Commit graph

426 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Ame
9d67edc3a6
fix some typos (#12038)
# Objective

Split - containing only the fixed typos

-
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/12036#pullrequestreview-1894738751


# Migration Guide
In `crates/bevy_mikktspace/src/generated.rs` 

```rs
// before
pub struct SGroup {
    pub iVertexRepresentitive: i32,
    ..
}

// after
pub struct SGroup {
    pub iVertexRepresentative: i32,
    ..
}
```

In `crates/bevy_core_pipeline/src/core_2d/mod.rs`

```rs
// before
Node2D::ConstrastAdaptiveSharpening

// after
Node2D::ContrastAdaptiveSharpening
```

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: James Liu <contact@jamessliu.com>
Co-authored-by: François <mockersf@gmail.com>
2024-02-22 18:55:22 +00:00
Tristan Guichaoua
33c7a2251e
bevy_ecs address trivial cases of unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn (#11861)
# Objective

- Part of #11590
- Fix `unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn` for trivial cases in bevy_ecs

## Solution

Fix `unsafe_op_in_unsafe_fn` in bevy_ecs for trivial cases, i.e., add an
`unsafe` block when the safety comment already exists or add a comment
like "The invariants are uphold by the caller".

---------

Co-authored-by: James Liu <contact@jamessliu.com>
2024-02-22 00:04:38 +00:00
Jakob Hellermann
a491bce680
Fix SystemTypeSet::system_type being out of sync with System::type_id (#12030)
## Objective

Always have `some_system.into_system().type_id() ==
some_system.into_system_set().system_type().unwrap()`.

System sets have a `fn system_type() -> Option<TypeId>` that is
implemented by `SystemTypeSet` to returning the TypeId of the system's
function type. This was implemented in
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/7715 and is used in
`bevy_mod_debugdump` to handle `.after(function)` constraints.

Back then, `System::type_id` always also returned the type id of the
function item, not of `FunctionSystem<M, F>`.

https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/11728 changes the behaviour of
`System::type_id` so that it returns the id of the
`FunctionSystem`/`ExclusiveFunctionSystem` wrapper, but it did not
change `SystemTypeSet::system_type`, so doing the lookup breaks in
`bevy_mod_debugdump`.

## Solution

Change `IntoSystemSet` for functions to return a
`SystemTypeSet<FunctionSystem>` /
`SystemTypeSet<ExclusiveFunctionSystem>` instead of `SystemTypeSet<F>`.
2024-02-21 23:40:45 +00:00
James Liu
bc82749012
Remove APIs deprecated in 0.13 (#11974)
# Objective
We deprecated quite a few APIs in 0.13. 0.13 has shipped already. It
should be OK to remove them in 0.14's release. Fixes #4059. Fixes #9011.

## Solution
Remove them.
2024-02-19 19:04:47 +00:00
James Liu
e34fb68677
refactor: Extract parallel queue abstraction (#7348)
# Objective
There's a repeating pattern of `ThreadLocal<Cell<Vec<T>>>` which is very
useful for low overhead, low contention multithreaded queues that have
cropped up in a few places in the engine. This pattern is surprisingly
useful when building deferred mutation across multiple threads, as noted
by it's use in `ParallelCommands`.

However, `ThreadLocal<Cell<Vec<T>>>` is not only a mouthful, it's also
hard to ensure the thread-local queue is replaced after it's been
temporarily removed from the `Cell`.

## Solution
Wrap the pattern into `bevy_utils::Parallel<T>` which codifies the
entire pattern and ensures the user follows the contract. Instead of
fetching indivdual cells, removing the value, mutating it, and replacing
it, `Parallel::get` returns a `ParRef<'a, T>` which contains the
temporarily removed value and a reference back to the cell, and will
write the mutated value back to the cell upon being dropped.

I would like to use this to simplify the remaining part of #4899 that
has not been adopted/merged.

---

## Changelog
TODO

---------

Co-authored-by: Joseph <21144246+JoJoJet@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-02-19 16:31:15 +00:00
Joseph
bd25135330
Fix double indirection when applying command queues (#11822)
# Objective

When applying a command, we currently use double indirection for the
world reference `&mut Option<&mut World>`. Since this is used across a
`fn` pointer boundary, this can't get optimized away.

## Solution

Reborrow the world reference and pass `Option<&mut World>` instead.
2024-02-12 15:27:18 +00:00
Joseph
9c2257332a
Add a method for detecting changes within a certain scope (#11687)
# Objective

Bevy's change detection functionality is invaluable for writing robust
apps, but it only works in the context of systems and exclusive systems.
Oftentimes it is necessary to detect changes made in earlier code
without having to place the code in separate systems, but it is not
currently possible to do so since there is no way to set the value of
`World::last_change_tick`.

`World::clear_trackers` allows you to update the change tick, but this
has unintended side effects, since it irreversibly affects the behavior
of change and removal detection for the entire app.

## Solution

Add a method `World::last_change_tick_scope`. This allows you to set
`last_change_tick` to a specific value for a region of code. To ensure
that misuse doesn't break unrelated functions, we restore the world's
original change tick at the end of the provided scope.

### Example

A function that uses this to run an update loop repeatedly, allowing
each iteration of the loop to react to changes made in the previous loop
iteration.

```rust
fn update_loop(
    world: &mut World,
    mut update_fn: impl FnMut(&mut World) -> std::ops::ControlFlow<()>,
) {
    let mut last_change_tick = world.last_change_tick();

    // Repeatedly run the update function until it requests a break.
    loop {
        // Update once.
        let control_flow = world.last_change_tick_scope(last_change_tick, |world| {
            update_fn(world)
        });

        // End the loop when the closure returns `ControlFlow::Break`.
        if control_flow.is_break() {
            break;
        }

        // Increment the change tick so the next update can detect changes from this update.
        last_change_tick = world.change_tick();
        world.increment_change_tick();
    }
}
```

---

## Changelog

+ Added `World::last_change_tick_scope`, which allows you to specify the
reference for change detection within a certain scope.
2024-02-12 15:09:11 +00:00
Zachary Harrold
950bd2284d
System::type_id Consistency (#11728)
# Objective

- Fixes #11679

## Solution

- Added `IntoSystem::system_type_id` which returns the equivalent of
`system.into_system().type_id()` without construction. This allows for
getting the `TypeId` of functions (a function is an unnamed type and
therefore you cannot call `TypeId::of::<apply_deferred::System>()`)
- Added default implementation of `System::type_id` to ensure
consistency between implementations. Some returned `Self`, while others
were returning an inner value instead. This ensures consistency with
`IntoSystem::system_type_id`.

## Migration Guide

If you use `System::type_id()` on function systems (exclusive or not),
ensure you are comparing its value to other `System::type_id()` calls,
or `IntoSystem::system_type_id()`.

