# Objective
- Fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/14003
## Solution
- Expose an API to perform updates for a specific sub-app, so we can
avoid mutable borrow the app twice.
## Testing
- I have tested the API by modifying the code in the `many_lights`
example with the following changes:
```rust
impl Plugin for LogVisibleLights {
fn build(&self, app: &mut App) {
let Some(render_app) = app.get_sub_app_mut(RenderApp) else {
return;
};
render_app.add_systems(Render, print_visible_light_count.in_set(RenderSet::Prepare));
}
fn finish(&self, app: &mut App) {
app.update_sub_app_by_label(RenderApp);
}
}
```
---
## Changelog
- add the `update_sub_app_by_label` API to `App` and `SubApps`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Jan Hohenheim <jan@hohenheim.ch>
# Objective
Tight, in-frame generation, re-parenting, despawning, etc., UI
operations could sometime lead taffy to panic (invalid SlotMap key used)
when an entity with an invalid state later despawned.
Fixes#12403
## Solution
Move the `remove_entities` call after children updates.
## Testing
`sickle_ui` had a case that always caused the panic. Tested before this
change, after this change, and before the change again to make sure the
error is there without the fix. The fix worked. Test steps and used
commit described in issue #12403.
I have also ran every bevy UI example, though none of them deal with
entity re-parenting or removal. No regression detected on them.
Tested on Windows only.
* Fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/13813
* Fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/13810
Tested a combined scene with both regular meshes and meshlet meshes
with:
* Regular forward setup
* Forward + normal/motion vector prepasses
* Deferred (with depth prepass since that's required)
* Deferred + depth/normal/motion vector prepasses
Still broken:
* Using meshlet meshes rendering in deferred and regular meshes
rendering in forward + depth/normal prepass. I don't know how to fix
this at the moment, so for now I've just add instructions to not mix
them.
# Objective
`with_event` will result in unsafe casting of event data of the given
type to the type expected by the Observer system. This is inherently
unsafe.
## Solution
Flag `Observer::with_event` and `ObserverDescriptor::with_events` as
unsafe. This will not affect normal workflows as `with_event` is
intended for very specific (largely internal) use cases.
This _should_ be backported to 0.14 before release.
---
## Changelog
- `Observer::with_event` is now unsafe.
- Rename `ObserverDescriptor::with_triggers` to
`ObserverDescriptor::with_events` and make it unsafe.
# Objective
- Fixes#13702
- When creating a new window, its scale was changed to match the one
returned by winit, but its size was not which resulted in an incorrect
size until the event with the correct size was received, at least 1
frame later
## Solution
- Apply the window scale to its size when creating it
Fixes#13701
After `winit` upgrade to `0.31`, windows were no longer correctly
resizing. This appears to just have been a simple mistake, where the new
physical size was being sourced from the `winit` window rather than on
the incoming `Window` component.
## Testing
Tested on macOS, but I'm curious whether this was also broken on other
platforms.
# Objective
The documentation for
[`Transform::align`](https://docs.rs/bevy/0.14.0-rc.3/bevy/transform/components/struct.Transform.html#method.align)
mentions a hypothetical ship model. Showing this concretely would be a
nice improvement over using a cube.
> 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(Dir3::X, v, Dir3::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.
## Solution
This commit makes the ship less hypothetical by using a kenney ship
model in the example.
The local axes for the ship needed to change to accommodate the gltf, so
the hypothetical in the documentation and this example's local axes
don't necessarily match. Docs use `align(Dir3::X, v, Dir3::Y, w)` and
this example now uses `(Vec3::NEG_Z, *first, Vec3::X, *second)`.
I manually modified the `craft_speederD` Node's `translation` to be
0,0,0 in the gltf file, which means it now differs from kenney's
original model.
