Commit graph

1038 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Stepan Koltsov
0c2df27930
Rename some lifetimes (ResMut etc) for clarity (#11021)
Use `'w` for world lifetime consistently.

When implementing system params, useful to look at how other params are
implemented. `'w` makes it clear it is world, not state.
2023-12-19 15:22:25 +00:00
JMS55
9a89fc44f4
Add is_resource_changed_by_id + is_resource_added_by_id (#11012)
# Objective

- Allow checking if a resource has changed by its ComponentId

---

## Changelog
- Added `World::is_resource_changed_by_id()` and
`World::is_resource_added_by_id()`.
2023-12-18 01:44:33 +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
Tygyh
696af48416
Remove unnecessary parentheses (#10990)
# Objective

- Increase readability.

## Solution

- Remove unnecessary parentheses.
2023-12-16 02:26:18 +00:00
Joseph
11065974d4
Simplify lifetimes in QueryState methods (#10937)
# Objective

The definition of several `QueryState` methods use unnecessary explicit
lifetimes, which adds to visual noise.

## Solution

Elide the lifetimes.
2023-12-14 17:26:03 +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
Stepan Koltsov
12a11e2fd0
Actually check alignment in BlobVec test aligned_zst (#10885)
Do not rely on Miri.

---------

Co-authored-by: James Liu <contact@jamessliu.com>
2023-12-13 02:36:49 +00:00
Sludge
41db723c5c
Fix soundness of UnsafeWorldCell usage example (#10941)
# Objective

- The example in the docs is unsound.

Demo:

```rust
#[derive(Resource)]
struct MyRes(u32);

fn main() {
    let mut w = World::new();
    w.insert_resource(MyRes(0));

    let (mut res, comp) = split_world_access(&mut w);
    let mut r1 = res.get_resource_mut::<MyRes>().unwrap();
    let mut r2 = res.get_resource_mut::<MyRes>().unwrap();

    *r1 = MyRes(1);
    *r2 = MyRes(2);
}
```

The API in the example allows aliasing mutable references to the same
resource. Miri also complains when running this.

## Solution

- Change the example API to make the returned `Mut` borrow from the
`OnlyResourceAccessWorld` instead of borrowing from the world via `'w`.
This prevents obtaining more than one `Mut` at the same time from it.
2023-12-13 00:55:30 +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
Stepan Koltsov
79641c7f08
Reorder fields in SystemSchedule (#10764)
Make more clear what is going on there.
2023-12-12 19:45:44 +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
Zachary Harrold
72adf2ae2a
Reduced TableRow as Casting (#10811)
# Objective

- Fixes #10806

## Solution

Replaced `new` and `index` methods for both `TableRow` and `TableId`
with `from_*` and `as_*` methods. These remove the need to perform
casting at call sites, reducing the total number of casts in the Bevy
codebase. Within these methods, an appropriate `debug_assertion` ensures
the cast will behave in an expected manner (no wrapping, etc.). I am
using a `debug_assertion` instead of an `assert` to reduce any possible
runtime overhead, however minimal. This choice is something I am open to
changing (or leaving up to another PR) if anyone has any strong
arguments for it.

---

## Changelog

- `ComponentSparseSet::sparse` stores a `TableRow` instead of a `u32`
(private change)
- Replaced `TableRow::new` and `TableRow::index` methods with
`TableRow::from_*` and `TableRow::as_*`, with `debug_assertions`
protecting any internal casting.
- Replaced `TableId::new` and `TableId::index` methods with
`TableId::from_*` and `TableId::as_*`, with `debug_assertions`
protecting any internal casting.
- All `TableId` methods are now `const`

## Migration Guide

- `TableRow::new` -> `TableRow::from_usize`
- `TableRow::index` -> `TableRow::as_usize`
- `TableId::new` -> `TableId::from_usize`
- `TableId::index` -> `TableId::as_usize`

---

## Notes

I have chosen to remove the `index` and `new` methods for the following
chain of reasoning:

- Across the codebase, `new` was called with a mixture of `u32` and
`usize` values. Likewise for `index`.
- Choosing `new` to either be `usize` or `u32` would break half of these
call-sites, requiring `as` casting at the site.
- Adding a second method `new_u32` or `new_usize` avoids the above, bu
looks visually inconsistent.
- Therefore, they should be replaced with `from_*` and `as_*` methods
instead.