This code wont require any changes, because `IntoSystem`'s are directly
compared to each other.

```rust
fn test_system() {}

let type_id = test_system.type_id();

// ...

// No change required
assert_eq!(test_system.type_id(), type_id);
```

Likewise, this code wont, because `System`'s are directly compared.

```rust
fn test_system() {}

let type_id = IntoSystem::into_system(test_system).type_id();

// ...

// No change required
assert_eq!(IntoSystem::into_system(test_system).type_id(), type_id);
```

The below _does_ require a change, since you're comparing a `System`
type to a `IntoSystem` type.

```rust
fn test_system() {}

// Before
assert_eq!(test_system.type_id(), IntoSystem::into_system(test_system).type_id());

// After
assert_eq!(test_system.system_type_id(), IntoSystem::into_system(test_system).type_id());
```
2024-02-06 14:43:33 +00:00
Zachary Harrold
1974723a63
Deprecated Various Component Methods from Query and QueryState (#9920)
# Objective

- (Partially) Fixes #9904
- Acts on #9910

## Solution

- Deprecated the relevant methods from `Query`, cascading changes as
required across Bevy.

---

## Changelog

- Deprecated `QueryState::get_component_unchecked_mut` method
- Deprecated `Query::get_component` method
- Deprecated `Query::get_component_mut` method
- Deprecated `Query::component` method
- Deprecated `Query::component_mut` method
- Deprecated `Query::get_component_unchecked_mut` method

## Migration Guide

### `QueryState::get_component_unchecked_mut`

Use `QueryState::get_unchecked_manual` and select for the exact
component based on the structure of the exact query as required.

### `Query::(get_)component(_unchecked)(_mut)`

Use `Query::get` and select for the exact component based on the
structure of the exact query as required.

- For mutable access (`_mut`), use `Query::get_mut`
- For unchecked access (`_unchecked`), use `Query::get_unchecked`
- For panic variants (non-`get_`), add `.unwrap()`

## Notes

- `QueryComponentError` can be removed once these deprecated methods are
also removed. Due to an interaction with `thiserror`'s derive macro, it
is not marked as deprecated.
2024-02-04 01:01:59 +00:00
Lane Kolbly
9fcf862114
bevy_ecs: Add doc example for par_iter_mut (#11311) (#11499)
# Objective

Fixes #11311 

## Solution

Adds an example to the documentation for `par_iter_mut`. I didn't add
any examples to `par_iter`, because I couldn't think of a good example
and I figure users can infer that `par_iter` and `par_iter_mut` are
similar.
2024-01-28 02:13:03 +00:00
Trashtalk217
a955d65ffa
Exclusive systems can now be used for one-shot systems (#11560)
Joy notified me that exclusive systems should now work (they may have
always worked, I don't know), so here's a quick change to the
documentation.
2024-01-27 16:10:39 +00:00
Pixelstorm
df063ab1ef
Implement Debug for CommandQueue (#11444)
# Objective

Allow users to impl Debug on types containing `CommandQueue`s

## Solution

Derive Debug on `CommandQueue`

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2024-01-22 15:45:17 +00:00
Joseph
7d69d3195f
refactor: Simplify lifetimes for Commands and related types (#11445)
# Objective

It would be convenient to be able to call functions with `Commands` as a
parameter without having to move your own instance of `Commands`. Since
this struct is composed entirely of references, we can easily get an
owned instance of `Commands` by shortening the lifetime.

## Solution

Add `Commands::reborrow`, `EntiyCommands::reborrow`, and
`Deferred::reborrow`, which returns an owned version of themselves with
a shorter lifetime.

Remove unnecessary lifetimes from `EntityCommands`. The `'w` and `'s`
lifetimes only have to be separate for `Commands` because it's used as a
`SystemParam` -- this is not the case for `EntityCommands`.

---

## Changelog

Added `Commands::reborrow`. This is useful if you have `&mut Commands`
but need `Commands`. Also added `EntityCommands::reborrow` and
`Deferred:reborrow` which serve the same purpose.

## Migration Guide

The lifetimes for `EntityCommands` have been simplified.

```rust
// Before (Bevy 0.12)
struct MyStruct<'w, 's, 'a> {
     commands: EntityCommands<'w, 's, 'a>,
}

// After (Bevy 0.13)
struct MyStruct<'a> {
    commands: EntityCommands<'a>,
}
```

The method `EntityCommands::commands` now returns `Commands` rather than
`&mut Commands`.

```rust
// Before (Bevy 0.12)
let commands = entity_commands.commands();
commands.spawn(...);

// After (Bevy 0.13)
let mut commands = entity_commands.commands();
commands.spawn(...);
```
2024-01-22 15:35:42 +00:00
laund
e2e4e8eb9a
document which lifetime is needed for systemparam derive (#11321)
# Objective

Document a few common cases of which lifetime is required when using
SystemParam Derive

## Solution

Added a table in the doc comment

---------

Co-authored-by: laund <me@laund.moe>
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2024-01-22 15:32:42 +00:00
James O'Brien
ea42d14344
Dynamic queries and builder API (#9774)
# Objective
Expand the existing `Query` API to support more dynamic use cases i.e.
scripting.

## Prior Art
 - #6390 
 - #8308 
- #10037

## Solution
- Create a `QueryBuilder` with runtime methods to define the set of
component accesses for a built query.
- Create new `WorldQueryData` implementations `FilteredEntityMut` and
`FilteredEntityRef` as variants of `EntityMut` and `EntityRef` that
provide run time checked access to the components included in a given
query.
- Add new methods to `Query` to create "query lens" with a subset of the
access of the initial query.