Original ship from: https://kenney.nl/assets/space-kit
## Testing
```
cargo run --example align
```
![screenshot-2024-06-19-at-14 27
05@2x](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/551247/ab1afc8f-76b2-42b6-b455-f0d1c77cfed7)
![screenshot-2024-06-19-at-14 27
12@2x](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/551247/4a01031c-4ea1-43ab-8078-3656db67efe0)
![screenshot-2024-06-19-at-14 27
20@2x](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/551247/06830f38-ba2b-4e3a-a265-2d10f9ea9de9)
# Objective
Fixes#13920
## Solution
As described in the issue.
## Testing
Moved a custom transition plugin in example before any of the app-state
methods.
# Objective
Fix a 9-slice asymmetric border issue that
[QueenOfSquiggles](https://blobfox.coffee/@queenofsquiggles/112639035165575222)
found. Here's the behavior before:
<img width="340" alt="the-bug"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/54390/81ff1847-b2ea-4578-9fd0-af6ee96c5438">
## Solution
Here's the behavior with the fix.
<img width="327" alt="the-fix"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/54390/33a4e3f0-b6a8-448e-9654-1197218ea11d">
## Testing
I used QueenOfSquiggles
[repo](https://github.com/QueenOfSquiggles/my-bevy-learning-project) to
exercise the code. I manually went through a number of variations of the
border and caught a few other issues after the first pass. I added some
code to create random borders and though they often looked funny there
weren't any gaps like before.
### Unit Tests
I did add some tests to `slicer.rs` mostly as an exploratory programming
exercise. So they currently act as a limited, incomplete,
"golden-file"-ish approach. Perhaps they're not worth keeping.
In order to write the tests, I did add a `PartialEq` derive for
`TextureSlice`.
I only tested these changes on macOS.
---
## Changelog
Make 9-slice textures work with asymmetric borders.
# Objective
Add extra metadata for the shader examples that contains the location of
their associated shader file(s). This is to be used for the bevy website
shader examples so that the shader code is underneath the rust code.
## Solution
Parse the example rust files for mentions of `.wgsl`, `.frag`, and
`.vert`, then append the found paths to a field called
`shader_code_paths` in the generated `index.md`s for each shader
example.
# Objective
A very common way to organize a first-person view is to split it into
two kinds of models:
- The *view model* is the model that represents the player's body.
- The *world model* is everything else.
The reason for this distinction is that these two models should be
rendered with different FOVs.
The view model is typically designed and animated with a very specific
FOV in mind, so it is
generally *fixed* and cannot be changed by a player. The world model, on
the other hand, should
be able to change its FOV to accommodate the player's preferences for
the following reasons:
- *Accessibility*: How prone is the player to motion sickness? A wider
FOV can help.
- *Tactical preference*: Does the player want to see more of the
battlefield?
Or have a more zoomed-in view for precision aiming?
- *Physical considerations*: How well does the in-game FOV match the
player's real-world FOV?
Are they sitting in front of a monitor or playing on a TV in the living
room? How big is the screen?
## Solution
I've added an example implementing the described setup as follows.
The `Player` is an entity holding two cameras, one for each model. The
view model camera has a fixed
FOV of 70 degrees, while the world model camera has a variable FOV that
can be changed by the player.
I use different `RenderLayers` to select what to render.
- The world model camera has no explicit `RenderLayers` component, so it
uses the layer 0.
All static objects in the scene are also on layer 0 for the same reason.
- The view model camera has a `RenderLayers` component with layer 1, so
it only renders objects
explicitly assigned to layer 1. The arm of the player is one such
object.
The order of the view model camera is additionally bumped to 1 to ensure
it renders on top of the world model.
- The light source in the scene must illuminate both the view model and
the world model, so it is
assigned to both layers 0 and 1.
To better see the effect, the player can move the camera by dragging
their mouse and change the world model's FOV with the arrow keys. The
arrow up key maps to "decrease FOV" and the arrow down key maps to
"increase FOV". This sounds backwards on paper, but is more intuitive
when actually changing the FOV in-game since a decrease in FOV looks
like a zoom-in.
I intentionally do not allow changing the view model's FOV even though
it would be illustrative because that would be an anti-pattern and bloat
the code a bit.
The example is called `first_person_view_model` and not just
`first_person` because I want to highlight that this is not a simple
flycam, but actually renders the player.