Worth noting is that by updating `ComponentSparseSet`, there are now
zero instances of interacting with the inner value of `TableRow` as a
`u32`, it is exclusively used as a `usize` value (due to interactions
with methods like `len` and slice indexing). I have left the `as_u32`
and `from_u32` methods as the "proper" constructors/getters.
2023-12-05 02:44:33 +00:00
Stepan Koltsov
2653adf5d8
Make ComponentId typed in Components (#10770)
Trying to understand code. Types help.
2023-12-05 01:54:27 +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
AxiomaticSemantics
b4c33da149
Fix typos in safety comment (#10827)
# Objective

- Minor fix for typos in safety comment

- Fix the typos.

Co-authored-by: ebola <dev@axiomatic>
2023-12-01 18:07:16 +00:00
Aldrich Suratos
cbf39b7eab
Deprecate QueryState::for_each_unchecked (#10815)
# Objective

Resolves Issue #10772.

## Solution

Added the deprecated warning for QueryState::for_each_unchecked, as
noted in the comments of PR #6773.
Followed the wording in the deprecation messages for `for_each` and
`for_each_mut`
2023-12-01 09:48:16 +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
Stepan Koltsov
d04a2204f5
Make IntoSystemConfigs::into_configs public API (visible in docs) (#10624)
`IntoSystemConfigs::into_configs` function is public, but hidden from
documentation. This PR makes it visible.

Fixes #10622.
2023-11-29 14:38:37 +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
scottmcm
a902ea6f85
Save an instruction in EntityHasher (#10648)
# Objective

Keep essentially the same structure of `EntityHasher` from #9903, but
rephrase the multiplication slightly to save an instruction.

cc @superdump 
Discord thread:
https://discord.com/channels/691052431525675048/1172033156845674507/1174969772522356756

## Solution

Today, the hash is
```rust
        self.hash = i | (i.wrapping_mul(FRAC_U64MAX_PI) << 32);
```
with `i` being `(generation << 32) | index`.

Expanding things out, we get
```rust
i | ( (i * CONST) << 32 )
= (generation << 32) | index | ((((generation << 32) | index) * CONST) << 32)
= (generation << 32) | index | ((index * CONST) << 32)  // because the generation overflowed
= (index * CONST | generation) << 32 | index
```

What if we do the same thing, but with `+` instead of `|`? That's almost
the same thing, except that it has carries, which are actually often
better in a hash function anyway, since it doesn't saturate. (`|` can be
dangerous, since once something becomes `-1` it'll stay that, and
there's no mixing available.)

```rust
(index * CONST + generation) << 32 + index
= (CONST << 32 + 1) * index + generation << 32
= (CONST << 32 + 1) * index + (WHATEVER << 32 + generation) << 32 // because the extra overflows and thus can be anything
= (CONST << 32 + 1) * index + ((CONST * generation) << 32 + generation) << 32 // pick "whatever" to be something convenient
= (CONST << 32 + 1) * index + ((CONST << 32 + 1) * generation) << 32
= (CONST << 32 + 1) * index +((CONST << 32 + 1) * (generation << 32)
= (CONST << 32 + 1) * (index + generation << 32)
= (CONST << 32 + 1) * (generation << 32 | index)
= (CONST << 32 + 1) * i
```

So we can do essentially the same thing using a single multiplication
instead of doing multiply-shift-or.