### Query Builder
The `QueryBuilder` API allows you to define a query at runtime. At it's
most basic use it will simply create a query with the corresponding type
signature:
```rust
let query = QueryBuilder::<Entity, With<A>>::new(&mut world).build();
// is equivalent to
let query = QueryState::<Entity, With<A>>::new(&mut world);
```
Before calling `.build()` you also have the opportunity to add
additional accesses and filters. Here is a simple example where we add
additional filter terms:
```rust
let entity_a = world.spawn((A(0), B(0))).id();
let entity_b = world.spawn((A(0), C(0))).id();

let mut query_a = QueryBuilder::<Entity>::new(&mut world)
    .with::<A>()
    .without::<C>()
    .build();
            
assert_eq!(entity_a, query_a.single(&world));
```
This alone is useful in that allows you to decide which archetypes your
query will match at runtime. However it is also very limited, consider a
case like the following:
```rust
let query_a = QueryBuilder::<&A>::new(&mut world)
// Add an additional access
    .data::<&B>()
    .build();
```
This will grant the query an additional read access to component B
however we have no way of accessing the data while iterating as the type
signature still only includes &A. For an even more concrete example of
this consider dynamic components:
```rust
let query_a = QueryBuilder::<Entity>::new(&mut world)
// Adding a filter is easy since it doesn't need be read later
    .with_id(component_id_a)
// How do I access the data of this component?
    .ref_id(component_id_b)
    .build();
```
With this in mind the `QueryBuilder` API seems somewhat incomplete by
itself, we need some way method of accessing the components dynamically.
So here's one:
### Query Transmutation
If the problem is not having the component in the type signature why not
just add it? This PR also adds transmute methods to `QueryBuilder` and
`QueryState`. Here's a simple example:
```rust
world.spawn(A(0));
world.spawn((A(1), B(0)));
let mut query = QueryBuilder::<()>::new(&mut world)
    .with::<B>()
    .transmute::<&A>()
    .build();

query.iter(&world).for_each(|a| assert_eq!(a.0, 1));
```
The `QueryState` and `QueryBuilder` transmute methods look quite similar
but are different in one respect. Transmuting a builder will always
succeed as it will just add the additional accesses needed for the new
terms if they weren't already included. Transmuting a `QueryState` will
panic in the case that the new type signature would give it access it
didn't already have, for example:
```rust
let query = QueryState::<&A, Option<&B>>::new(&mut world);
/// This is fine, the access for Option<&A> is less restrictive than &A
query.transmute::<Option<&A>>(&world);
/// Oh no, this would allow access to &B on entities that might not have it, so it panics
query.transmute::<&B>(&world);
/// This is right out
query.transmute::<&C>(&world);
```
This is quite an appealing API to also have available on `Query` however
it does pose one additional wrinkle: In order to to change the iterator
we need to create a new `QueryState` to back it. `Query` doesn't own
it's own state though, it just borrows it, so we need a place to borrow
it from. This is why `QueryLens` exists, it is a place to store the new
state so it can be borrowed when you call `.query()` leaving you with an
API like this:
```rust
fn function_that_takes_a_query(query: &Query<&A>) {
    // ...
}

fn system(query: Query<(&A, &B)>) {
    let lens = query.transmute_lens::<&A>();
    let q = lens.query();
    function_that_takes_a_query(&q);
}
```
Now you may be thinking: Hey, wait a second, you introduced the problem
with dynamic components and then described a solution that only works
for static components! Ok, you got me, I guess we need a bit more:
### Filtered Entity References
Currently the only way you can access dynamic components on entities
through a query is with either `EntityMut` or `EntityRef`, however these
can access all components and so conflict with all other accesses. This
PR introduces `FilteredEntityMut` and `FilteredEntityRef` as
alternatives that have additional runtime checking to prevent accessing
components that you shouldn't. This way you can build a query with a
`QueryBuilder` and actually access the components you asked for:
```rust
let mut query = QueryBuilder::<FilteredEntityRef>::new(&mut world)
    .ref_id(component_id_a)
    .with(component_id_b)
    .build();

let entity_ref = query.single(&world);

// Returns Some(Ptr) as we have that component and are allowed to read it
let a = entity_ref.get_by_id(component_id_a);
// Will return None even though the entity does have the component, as we are not allowed to read it
let b = entity_ref.get_by_id(component_id_b);
```
For the most part these new structs have the exact same methods as their
non-filtered equivalents.

Putting all of this together we can do some truly dynamic ECS queries,
check out the `dynamic` example to see it in action:
```
Commands:
    comp, c   Create new components
    spawn, s  Spawn entities
    query, q  Query for entities
Enter a command with no parameters for usage.

> c A, B, C, Data 4  
Component A created with id: 0
Component B created with id: 1
Component C created with id: 2
Component Data created with id: 3

> s A, B, Data 1
Entity spawned with id: 0v0

> s A, C, Data 0
Entity spawned with id: 1v0

> q &Data
0v0: Data: [1, 0, 0, 0]
1v0: Data: [0, 0, 0, 0]

> q B, &mut Data                                                                                     
0v0: Data: [2, 1, 1, 1]

> q B || C, &Data 
0v0: Data: [2, 1, 1, 1]
1v0: Data: [0, 0, 0, 0]
```
## Changelog
 - Add new `transmute_lens` methods to `Query`.
- Add new types `QueryBuilder`, `FilteredEntityMut`, `FilteredEntityRef`
and `QueryLens`
- `update_archetype_component_access` has been removed, archetype
component accesses are now determined by the accesses set in
`update_component_access`
- Added method `set_access` to `WorldQuery`, this is called before
`update_component_access` for queries that have a restricted set of
accesses, such as those built by `QueryBuilder` or `QueryLens`. This is
primarily used by the `FilteredEntity*` variants and has an empty trait
implementation.
- Added method `get_state` to `WorldQuery` as a fallible version of
`init_state` when you don't have `&mut World` access.

## Future Work
Improve performance of `FilteredEntityMut` and `FilteredEntityRef`,
currently they have to determine the accesses a query has in a given
archetype during iteration which is far from ideal, especially since we
already did the work when matching the archetype in the first place. To
avoid making more internal API changes I have left it out of this PR.

---------

Co-authored-by: Mike Hsu <mike.hsu@gmail.com>
2024-01-16 19:16:49 +00:00
Ixentus
e2fd63104d
Simplify conditions (#11316)
# Objective

- Conditions don't have to be closures unless they have state or mutate.

## Solution

- Simplify conditions when possible.

---

## Changelog

The following run conditions are now regular systems:
- resource_exists<T>
- resource_added<T>
- resource_changed<T>
- resource_exists_and_changed<T>
- state_exists<S: States>
- state_changed<S: States>
- any_with_component<T: Component>

## Migration Guide

- resource_exists<T>() -> resource_exists<T>
- resource_added<T>() -> resource_added<T>
- resource_changed<T>() -> resource_changed<T>
- resource_exists_and_changed<T>() -> resource_exists_and_changed<T>
- state_exists<S: States>() -> state_exists<S: States>
- state_changed<S: States>() -> state_changed<S: States>
- any_with_component<T: Component>() -> any_with_component<T: Component>
2024-01-13 13:22:17 +00:00
Joseph
df2ba09989
Restore support for running fn EntityCommands on entities that might be despawned (#11107)
# Objective

In #9604 we removed the ability to define an `EntityCommand` as
`fn(Entity, &mut World)`. However I have since realized that `fn(Entity,
&mut World)` is an incredibly expressive and powerful way to define a
command for an entity that may or may not exist (`fn(EntityWorldMut)`
only works on entities that are alive).

## Solution

Support `EntityCommand`s in the style of `fn(Entity, &mut World)`, as
well as `fn(EntityWorldMut)`. Use a marker generic on the
`EntityCommand` trait to allow multiple impls.

The second commit in this PR replaces all of the internal command
definitions with ones using `fn` definitions. This is mostly just to
show off how expressive this style of command is -- we can revert this
commit if we'd rather avoid breaking changes.

---

## Changelog

Re-added support for expressively defining an `EntityCommand` as a
function that takes `Entity, &mut World`.

## Migration Guide

All `Command` types in `bevy_ecs`, such as `Spawn`, `SpawnBatch`,
`Insert`, etc., have been made private. Use the equivalent methods on
`Commands` or `EntityCommands` instead.
2024-01-08 22:32:28 +00:00
Chia-Hsiang Cheng
b6da40cfe6
Print a warning for un-applied commands being dropped from a CommandQueue (#11146)
# Objective

- Fixes #11125 
## Solution

Add a warning for un-applied commands to the `drop` function.
2024-01-03 15:32:57 +00:00
Stepan Koltsov
6bc2686a7a
impl ExclusiveSystemParam for SystemName (#11163)
# Objective

`SystemName` might be useful in systems which accept `&mut World`.