## Testing
Default FOV:
<img width="1392" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/9047632/8c2e804f-fac2-48c7-8a22-d85af999dfb2">
Decreased FOV:
<img width="1392" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/9047632/1733b3e5-f583-4214-a454-3554e3cbd066">
Increased FOV:
<img width="1392" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/9047632/0b0640e6-5743-46f6-a79a-7181ba9678e8">
Note that the white bar on the right represents the player's arm, which
is more obvious in-game because you can move the camera around.
The box on top is there to make sure that the view model is receiving
shadows.
I tested only on macOS.
---
## Changelog
I don't think new examples go in here, do they?
## Caveat
The solution used here was implemented with help by @robtfm on
[Discord](https://discord.com/channels/691052431525675048/866787577687310356/1241019224491561000):
> shadow maps are specific to lights, not to layers
> if you want shadows from some meshes that are not visible, you could
have light on layer 1+2, meshes on layer 2, camera on layer 1 (for
example)
> but this might change in future, it's not exactly an intended feature
In other words, the example code as-is is not guaranteed to work in the
future. I want to bring this up because the use-case presented here is
extremely common in first-person games and important for accessibility.
It would be good to have a blessed and easy way of how to achieve it.
I'm also not happy about how I get the `perspective` variable in
`change_fov`. Very open to suggestions :)
## Related issues
- Addresses parts of #12658
- Addresses parts of #12588
---------
Co-authored-by: Pascal Hertleif <killercup@gmail.com>
# Objective
Fixes#13299
On Linux/X11, changing focus into a winit window will produce winit
KeyboardInput events with a "is_synthetic=true" flag that are not
intended to be used. Bevy erroneously passes them on to the user,
resulting in phantom key presses.
## Solution
This patch properly filters out winit KeyboardInput events with
"is_synthetic=true".
For example, pressing Alt+Tab to focus a bevy winit window results in a
permanently stuck Tab key until the user presses Tab once again to
produce a winit KeyboardInput release event. The Tab key press event
that causes this problem is "synthetic", should not be used according to
the winit devs, and simply ignoring it fixes this problem.
Synthetic key **releases** are still evaluated though, as they are
essential for correct release key handling. For example, if the user
binds the key combination Alt+1 to the action "move the window to
workspace 1", places the bevy game in workspace 2, focuses the game and
presses Alt+1, then the key release event for the "1" key will be
synthetic. If we would filter out all synthetic keys, the bevy game
would think that the 1 key remains pressed forever, until the user
manually presses+releases the key again inside bevy.
Reference:
https://docs.rs/winit/0.30.0/winit/event/enum.WindowEvent.html#variant.KeyboardInput.field.is_synthetic
Relevant discussion: https://github.com/rust-windowing/winit/issues/3543
## Testing
Tested with the "keyboard_input_events" example. Entering/exiting the
window with various keys, as well as changing its workspace, produces
the correct press/release events.
# Objective
- Observers example is using an unseeded random, prints text to console
and doesn't display text as other examples
## Solution
- use seeded random
- log instead of printing
- use common settings for UI text
# Objective
- Fixes#13874
## Solution
- Confirm that the `StatesPlugin` is installed when trying to add
states.
- Skipped for state scoped entities, since those will warn about missing
states.
# Objective
Fixes#13854
## Solution
Removed the inaccurate warning. This was done for a few reasons:
- States not existing is now a valid "state" (for lack of a better term)
- Other run conditions don't provide an equivalent warning
# Objective
- #13846 introduced a bug where text not bound was not displayed
## Solution
- bounds are infinite
- use computed size instead, that already should be using the available
bounds
# Objective
- Fixes#13825
## Solution
- Cherry picked and fixed non-trivial conflicts to be able to merge
#10839 into the 0.14 release branch.
Link to PR: https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/10839
Co-authored-by: James O'Brien <james.obrien@drafly.net>
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: MiniaczQ <xnetroidpl@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Fixes#13844
- Warn user when initializing state multiple times
## Solution
- `insert_state` will overwrite previously initialized state value,
reset transition events and re-insert it's own transition event.
