, i32]
e.insert(1i32);
// [usize, i32] -> [usize]
e.remove::<i32>();
// [usize] -> [usize, i32]
e.insert(1i32);
```
Note that the second `e.insert(1i32)` command has a different "archetype graph edge" than the first, but they both lead to the same "new archetype".
The fix here is simple: just remove FromBundle edges because they are broken and store the information in the "add edges", which are guaranteed to be unique.
FromBundle edges were added to cut down on the number of archetype accesses / make the archetype access patterns nicer. But benching this change resulted in no significant perf changes and the addition of get_2_mut() for archetypes resolves the access pattern issue.
In the current impl, next clears out the entire stack and replaces it with a new state. This PR moves this functionality into a replace method, and changes the behavior of next to only change the top state.
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
This adds a new project for showing off Frustum Culling.
(Master runs this at sub 1 FPS while with the frustum culling it runs at 144 FPS on my system)
Short clip of the project running:
https://streamable.com/vvzh2u
This PR adds two systems to the sprite module that culls Sprites and AtlasSprites that are not within the camera's view.
This is achieved by removing / adding a new `Viewable` Component dynamically.
Some of the render queries now use a `With<Viewable>` filter to only process the sprites that are actually on screen, which improves performance drastically for scene swith a large amount of sprites off-screen.
https://streamable.com/vvzh2u
This scene shows a map with a 320x320 tiles, with a grid size of 64p.
This is exactly 102400 Sprites in the entire scene.
Without this PR, this scene runs with 1 to 4 FPS.
With this PR..
.. at 720p, there are around 600 visible sprites and runs at ~215 FPS
.. at 1440p there are around 2000 visible sprites and runs at ~135 FPS
The Systems this PR adds take around 1.2ms (with 100K+ sprites in the scene)
Note:
This is only implemented for Sprites and AtlasTextureSprites.
There is no culling for 3D in this PR.
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
I'm opening this prematurely; consider this an RFC that predates RFCs and therefore not super-RFC-like.
This PR does two "big" things: decouple run criteria from system sets, reimagine system sets as weapons of mass system description.
### What it lets us do:
* Reuse run criteria within a stage.
* Pipe output of one run criteria as input to another.
* Assign labels, dependencies, run criteria, and ambiguity sets to many systems at the same time.
### Things already done:
* Decoupled run criteria from system sets.
* Mass system description superpowers to `SystemSet`.
* Implemented `RunCriteriaDescriptor`.
* Removed `VirtualSystemSet`.
* Centralized all run criteria of `SystemStage`.
* Extended system descriptors with per-system run criteria.
* `.before()` and `.after()` for run criteria.
* Explicit order between state driver and related run criteria. Fixes#1672.
* Opt-in run criteria deduplication; default behavior is to panic.
* Labels (not exposed) for state run criteria; state run criteria are deduplicated.
### API issues that need discussion:
* [`FixedTimestep::step(1.0).label("my label")`](eaccf857cd/crates/bevy_ecs/src/schedule/run_criteria.rs (L120-L122)) and [`FixedTimestep::step(1.0).with_label("my label")`](eaccf857cd/crates/bevy_core/src/time/fixed_timestep.rs (L86-L89)) are both valid but do very different things.
---
I will try to maintain this post up-to-date as things change. Do check the diffs in "edited" thingy from time to time.
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
Fixes#1736
There seemed to be an obvious transcription error where `setup_pipeline` was being called during `on_update` of `AppState::CreateWindow` instead of `AppState::Setup`.
However, the example still panicked after fixing that.
I'm not sure if there's some intended or unintended change in event processing during state transitions or something, but this PR make the example work again.
Cleaned up an unused `Stage` label while I was in there.
Please feel free to close this in favor of another approach.
Resolves#1253#1562
This makes the Commands apis consistent with World apis. This moves to a "type state" pattern (like World) where the "current entity" is stored in an `EntityCommands` builder.
In general this tends to cuts down on indentation and line count. It comes at the cost of needing to type `commands` more and adding more semicolons to terminate expressions.
I also added `spawn_bundle` to Commands because this is a common enough operation that I think its worth providing a shorthand.
So I think that the underlying issue is actually a system order ambiguity thing between `spawn_bonus` and `rotate_bonus`, but I'm not confident enough about `run_criteria`, `FixedTimeStep`, etc. to sort that out.