## Solution

- `impl ExclusiveSystemParam for SystemName`
- move `SystemName` into a separate file, because it no longer belongs
to a file which defines `SystemParam`
- add a test for new impl, and for existing impl

## Changelog

- `impl ExclusiveSystemParam for SystemName`
2024-01-01 17:08:29 +00:00
Adam
8baefa1570
Implement Deref and DerefMut for In (#11104)
# Objective

Implement Deref and DerefMut for In<T>

makes it so the user doesn't have to add ".0" in most cases
2024-01-01 16:55:07 +00:00
Doonv
189ceaf0d3
Replace or document ignored doctests (#11040)
# Objective

There are a lot of doctests that are `ignore`d for no documented reason.
And that should be fixed.

## Solution

I searched the bevy repo with the regex ` ```[a-z,]*ignore ` in order to
find all `ignore`d doctests. For each one of the `ignore`d doctests, I
did the following steps:
1. Attempt to remove the `ignored` attribute while still passing the
test. I did this by adding hidden dummy structs and imports.
2. If step 1 doesn't work, attempt to replace the `ignored` attribute
with the `no_run` attribute while still passing the test.
3. If step 2 doesn't work, keep the `ignored` attribute but add
documentation for why the `ignored` attribute was added.

---------

Co-authored-by: François <mockersf@gmail.com>
2024-01-01 16:50:56 +00:00
Stepan Koltsov
4fba03b529
impl ExclusiveSystemParam for PhantomData (#11153)
# Objective

Implement `ExclusiveSystemParam` for `PhantomData`.

For the same reason `SystemParam` impl exists: to simplify writing
generic code.


786abbf3f5/crates/bevy_ecs/src/system/system_param.rs (L1557)

Also for consistency.

## Solution

`impl ExclusiveSystemParam for PhantomData`.

## Changelog
Added: PhantomData<T> now implements ExclusiveSystemParam.
2024-01-01 16:02:21 +00:00
Stepan Koltsov
ac58a5fe57
Better doc for SystemName (#11084)
Compared to [current
documentation](https://docs.rs/bevy/latest/bevy/ecs/system/struct.SystemName.html)
it is now immediately clear that it is `SystemParam` readily available
to user, and not just some accidentally exposed internal data type.
2023-12-25 05:09:15 +00:00
Tygyh
7b8305e5b4
Remove unnecessary parens (#11075)
# Objective

- Increase readability.

## Solution

- Remove unnecessary parens.
2023-12-24 17:43:01 +00:00
Tygyh
63d17e8494
Simplify equality assertions (#10988)
# Objective

- Shorten assertions.

## Solution

- Replace '==' assertions with 'assert_eq()' and '!=' assertions with
'assert_ne()' .
2023-12-16 23:58:41 +00:00
Mike
6b84ba97a3
Auto insert sync points (#9822)
# Objective

- Users are often confused when their command effects are not visible in
the next system. This PR auto inserts sync points if there are deferred
buffers on a system and there are dependents on that system (systems
with after relationships).
- Manual sync points can lead to users adding more than needed and it's
hard for the user to have a global understanding of their system graph
to know which sync points can be merged. However we can easily calculate
which sync points can be merged automatically.

## Solution

1. Add new edge types to allow opting out of new behavior
2. Insert an sync point for each edge whose initial node has deferred
system params.
3. Reuse nodes if they're at the number of sync points away.

* add opt outs for specific edges with `after_ignore_deferred`,
`before_ignore_deferred` and `chain_ignore_deferred`. The
`auto_insert_apply_deferred` boolean on `ScheduleBuildSettings` can be
set to false to opt out for the whole schedule.

## Perf
This has a small negative effect on schedule build times.
```text
group                                           auto-sync                              main-for-auto-sync
-----                                           -----------                            ------------------
build_schedule/1000_schedule                    1.06       2.8±0.15s        ? ?/sec    1.00       2.7±0.06s        ? ?/sec
build_schedule/1000_schedule_noconstraints      1.01     26.2±0.88ms        ? ?/sec    1.00     25.8±0.36ms        ? ?/sec
build_schedule/100_schedule                     1.02     13.1±0.33ms        ? ?/sec    1.00     12.9±0.28ms        ? ?/sec
build_schedule/100_schedule_noconstraints       1.08   505.3±29.30µs        ? ?/sec    1.00   469.4±12.48µs        ? ?/sec
build_schedule/500_schedule                     1.00    485.5±6.29ms        ? ?/sec    1.00    485.5±9.80ms        ? ?/sec
build_schedule/500_schedule_noconstraints       1.00      6.8±0.10ms        ? ?/sec    1.02      6.9±0.16ms        ? ?/sec
```
---

## Changelog

- Auto insert sync points and added `after_ignore_deferred`,
`before_ignore_deferred`, `chain_no_deferred` and
`auto_insert_apply_deferred` APIs to opt out of this behavior

## Migration Guide

- `apply_deferred` points are added automatically when there is ordering
relationship with a system that has deferred parameters like `Commands`.
If you want to opt out of this you can switch from `after`, `before`,
and `chain` to the corresponding `ignore_deferred` API,
`after_ignore_deferred`, `before_ignore_deferred` or
`chain_ignore_deferred` for your system/set ordering.
- You can also set `ScheduleBuildSettings::auto_insert_sync_points` to
`false` if you want to do it for the whole schedule. Note that in this
mode you can still add `apply_deferred` points manually.
- For most manual insertions of `apply_deferred` you should remove them
as they cannot be merged with the automatically inserted points and
might reduce parallelizability of the system graph.

## TODO
- [x] remove any apply_deferred used in the engine
- [x] ~~decide if we should deprecate manually using apply_deferred.~~
We'll still allow inserting manual sync points for now for whatever edge
cases users might have.
- [x] Update migration guide
- [x] rerun schedule build benchmarks

---------

Co-authored-by: Joseph <21144246+JoJoJet@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-12-14 16:34:01 +00:00
Tygyh
b2661ea73d
Reorder impl to be the same as the trait (#10964)
# Objective

- Make the implementation order consistent between all sources to fit
the order in the trait.

## Solution

- Change the implementation order.
2023-12-13 21:19:49 +00:00
Federico Rinaldi
9c78128e8f
Rename Q type parameter to D when referring to WorldQueryData (#10782)
# Objective

Since #10776 split `WorldQuery` to `WorldQueryData` and
`WorldQueryFilter`, it should be clear that the query is actually
composed of two parts. It is not factually correct to call "query" only
the data part. Therefore I suggest to rename the `Q` parameter to `D` in
`Query` and related items.

As far as I know, there shouldn't be breaking changes from renaming
generic type parameters.

## Solution

I used a combination of rust-analyzer go to reference and `Ctrl-F`ing
various patterns to catch as many cases as possible. Hopefully I got
them all. Feel free to check if you're concerned of me having missed
some.