- `init_state`, `add_sub_state`, `add_computed_state` are idempotent, so
calling them multiple times will emit a warning.
## Testing
- 2 tests confirming overwrite works.
- Given the example from #13844
```rs
use bevy::prelude::*;
fn main() {
App::new()
.add_plugins(DefaultPlugins)
.insert_state(AppState::A)
.insert_state(AppState::B)
.add_systems(OnEnter(AppState::A), setup_a)
.add_systems(OnEnter(AppState::B), setup_b)
.add_systems(OnExit(AppState::A), cleanup_a)
.add_systems(OnExit(AppState::B), cleanup_b)
.run();
}
#[derive(States, Debug, Clone, PartialEq, Eq, Hash)]
enum AppState {
A,
B,
}
fn setup_a() {
info!("setting up A");
}
fn setup_b() {
info!("setting up B");
}
fn cleanup_a() {
info!("cleaning up A");
}
fn cleanup_b() {
info!("cleaning up B");
}
```
We get the following result:
```
INFO states: setting up B
```
which matches our expectations.
# Objective
Fixes#13815
## Solution
Move insertion of the plugin name to after build is called.
## Testing
I added a regression test
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: François Mockers <mockersf@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: François Mockers <francois.mockers@vleue.com>
# Objective
when a parent container is auto-sized, text alignments `Center` and
`Right` don't align to the center and right properly. fix it
## Solution
ab_glyph positions return +/- values from an anchor point. we currently
transform them to positive values from the min-x of the glyphs, and then
offset from the left of the bounds. instead, we can keep the negative
values as ab_glyph intended and offset from the left/middle/right of the
bounds as appropriate.
## Testing
texts with align left, center, right, all contained in the purple boxes:
before (0.14.0-rc.2):
![Screenshot 2024-06-14
165456](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/50659922/90fb73b0-d8bd-4ae8-abf3-7106eafc93ba)
after:
![Screenshot 2024-06-14
164449](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/50659922/0a75ff09-b51d-4fbe-a491-b655a145c08b)
code:
```rs
use bevy::prelude::*;
fn main() {
App::new()
.add_plugins(DefaultPlugins)
.add_systems(Startup, setup)
.run();
}
fn setup(mut commands: Commands) {
commands.spawn(Camera2dBundle::default());
for (left, justify) in [
(100.0, JustifyText::Left),
(500.0, JustifyText::Center),
(900.0, JustifyText::Right),
] {
commands
// container
.spawn(NodeBundle {
style: Style {
flex_direction: FlexDirection::Column,
position_type: PositionType::Absolute,
left: Val::Px(left),
top: Val::Px(100.0),
width: Val::Px(300.0),
..Default::default()
},
..Default::default()
})
.with_children(|commands| {
commands.spawn(NodeBundle{
style: Style {
flex_direction: FlexDirection::Row,
height: Val::Px(75.0),
..Default::default()
},
background_color: Color::srgb(1.0, 0.0, 1.0).into(),
..Default::default()
}).with_children(|commands| {
// a div that reduces the available size
commands.spawn(NodeBundle {
style: Style {
width: Val::Px(75.0),
..Default::default()
},
background_color: Color::srgb(0.0, 1.0, 0.0).into(),
..Default::default()
});
// text with width=auto, but actual size will not be what it expcets due to the sibling div above
commands.spawn(TextBundle {
text: Text::from_section("Some text that wraps onto a second line", Default::default()).with_justify(justify),
style: Style {
align_self: AlignSelf::Center,
..Default::default()
},
..Default::default()
});
});
});
}
}
```
Currently blocked on https://github.com/gfx-rs/wgpu/issues/5774
# Objective
Update to wgpu 0.20
## Solution
Update to wgpu 0.20 and naga_oil 0.14.
## Testing
Tested a few different examples on linux (vulkan, webgl2, webgpu) and
windows (dx12 + vulkan) and they worked.