## Notes

This and #10779 have many lines in common, so merging one will cause a
lot of merge conflicts to the other.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2023-12-13 18:50:46 +00:00
Mantas
5af2f022d8
Rename WorldQueryData & WorldQueryFilter to QueryData & QueryFilter (#10779)
# Rename `WorldQueryData` & `WorldQueryFilter` to `QueryData` &
`QueryFilter`

Fixes #10776 

## Solution

Traits `WorldQueryData` & `WorldQueryFilter` were renamed to `QueryData`
and `QueryFilter`, respectively. Related Trait types were also renamed.

---

## Changelog

- Trait `WorldQueryData` has been renamed to `QueryData`. Derive macro's
`QueryData` attribute `world_query_data` has been renamed to
`query_data`.
- Trait `WorldQueryFilter` has been renamed to `QueryFilter`. Derive
macro's `QueryFilter` attribute `world_query_filter` has been renamed to
`query_filter`.
- Trait's `ExtractComponent` type `Query` has been renamed to `Data`.
- Trait's `GetBatchData` types `Query` & `QueryFilter` has been renamed
to `Data` & `Filter`, respectively.
- Trait's `ExtractInstance` type `Query` has been renamed to `Data`.
- Trait's `ViewNode` type `ViewQuery` has been renamed to `ViewData`.
- Trait's `RenderCommand` types `ViewWorldQuery` & `ItemWorldQuery` has
been renamed to `ViewData` & `ItemData`, respectively.

## Migration Guide

Note: if merged before 0.13 is released, this should instead modify the
migration guide of #10776 with the updated names.

- Rename `WorldQueryData` & `WorldQueryFilter` trait usages to
`QueryData` & `QueryFilter` and their respective derive macro attributes
`world_query_data` & `world_query_filter` to `query_data` &
`query_filter`.
- Rename the following trait type usages:
  - Trait's `ExtractComponent` type `Query` to `Data`.
  - Trait's `GetBatchData` type `Query` to `Data`.
  - Trait's `ExtractInstance` type `Query` to `Data`.
  - Trait's `ViewNode` type `ViewQuery` to `ViewData`'
- Trait's `RenderCommand` types `ViewWolrdQuery` & `ItemWorldQuery` to
`ViewData` & `ItemData`, respectively.

```rust
// Before
#[derive(WorldQueryData)]
#[world_query_data(derive(Debug))]
struct EmptyQuery {
    empty: (),
}

// After
#[derive(QueryData)]
#[query_data(derive(Debug))]
struct EmptyQuery {
    empty: (),
}

// Before
#[derive(WorldQueryFilter)]
struct CustomQueryFilter<T: Component, P: Component> {
    _c: With<ComponentC>,
    _d: With<ComponentD>,
    _or: Or<(Added<ComponentC>, Changed<ComponentD>, Without<ComponentZ>)>,
    _generic_tuple: (With<T>, With<P>),
}

// After
#[derive(QueryFilter)]
struct CustomQueryFilter<T: Component, P: Component> {
    _c: With<ComponentC>,
    _d: With<ComponentD>,
    _or: Or<(Added<ComponentC>, Changed<ComponentD>, Without<ComponentZ>)>,
    _generic_tuple: (With<T>, With<P>),
}

// Before
impl ExtractComponent for ContrastAdaptiveSharpeningSettings {
    type Query = &'static Self;
    type Filter = With<Camera>;
    type Out = (DenoiseCAS, CASUniform);

    fn extract_component(item: QueryItem<Self::Query>) -> Option<Self::Out> {
        //...
    }
}

// After
impl ExtractComponent for ContrastAdaptiveSharpeningSettings {
    type Data = &'static Self;
    type Filter = With<Camera>;
    type Out = (DenoiseCAS, CASUniform);

    fn extract_component(item: QueryItem<Self::Data>) -> Option<Self::Out> {
        //...
    }
}

// Before
impl GetBatchData for MeshPipeline {
    type Param = SRes<RenderMeshInstances>;
    type Query = Entity;
    type QueryFilter = With<Mesh3d>;
    type CompareData = (MaterialBindGroupId, AssetId<Mesh>);
    type BufferData = MeshUniform;

    fn get_batch_data(
        mesh_instances: &SystemParamItem<Self::Param>,
        entity: &QueryItem<Self::Query>,
    ) -> (Self::BufferData, Option<Self::CompareData>) {
        // ....
    }
}

// After
impl GetBatchData for MeshPipeline {
    type Param = SRes<RenderMeshInstances>;
    type Data = Entity;
    type Filter = With<Mesh3d>;
    type CompareData = (MaterialBindGroupId, AssetId<Mesh>);
    type BufferData = MeshUniform;

    fn get_batch_data(
        mesh_instances: &SystemParamItem<Self::Param>,
        entity: &QueryItem<Self::Data>,
    ) -> (Self::BufferData, Option<Self::CompareData>) {
        // ....
    }
}

// Before
impl<A> ExtractInstance for AssetId<A>
where
    A: Asset,
{
    type Query = Read<Handle<A>>;
    type Filter = ();

    fn extract(item: QueryItem<'_, Self::Query>) -> Option<Self> {
        Some(item.id())
    }
}

// After
impl<A> ExtractInstance for AssetId<A>
where
    A: Asset,
{
    type Data = Read<Handle<A>>;
    type Filter = ();

    fn extract(item: QueryItem<'_, Self::Data>) -> Option<Self> {
        Some(item.id())
    }
}

// Before
impl ViewNode for PostProcessNode {
    type ViewQuery = (
        &'static ViewTarget,
        &'static PostProcessSettings,
    );

    fn run(
        &self,
        _graph: &mut RenderGraphContext,
        render_context: &mut RenderContext,
        (view_target, _post_process_settings): QueryItem<Self::ViewQuery>,
        world: &World,
    ) -> Result<(), NodeRunError> {
        // ...
    }
}

// After
impl ViewNode for PostProcessNode {
    type ViewData = (
        &'static ViewTarget,
        &'static PostProcessSettings,
    );

    fn run(
        &self,
        _graph: &mut RenderGraphContext,
        render_context: &mut RenderContext,
        (view_target, _post_process_settings): QueryItem<Self::ViewData>,
        world: &World,
    ) -> Result<(), NodeRunError> {
        // ...
    }
}

// Before
impl<P: CachedRenderPipelinePhaseItem> RenderCommand<P> for SetItemPipeline {
    type Param = SRes<PipelineCache>;
    type ViewWorldQuery = ();
    type ItemWorldQuery = ();
    #[inline]
    fn render<'w>(
        item: &P,
        _view: (),
        _entity: (),
        pipeline_cache: SystemParamItem<'w, '_, Self::Param>,
        pass: &mut TrackedRenderPass<'w>,
    ) -> RenderCommandResult {
        // ...
    }
}

// After
impl<P: CachedRenderPipelinePhaseItem> RenderCommand<P> for SetItemPipeline {
    type Param = SRes<PipelineCache>;
    type ViewData = ();
    type ItemData = ();
    #[inline]
    fn render<'w>(
        item: &P,
        _view: (),
        _entity: (),
        pipeline_cache: SystemParamItem<'w, '_, Self::Param>,
        pass: &mut TrackedRenderPass<'w>,
    ) -> RenderCommandResult {
        // ...
    }
}
```
2023-12-12 19:45:50 +00:00
Ben Frankel
9c8576996f
Add a doc note about despawn footgun (#10889)
# Objective

The `Despawn` command breaks the hierarchy whenever you use it if the
despawned entity has a parent or any children. This is a serious footgun
because the `Despawn` command has the shortest name, the behavior is
unexpected and not likely to be what you want, and the crash that it
causes can be very difficult to track down.

## Solution

Until this can be fixed by relations, add a note mentioning the footgun
in the documentation.
2023-12-12 19:44:05 +00:00
TheBigCheese
6a15ed564d
Improve EntityWorldMut.remove, retain and despawn docs by linking to more detail (#10943)
## Solution

`Commands.remove` and `.retain` (because I copied `remove`s doc)
referenced `EntityWorldMut.remove` and `retain` for more detail but the
`Commands` docs are much more detailed (which makes sense because it is
the most common api), so I have instead inverted this so that
`EntityWorldMut` docs link to `Commands`.

I also made `EntityWorldMut.despawn` reference `World.despawn` for more
details, like `Commands.despawn` does.
2023-12-12 19:27:11 +00:00
Nicola Papale
d2614f2d80
Add a couple assertions for system types (#10893)
# Objective

Test more complex function signatures for exclusive systems, and test
that `StaticSystemParam` is indeed a `SystemParam`.

I mean, it currently works, but might as well add a test for it.
2023-12-06 20:35:46 +00:00
TheBigCheese
9da65b10b4
Add EntityCommands.retain and EntityWorldMut.retain (#10873)
# Objective
Adds `EntityCommands.retain` and `EntityWorldMut.retain` to remove all
components except the given bundle from the entity.
Fixes #10865.

## Solution

I added a private unsafe function in `EntityWorldMut` called
`remove_bundle_info` which performs the shared behaviour of `remove` and
`retain`, namely taking a `BundleInfo` of components to remove, and
removing them from the given entity. Then `retain` simply gets all the
components on the entity and filters them by whether they are in the
bundle it was passed, before passing this `BundleInfo` into
`remove_bundle_info`.

`EntityCommands.retain` just creates a new type `Retain` which runs
`EntityWorldMut.retain` when run.

---

## Changelog

Added `EntityCommands.retain` and `EntityWorldMut.retain`, which remove
all components except the given bundle from the entity, they can also be
used to remove all components by passing `()` as the bundle.
2023-12-05 15:37:33 +00:00
Nathan
24c6a7df05
Clarifying Commands' purpose (#10837)
# Objective
As described in [Issue
#10805](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/10805) I have changed
"impactful changes" to "structural changes"

## Solution
Updated the text "impactful" to "structural"
2023-12-02 10:07:19 +00:00
James Liu
2148518758
Override QueryIter::fold to port Query::for_each perf gains to select Iterator combinators (#6773)
# Objective
After #6547, `Query::for_each` has been capable of automatic
vectorization on certain queries, which is seeing a notable (>50% CPU
time improvements) for iteration. However, `Query::for_each` isn't
idiomatic Rust, and lacks the flexibility of iterator combinators.

Ideally, `Query::iter` and friends should be able to achieve the same
results. However, this does seem to blocked upstream
(rust-lang/rust#104914) by Rust's loop optimizations.

## Solution
This is an intermediate solution and refactor. This moves the
`Query::for_each` implementation onto the `Iterator::fold`
implementation for `QueryIter` instead. This should result in the same
automatic vectorization optimization on all `Iterator` functions that
internally use fold, including `Iterator::for_each`, `Iterator::count`,
etc.

With this, it should close the gap between the two completely.
Internally, this PR changes `Query::for_each` to use
`query.iter().for_each(..)` instead of the duplicated implementation.

Separately, the duplicate implementations of internal iteration (i.e.
`Query::par_for_each`) now use portions of the current `Query::for_each`
implementation factored out into their own functions.

This also massively cleans up our internal fragmentation of internal
iteration options, deduplicating the iteration code used in `for_each`
and `par_iter().for_each()`.

---

## Changelog
Changed: `Query::for_each`, `Query::for_each_mut`, `Query::for_each`,
and `Query::for_each_mut` have been moved to `QueryIter`'s
`Iterator::for_each` implementation, and still retains their performance
improvements over normal iteration. These APIs are deprecated in 0.13
and will be removed in 0.14.

---------

Co-authored-by: JoJoJet <21144246+JoJoJet@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2023-12-01 09:09:55 +00:00
tygyh
fd308571c4
Remove unnecessary path prefixes (#10749)
# Objective

- Shorten paths by removing unnecessary prefixes

## Solution

- Remove the prefixes from many paths which do not need them. Finding
the paths was done automatically using built-in refactoring tools in
Jetbrains RustRover.
2023-11-28 23:43:40 +00:00
Mark Wainwright
f0a8994f55
Split WorldQuery into WorldQueryData and WorldQueryFilter (#9918)
# Objective

- Fixes #7680
- This is an updated for https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/8899
which had the same objective but fell a long way behind the latest
changes


## Solution

The traits `WorldQueryData : WorldQuery` and `WorldQueryFilter :
WorldQuery` have been added and some of the types and functions from
`WorldQuery` has been moved into them.

`ReadOnlyWorldQuery` has been replaced with `ReadOnlyWorldQueryData`. 

`WorldQueryFilter` is safe (as long as `WorldQuery` is implemented
safely).

`WorldQueryData` is unsafe - safely implementing it requires that
`Self::ReadOnly` is a readonly version of `Self` (this used to be a
safety requirement of `WorldQuery`)

The type parameters `Q` and `F` of `Query` must now implement
`WorldQueryData` and `WorldQueryFilter` respectively.

This makes it impossible to accidentally use a filter in the data
position or vice versa which was something that could lead to bugs.
~~Compile failure tests have been added to check this.~~

It was previously sometimes useful to use `Option<With<T>>` in the data
position. Use `Has<T>` instead in these cases.

The `WorldQuery` derive macro has been split into separate derive macros
for `WorldQueryData` and `WorldQueryFilter`.

Previously it was possible to derive both `WorldQuery` for a struct that
had a mixture of data and filter items. This would not work correctly in
some cases but could be a useful pattern in others. *This is no longer
possible.*

---

## Notes

- The changes outside of `bevy_ecs` are all changing type parameters to
the new types, updating the macro use, or replacing `Option<With<T>>`
with `Has<T>`.

- All `WorldQueryData` types always returned `true` for `IS_ARCHETYPAL`
so I moved it to `WorldQueryFilter` and
replaced all calls to it with `true`. That should be the only logic
change outside of the macro generation code.

- `Changed<T>` and `Added<T>` were being generated by a macro that I
have expanded. Happy to revert that if desired.