---
## Changelog
- Updated to wgpu 0.20. Note that we don't currently support wgpu's new
pipeline overridable constants, as they don't work on web currently and
need some more changes to naga_oil (and are somewhat redundant with
naga_oil's shader defs). See wgpu's changelog for more
https://github.com/gfx-rs/wgpu/blob/trunk/CHANGELOG.md#v0200-2024-04-28
## Migration Guide
TODO
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: François Mockers <mockersf@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Fixes#13807
## Solution
- Before this pr we antialiased between 0.5 and -0.5. This pr changes
things to antialias between 0.25 and -0.25. I tried slightly larger
ranges, but the edge between the boxes still showed. I'm not 100% sure
this is the correct solution, but from what I could find the range you
use is more art than science.
## Testing
- Ran rounded_borders example, the code in the linked issue, and the
testing example from #12702.
---
## Changelog
- reduce antialiasing in ui shader.
# Objective
While learning about shaders and pipelines, I found this example to be
misleading; it wasn't clear to me how the node knew what the correct
"instance" of `PostProcessSettings` we should send to the shader (as the
combination of `ExtractComponentPlugin` and `UniformComponentPlugin`
extracts + sends _all_ of our `PostProcessSetting` components to the
GPU).
The goal of this PR is to clarify how to target the view specific
`PostProcessSettings` in the shader when there are multiple cameras.
## Solution
To accomplish this, we can use a dynamic uniform buffer for
`PostProcessSettings`, querying for the relevant `DynamicUniformIndex`
in the `PostProcessNode` to get the relevant index to use with the bind
group.
While the example in its current state is _correct_, I believe that fact
that it's intended to showcase a per camera post processing effect
warrants a dynamic uniform buffer (even though in the context of this
example we have only one camera, and therefore no adverse behaviour).
## Testing
- Run the `post_processing` example before and after this change,
verifying they behave the same.
## Reviewer notes
This is my first PR to Bevy, and I'm by no means an expert in the world
of rendering (though I'm trying to learn all I can). If there's a better
way to do this / a reason not to take this route, I'd love to hear it!
Thanks in advance.
StatesPlugin and GizmoPlugin were missing from the doc comment of
DefaultPlugins. I am not sure whether this was for a reason, but i just
stumbled over it and it seemed off...
## Testing
I'm not sure how to test these changes?
# Objective
- Related to https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/13825
## Solution
- Cherry picked the merged PR and performed the necessary changes to
adapt it to the 0.14 release branch.
---------
As discovered in
https://github.com/Leafwing-Studios/leafwing-input-manager/issues/538,
there appears to be some real weirdness going on in how event updates
are processed between Bevy 0.13 and Bevy 0.14.
To identify the cause and prevent regression, I've added tests to
validate the intended behavior.
My initial suspicion was that this would be fixed by
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/13762, but that doesn't seem to
be the case.
Instead, events appear to never be updated at all when using `bevy_app`
by itself. This is part of the problem resolved by
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/11528, and introduced by
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/10077.
After some investigation, it appears that `signal_event_update_system`
is never added using a bare-bones `App`, and so event updates are always
skipped.
This can be worked around by adding your own copy to a
later-in-the-frame schedule, but that's not a very good fix.
Ensure that if we're not using a `FixedUpdate` schedule, events are
always updated every frame.
To do this, I've modified the logic of `event_update_condition` and
`event_update_system` to clearly and correctly differentiate between the
two cases: where we're waiting for a "you should update now" signal and
where we simply don't care.
To encode this, I've added the `ShouldUpdateEvents` enum, replacing a
simple `bool` in `EventRegistry`'s `needs_update` field.
Now, both tests pass as expected, without having to manually add a
system!
I've written two parallel unit tests to cover the intended behavior:
1. Test that `iter_current_update_events` works as expected in
`bevy_ecs`.
2. Test that `iter_current_update_events` works as expected in
`bevy_app`
I've also added a test to verify that event updating works correctly in
the presence of a fixed main schedule, and a second test to verify that
fixed updating works at all to help future authors narrow down failures.
- [x] figure out why the `bevy_app` version of this test fails but the
`bevy_ecs` version does not
- [x] figure out why `EventRegistry::run_updates` isn't working properly
- [x] figure out why `EventRegistry::run_updates` is never getting
called
- [x] figure out why `event_update_condition` is always returning false
- [x] figure out why `EventRegistry::needs_update` is always false
- [x] verify that the problem is a missing `signal_events_update_system`
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Mike <mike.hsu@gmail.com>
…izer (#13442)"
This reverts commit 5cfb063d4a.
- This PR broke bevy-trait-query, which needs to be able to write a
resource in init_state. See #13798 for more details.
- Note this doesn't fix everything as transmutes for bevy-trait-query
will still be broken,. But the current usage in that crate is UB, so we
need to find another solution.
# Objective
Closes#13738
## Solution
Added `from_color` to materials that would support it. Didn't add
`from_color` to `WireframeMaterial` as it doesn't seem we expect users
to be constructing them themselves.
## Testing
None
---
## Changelog
### Added
- `from_color` to `StandardMaterial` so you can construct this material
from any color type.
- `from_color` to `ColorMaterial` so you can construct this material
from any color type.
# Objective
- Add a new example showcasing how to add custom primitives and what you
can do with them.
## Solution
- Added a new example `custom_primitives` with a 2D heart shape
primitive highlighting
- `Bounded2d` by implementing and visualising bounding shapes,
- `Measured2d` by implementing it,
- `Meshable` to show the shape on the screen
- The example also includes an `Extrusion<Heart>` implementing
- `Measured3d`,
- `Bounded3d` using the `BoundedExtrusion` trait and
- meshing using the `Extrudable` trait.
## Additional information
Here are two images of the heart and its extrusion:
![image_2024-06-10_194631194](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/62256001/53f1836c-df74-4ba6-85e9-fabdafa94c66)
![Screenshot 2024-06-10
194609](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/62256001/b1630e71-6e94-4293-b7b5-da8d9cc98faf)
---------
Co-authored-by: Jakub Marcowski <37378746+Chubercik@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
- Mikktspace requires that we normalize world normals/tangents _before_
interpolation across vertices, and then do _not_ normalize after. I had
it backwards.
- We do not (am not supposed to?) need a second set of barycentrics for
motion vectors. If you think about the typical raster pipeline, in the
vertex shader we calculate previous_world_position, and then it gets
interpolated using the current triangle's barycentrics.
## Solution
- Fix normal/tangent processing
- Reuse barycentrics for motion vector calculations
- Not implementing this for 0.14, but long term I aim to remove explicit
vertex tangents and calculate them in the shader on the fly.
## Testing
- I tested out some of the normal maps we have in repo. Didn't seem to
make a difference, but mikktspace is all about correctness across
various baking tools. I probably just didn't have any of the ones that
would cause it to break.
- Didn't test motion vectors as there's a known bug with the depth
buffer and meshlets that I'm waiting on the render graph rewrite to fix.
Reading system information severely slows down the update loop.
Fixes#12848.
Read system info in a separate thread.
- Open the scene 3d example
- Add `FrameTimeDiagnosticsPlugin`, `SystemInformationDiagnosticsPlugin`
and `LogDiagnosticsPlugin` to the app.
- Add this system to the update schedule to disable Vsync on the main
window
```rust
fn change_window_mode(mut windows: Query<&mut Window, Added<Window>>) {
for mut window in &mut windows {
window.present_mode = PresentMode::AutoNoVsync;
}
}
```
- Read the fps values in the console before and after this PR.
On my PC I went from around 50 fps to around 1150 fps.
---
- The `SystemInformationDiagnosticsPlugin` now reads system data
separate of the update cycle.
- The `EXPECTED_SYSTEM_INFORMATION_INTERVAL` constant which defines how
often we read system diagnostic data.
---------
Co-authored-by: IceSentry <IceSentry@users.noreply.github.com>
Fixes#13758.
# Objective
Calling `update` on the main app already calls `clear_trackers`. Calling
it again in `SubApps::update` caused RemovedCompenet Events to be
cleared earlier than they should be.