- The two derive macros share some functions for implementing
`WorldQuery` but the tidiest way I could find to implement them was to
give them a ton of arguments and ask clippy to ignore that.

## Changelog

### Changed
- Split `WorldQuery` into `WorldQueryData` and `WorldQueryFilter` which
now have separate derive macros. It is not possible to derive both for
the same type.
- `Query` now requires that the first type argument implements
`WorldQueryData` and the second implements `WorldQueryFilter`

## Migration Guide

- Update derives

```rust
// old
#[derive(WorldQuery)]
#[world_query(mutable, derive(Debug))]
struct CustomQuery {
    entity: Entity,
    a: &'static mut ComponentA
}

#[derive(WorldQuery)]
struct QueryFilter {
    _c: With<ComponentC>
}

// new 
#[derive(WorldQueryData)]
#[world_query_data(mutable, derive(Debug))]
struct CustomQuery {
    entity: Entity,
    a: &'static mut ComponentA,
}

#[derive(WorldQueryFilter)]
struct QueryFilter {
    _c: With<ComponentC>
}
```
- Replace `Option<With<T>>` with `Has<T>`

```rust
/// old
fn my_system(query: Query<(Entity, Option<With<ComponentA>>)>)
{
  for (entity, has_a_option) in query.iter(){
    let has_a:bool = has_a_option.is_some();
    //todo!()
  }
}

/// new
fn my_system(query: Query<(Entity, Has<ComponentA>)>)
{
  for (entity, has_a) in query.iter(){
    //todo!()
  }
}
```

- Fix queries which had filters in the data position or vice versa.

```rust
// old
fn my_system(query: Query<(Entity, With<ComponentA>)>)
{
  for (entity, _) in query.iter(){
  //todo!()
  }
}

// new
fn my_system(query: Query<Entity, With<ComponentA>>)
{
  for entity in query.iter(){
  //todo!()
  }
}

// old
fn my_system(query: Query<AnyOf<(&ComponentA, With<ComponentB>)>>)
{
  for (entity, _) in query.iter(){
  //todo!()
  }
}

// new
fn my_system(query: Query<Option<&ComponentA>, Or<(With<ComponentA>, With<ComponentB>)>>)
{
  for entity in query.iter(){
  //todo!()
  }
}

```

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2023-11-28 03:56:07 +00:00
Zachary Harrold
6e871ab919
Implement Drop for CommandQueue (#10746)
# Objective

- Fixes #10676, preventing a possible memory leak for commands which
owned resources.

## Solution

Implemented `Drop` for `CommandQueue`. This has been done entirely in
the private API of `CommandQueue`, ensuring no breaking changes. Also
added a unit test, `test_command_queue_inner_drop_early`, based on the
reproduction steps as outlined in #10676.

## Notes

I believe this can be applied to `0.12.1` as well, but I am uncertain of
the process to make that kind of change. Please let me know if there's
anything I can do to help with the back-porting of this change.

---------

Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
2023-11-27 22:35:36 +00:00
Mike
11b1b3a24f
delete methods deprecated in 0.12 (#10693)
## Changelog

- delete methods deprecated in 0.12
2023-11-24 16:15:47 +00:00
Mike
208ecb53dc
Append commands (#10400)
# Objective

- I've been experimenting with different patterns to try and make async
tasks more convenient. One of the better ones I've found is to return a
command queue to allow for deferred &mut World access. It can be
convenient to check for task completion in a normal system, but it is
hard to do something with the command queue after getting it back. This
pr adds a `append` to Commands. This allows appending the returned
command queue onto the system's commands.

## Solution

- I edited the async compute example to use the new `append`, but not
sure if I should keep the example changed as this might be too
opinionated.

## Future Work

- It would be very easy to pull the pattern used in the example out into
a plugin or a external crate, so users wouldn't have to add the checking
system.

---

## Changelog

- add `append` to `Commands` and `CommandQueue`
2023-11-22 00:04:37 +00:00
Andrew Safigan
a22020bf5c
Make impl block for RemovedSystem generic (#10651)
# Objective

Make the impl block for RemovedSystem generic so that the methods can be
called for systems that have inputs or outputs.

## Solution

Simply adding generics to the impl block.
2023-11-21 01:27:29 +00:00
Stepan Koltsov
0c9f265423
Link to In in pipe documentation (#10596) 2023-11-17 15:34:58 +00:00
Nathan Fenner
1f05e1e2ab
Add 'World::run_system_with_input' function + allow World::run_system to get system output (#10380)
# Objective

Allows chained systems taking an `In<_>` input parameter to be run as
one-shot systems. This API was mentioned in #8963.

In addition, `run_system(_with_input)` returns the system output, for
any `'static` output type.

## Solution

A new function, `World::run_system_with_input` allows a `SystemId<I, O>`
to be run by providing an `I` value as input and producing `O` as an
output.

`SystemId<I, O>` is now generic over the input type `I` and output type
`O`, along with the related functions and types `RegisteredSystem`,
`RemovedSystem`, `register_system`, `remove_system`, and
`RegisteredSystemError`. These default to `()`, preserving the existing
API, for all of the public types.

---

## Changelog

- Added `World::run_system_with_input` function to allow one-shot
systems that take `In<_>` input parameters
- Changed `World::run_system` and `World::register_system` to support
systems with return types beyond `()`
- Added `Commands::run_system_with_input` command that schedules a
one-shot system with an `In<_>` input parameter
2023-11-15 13:44:44 +00:00
Giacomo Stevanato
e75c2f8b16
Remove a ptr-to-int cast in CommandQueue::apply (#10475)
# Objective

- `CommandQueue::apply` calculates the address of the end of the
internal buffer as a `usize` rather than as a pointer, requiring two
casts of `cursor` to `usize`. Casting pointers to integers is generally
discouraged and may also prevent optimizations. It's also unnecessary
here.

## Solution

- Calculate the end address as a pointer rather than a `usize`.

Small note:

A trivial translation of the old code to use pointers would have
computed `end_addr` as `cursor.add(self.bytes.len())`, which is not
wrong but is an additional `unsafe` operation that also needs to be
properly documented and proven correct. However this operation is
already implemented in the form of the safe `as_mut_ptr_range`, so I
just used that.
2023-11-09 19:32:33 +00:00
Aevyrie
0cc11791b9
Allow registering boxed systems (#10378)
# Objective

- Allow registration of one-shot systems when those systems have already
been `Box`ed.
- Needed for `bevy_eventlisteners` which allows adding event listeners
with callbacks in normal systems. The current one shot system
implementation requires systems be registered from an exclusive system,
and that those systems be passed in as types that implement
`IntoSystem`. However, the eventlistener callback crate allows users to
define their callbacks in normal systems, by boxing the system and
deferring initialization to an exclusive system.

## Solution

- Separate the registration of the system from the boxing of the system.
This is non-breaking, and adds a new method.

---

## Changelog

- Added `World::register_boxed_system` to allow registration of
already-boxed one shot systems.
2023-11-08 14:54:32 +00:00
Pascal Hertleif
0c2c52a0cd
Derive Error for more error types (#10240)
# Objective

Align all error-like types to implement `Error`.