## Solution
- Don't call clear_trackers an extra time.
## Testing
I manually tested the fix with this unit test:
```
#[cfg(test)]
mod test {
use crate::core::{FrameCount, FrameCountPlugin};
use crate::prelude::*;
#[test]
fn test_next_frame_removal() {
#[derive(Component)]
struct Foo;
#[derive(Resource)]
struct RemovedCount(usize);
let mut app = App::new();
app.add_plugins(FrameCountPlugin);
app.add_systems(Startup, |mut commands: Commands| {
for _ in 0..100 {
commands.spawn(Foo);
}
commands.insert_resource(RemovedCount(0));
});
app.add_systems(First, |counter: Res<FrameCount>| {
println!("Frame {}:", counter.0)
});
fn detector_system(
mut removals: RemovedComponents<Foo>,
foos: Query<Entity, With<Foo>>,
mut removed_c: ResMut<RemovedCount>,
) {
for e in removals.read() {
println!(" Detected removed Foo component for {e:?}");
removed_c.0 += 1;
}
let c = foos.iter().count();
println!(" Total Foos: {}", c);
assert_eq!(c + removed_c.0, 100);
}
fn deleter_system(foos: Query<Entity, With<Foo>>, mut commands: Commands) {
foos.iter().next().map(|e| {
commands.entity(e).remove::<Foo>();
});
}
app.add_systems(Update, (detector_system, deleter_system).chain());
app.update();
app.update();
app.update();
app.update();
}
}
```
# Objective
There were some issues with the `serialize` feature:
- `bevy_app` had a `serialize` feature and a dependency on `serde` even
there is no usage of serde at all inside `bevy_app`
- the `bevy_app/serialize` feature enabled `bevy_ecs/serde`, which is
strange
- `bevy_internal/serialize` did not enable `bevy_app/serialize` so there
was no way of serializing an Entity in bevy 0.14
## Solution
- Remove `serde` and `bevy_app/serialize`
- Add a `serialize` flag on `bevy_ecs` that enables `serde`
- ` bevy_internal/serialize` now enables `bevy_ecs/serialize`
# Objective
- If the fog is disabled it still generates a useless branch which can
hurt performance
## Solution
- Make the flag a shader_def instead
## Testing
- I tested enabling/disabling fog works as expected per-material in the
fog example
- I also tested that scenes that don't add the FogSettings resource
still work correctly
## Review notes
I'm not sure how to handle the removed material flag. Right now I just
commented it out and added a not to reuse it instead of creating a new
one.
The documentation for the `State` resource still referenced the use of
`apply_state_transition` to manually force a state transition to occur,
and the question around how to force transitions had come up a few times
on discord.
This is a docs-only change, that does the following:
- Properly references `StateTransition` in the `MainSchedule` docs
- replace the explanations for applying `NextState` with ones that
explain the `StateTransition` schedule, and mentions the possibility of
calling it manually
- Add an example of calling `StateTransition` manually in the docs for
the state transition schedule itself.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
The error printed-out due to a missing shader file was confusing; This
PR changes the error message.
Fixes#13644
## Solution
I replaced the confusing wording (`... shader is not loaded yet`) with a
clear explanation (`... shader could not be loaded`)
## Testing
> Did you test these changes? If so, how?
removing `assets/shaders/game_of_life.wgsl` & running its associated
example now produces the following error:
```
thread '<unnamed>' panicked at examples/shader/compute_shader_game_of_life.rs:233:25:
Initializing assets/shaders/game_of_life.wgsl:
Pipeline could not be compiled because the following shader could not be loaded: AssetId<bevy_render::render_resource::shader::Shader>{ index: 0, generation: 0}
note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace
Encountered a panic in system `bevy_render::renderer::render_system`!
```
I don't think there are any tests expecting the previous error message,
so this change should not break anything.
> Are there any parts that need more testing?
If there was an intent behind the original message, this might need more
attention.
> How can other people (reviewers) test your changes? Is there anything
specific they need to know?
One should be able to preview the changes by running any example after
deleting/renaming their associated shader(s).