Fixes  #10176

## Solution

- Derive `Error` on more types
- Refactor instances of manual implementations that could be derived

This adds thiserror as a dependency to bevy_transform, which might
increase compilation time -- but I don't know of any situation where you
might only use that but not any other crate that pulls in bevy_utils.

The `contributors` example has a `LoadContributorsError` type, but as
it's an example I have not updated it. Doing that would mean either
having a `use bevy_internal::utils::thiserror::Error;` in an example
file, or adding `thiserror` as a dev-dependency to the main `bevy`
crate.

---

## Changelog

- All `…Error` types now implement the `Error` trait
2023-10-28 22:20:37 +00:00
Edgar Geier
a830530be4
Replace all labels with interned labels (#7762)
# Objective

First of all, this PR took heavy inspiration from #7760 and #5715. It
intends to also fix #5569, but with a slightly different approach.


This also fixes #9335 by reexporting `DynEq`.

## Solution

The advantage of this API is that we can intern a value without
allocating for zero-sized-types and for enum variants that have no
fields. This PR does this automatically in the `SystemSet` and
`ScheduleLabel` derive macros for unit structs and fieldless enum
variants. So this should cover many internal and external use cases of
`SystemSet` and `ScheduleLabel`. In these optimal use cases, no memory
will be allocated.

- The interning returns a `Interned<dyn SystemSet>`, which is just a
wrapper around a `&'static dyn SystemSet`.
- `Hash` and `Eq` are implemented in terms of the pointer value of the
reference, similar to my first approach of anonymous system sets in
#7676.
- Therefore, `Interned<T>` does not implement `Borrow<T>`, only `Deref`.
- The debug output of `Interned<T>` is the same as the interned value.

Edit: 
- `AppLabel` is now also interned and the old
`derive_label`/`define_label` macros were replaced with the new
interning implementation.
- Anonymous set ids are reused for different `Schedule`s, reducing the
amount of leaked memory.

### Pros
- `InternedSystemSet` and `InternedScheduleLabel` behave very similar to
the current `BoxedSystemSet` and `BoxedScheduleLabel`, but can be copied
without an allocation.
- Many use cases don't allocate at all.
- Very fast lookups and comparisons when using `InternedSystemSet` and
`InternedScheduleLabel`.
- The `intern` module might be usable in other areas.
- `Interned{ScheduleLabel, SystemSet, AppLabel}` does implement
`{ScheduleLabel, SystemSet, AppLabel}`, increasing ergonomics.

### Cons
- Implementors of `SystemSet` and `ScheduleLabel` still need to
implement `Hash` and `Eq` (and `Clone`) for it to work.

## Changelog

### Added

- Added `intern` module to `bevy_utils`.
- Added reexports of `DynEq` to `bevy_ecs` and `bevy_app`.

### Changed

- Replaced `BoxedSystemSet` and `BoxedScheduleLabel` with
`InternedSystemSet` and `InternedScheduleLabel`.
- Replaced `impl AsRef<dyn ScheduleLabel>` with `impl ScheduleLabel`.
- Replaced `AppLabelId` with `InternedAppLabel`.
- Changed `AppLabel` to use `Debug` for error messages.
- Changed `AppLabel` to use interning.
- Changed `define_label`/`derive_label` to use interning. 
- Replaced `define_boxed_label`/`derive_boxed_label` with
`define_label`/`derive_label`.
- Changed anonymous set ids to be only unique inside a schedule, not
globally.
- Made interned label types implement their label trait. 

### Removed

- Removed `define_boxed_label` and `derive_boxed_label`. 

## Migration guide

- Replace `BoxedScheduleLabel` and `Box<dyn ScheduleLabel>` with
`InternedScheduleLabel` or `Interned<dyn ScheduleLabel>`.
- Replace `BoxedSystemSet` and `Box<dyn SystemSet>` with
`InternedSystemSet` or `Interned<dyn SystemSet>`.
- Replace `AppLabelId` with `InternedAppLabel` or `Interned<dyn
AppLabel>`.
- Types manually implementing `ScheduleLabel`, `AppLabel` or `SystemSet`
need to implement:
  - `dyn_hash` directly instead of implementing `DynHash`
  - `as_dyn_eq`
- Pass labels to `World::try_schedule_scope`, `World::schedule_scope`,
`World::try_run_schedule`. `World::run_schedule`, `Schedules::remove`,
`Schedules::remove_entry`, `Schedules::contains`, `Schedules::get` and
`Schedules::get_mut` by value instead of by reference.

---------

Co-authored-by: Joseph <21144246+JoJoJet@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
2023-10-25 21:39:23 +00:00
Joseph
0716922165
ParamSets containing non-send parameters should also be non-send (#10211)
# Objective

Fix #10207

## Solution

Mark a `ParamSet`'s `SystemMeta` as non-send if any of its component
parameters are non-send.
2023-10-21 18:07:52 +00:00
Mike
687e379800
Updates for rust 1.73 (#10035)
# Objective

- Updates for rust 1.73

## Solution

- new doc check for `redundant_explicit_links`
- updated to text for compile fail tests

---

## Changelog

- updates for rust 1.73
2023-10-06 00:31:10 +00:00
Nicola Papale
1bf271d56e
Add a public API to ArchetypeGeneration/Id (#9825)
Objective
---------

- Since #6742, It is not possible to build an `ArchetypeId` from a
`ArchetypeGeneration`
- This was useful to 3rd party crate extending the base bevy ECS
capabilities, such as [`bevy_ecs_dynamic`] and now
[`bevy_mod_dynamic_query`]
- Making `ArchetypeGeneration` opaque this way made it completely
useless, and removed the ability to limit archetype updates to a subset
of archetypes.
- Making the `index` method on `ArchetypeId` private prevented the use
of bitfields and other optimized data structure to store sets of
archetype ids. (without `transmute`)

This PR is not a simple reversal of the change. It exposes a different
API, rethought to keep the private stuff private and the public stuff
less error-prone.

- Add a `StartRange<ArchetypeGeneration>` `Index` implementation to
`Archetypes`
- Instead of converting the generation into an index, then creating a
ArchetypeId from that index, and indexing `Archetypes` with it, use
directly the old `ArchetypeGeneration` to get the range of new
archetypes.

From careful benchmarking, it seems to also be a performance improvement
(~0-5%) on add_archetypes.

---

Changelog
---------

- Added `impl Index<RangeFrom<ArchetypeGeneration>> for Archetypes` this
allows you to get a slice of newly added archetypes since the last
recorded generation.
- Added `ArchetypeId::index` and `ArchetypeId::new` methods. It should
enable 3rd party crates to use the `Archetypes` API in a meaningful way.

[`bevy_ecs_dynamic`]:
https://github.com/jakobhellermann/bevy_ecs_dynamic/tree/main
[`bevy_mod_dynamic_query`]:
https://github.com/nicopap/bevy_mod_dynamic_query/

---------

Co-authored-by: vero <email@atlasdostal.com>
2023-10-02 12:54:45 +00:00