> If relevant, what platforms did you test these changes on, and are
there any important ones you can't test?
N/A
# Objective
Fixes#13711
## Solution
Introduce smaller, generic system sets for each schedule variant, which
are ordered against other generic variants:
- `ExitSchedules<S>` - For `OnExit` schedules, runs from leaf states to
root states.
- `TransitionSchedules<S>` - For `OnTransition` schedules, runs in
arbitrary order.
- `EnterSchedules<S>` - For `OnEnter` schedules, runs from root states
to leaf states.
Also unified `ApplyStateTransition<S>` schedule which works in basically
the same way, just for internals.
## Testing
- One test that tests schedule execution order
---------
Co-authored-by: Lee-Orr <lee-orr@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
One thing missing from the new Color implementation in 0.14 is the
ability to easily convert to a u8 representation of the rgb color.
(note this is a redo of PR https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/13739
as I needed to move the source branch
## Solution
I have added to_u8_array and to_u8_array_no_alpha to a new trait called
ColorToPacked to mirror the f32 conversions in ColorToComponents and
implemented the new trait for Srgba and LinearRgba.
To go with those I also added matching from_u8... functions and
converted a couple of cases that used ad-hoc implementations of that
conversion to use these.
After discussion on Discord of the experience of using the API I renamed
Color::linear to Color::to_linear, as without that it looks like a
constructor (like Color::rgb).
I also added to_srgba which is the other commonly converted to type of
color (for UI and 2D) to match to_linear.
Removed a redundant extra implementation of to_f32_array for LinearColor
as it is also supplied in ColorToComponents (I'm surprised that's
allowed?)
## Testing
Ran all tests and manually tested.
Added to_and_from_u8 to linear_rgba::tests
## Changelog
visible change is Color::linear becomes Color::to_linear.
---------
Co-authored-by: John Payne <20407779+johngpayne@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
The method `AssetServer::add_async` (added in
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/13700) requires a future that
returns an `AssetLoadError` error, which was a bit of an oversight on my
part, as that type of error only really makes sense in the context of
bevy's own asset loader -- returning it from user-defined futures isn't
very useful.
## Solution
Allow passing custom error types to `add_async`, which get cast into a
trait object matching the form of `AssetLoader::load`. If merged before
the next release this will not be a breaking change
# Objective
- Add support for `segments` for extrusion-meshes, akin to what is
possible with cylinders
## Solution
- Added a `.segments(segments: usize)` function to `ExtrusionBuilder`.
- Implemented support for segments in the meshing algorithm.
- If you set `.segments(0)`, the meshing will fail, just like it does
with cylinders.
## Additional information
Here is a wireframe of some extrusions with 1, 2, 3, etc. segments:
![image_2024-06-06_233205114](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/62256001/358081e2-172d-407b-8bdb-9cda88eb4664)
---------
Co-authored-by: Lynn Büttgenbach <62256001+solis-lumine-vorago@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
This PR addresses the 2D part of #12658. I plan to separate the examples
and make one PR per camera example.
## Solution
Added a new top-down example composed of:
- [x] Player keyboard movements
- [x] UI for keyboard instructions
- [x] Colors and bloom effect to see the movement of the player
- [x] Camera smooth movement towards the player (lerp)
## Testing
```bash
cargo run --features="wayland,bevy/dynamic_linking" --example 2d_top_down_camera
```
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/10638479/95db0587-e5e0-4f55-be11-97444b795793
# Objective
- Let `init_non_send_resource` take `FromWorld` values again, not only
`Default`
- This reverts an unintended breaking change introduced in #9202
## Solution
- The resource initialized with `init_non_send_resource` requires
`FromWorld` again
# Objective
The `EntityCommands::despawn` method was previously changed from
panicking behavior to a warning, but the docs continue to state that it
panics.
## Solution
- Removed panic section, copied warning blurb from `World::despawn`
- Adds a similar warning blurb to
`DespawnRecursiveExt::despawn_recursive` and
`DespawnRecursiveExt::despawn_descendants`