LLVM was already smart enough to merge the shifting into a
multiplication, but this saves the extra `or`:

![image](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/18526288/d9396614-2326-4730-abbe-4908c01b5ace)
<https://rust.godbolt.org/z/MEvbz4eo4>

It's a very small change, and often will disappear in load latency
anyway, but it's a couple percent faster in lookups:

![image](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/18526288/c365ec85-6adc-4f6d-8fa6-a65146f55a75)

(There was more of an improvement here before #10558, but with `to_bits`
being a single `qword` load now, keeping things mostly as it is turned
out to be better than the bigger changes I'd tried in #10605.)

---

## Changelog

(Probably skip it)

## Migration Guide

(none needed)
2023-11-28 12:37:30 +00:00
Kanabenki
0e9f6e92ea
Add clippy::manual_let_else at warn level to lints (#10684)
# Objective

Related to #10612.

Enable the
[`clippy::manual_let_else`](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/#manual_let_else)
lint as a warning. The `let else` form seems more idiomatic to me than a
`match`/`if else` that either match a pattern or diverge, and from the
clippy doc, the lint doesn't seem to have any possible false positive.

## Solution

Add the lint as warning in `Cargo.toml`, refactor places where the lint
triggers.
2023-11-28 04:15:27 +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
Helix
879893c30a
fix insert_reflect panic caused by clone_value (#10627)
# Objective

- `insert_reflect` relies on `reflect_type_path`, which doesn't gives
the actual type path for object created by `clone_value`, leading to an
unexpected panic. This is a workaround for it.
- Fix #10590 

## Solution

- Tries to get type path from `get_represented_type_info` if get failed
from `reflect_type_path`.

---

## Defect remaining

- `get_represented_type_info` implies a shortage on performance than
using `TypeRegistry`.
2023-11-28 00:17:10 +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
Aldrich Suratos
1e2132672e
Copy over docs for Condition trait from PR #10718 (#10748)
# Objective

Resolves #10743.

## Solution

Copied over the documentation written by @stepancheng from PR #10718.

I left out the lines from the doctest where `<()>` is removed, as that
seemed to be the part people couldn't decide on whether to keep or not.
2023-11-27 16:33:22 +00:00
Cameron
53919c3e70
Wait until FixedUpdate can see events before dropping them (#10077)
## Objective
 
Currently, events are dropped after two frames. This cadence wasn't
*chosen* for a specific reason, double buffering just lets events
persist for at least two frames. Events only need to be dropped at a
predictable point so that the event queues don't grow forever (i.e.
events should never cause a memory leak).
 
Events (and especially input events) need to be observable by systems in
`FixedUpdate`, but as-is events are dropped before those systems even
get a chance to see them.
 
## Solution
 
Instead of unconditionally dropping events in `First`, require
`FixedUpdate` to first queue the buffer swap (if the `TimePlugin` has
been installed). This way, events are only dropped after a frame that
runs `FixedUpdate`.
 
## Future Work

In the same way we have independent copies of `Time` for tracking time
in `Main` and `FixedUpdate`, we will need independent copies of `Input`
for tracking press/release status correctly in `Main` and `FixedUpdate`.

--
 
Every run of `FixedUpdate` covers a specific timespan. For example, if
the fixed timestep `Δt` is 10ms, the first three `FixedUpdate` runs
cover `[0ms, 10ms)`, `[10ms, 20ms)`, and `[20ms, 30ms)`.
 
`FixedUpdate` can run many times in one frame. For truly
framerate-independent behavior, each `FixedUpdate` should only see the
events that occurred in its covered timespan, but what happens right now
is the first step in the frame reads all pending events.

Fixing that will require timestamped events.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2023-11-26 23:04:41 +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
Stepan Koltsov
48af029f7b
Warn that Added/Changed filters do not see deferred changes (#10681)
Explain https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/10625.

This might be obvious to those familiar with Bevy internals, but it
surprised me.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2023-11-23 14:04:07 +00:00
Stepan Koltsov
b0cc6bfd7e
Rustdoc example for Ref (#10682) 2023-11-22 20:20:39 +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
TheBigCheese
e67cfdf82b
Enable clippy::undocumented_unsafe_blocks warning across the workspace (#10646)
# Objective

Enables warning on `clippy::undocumented_unsafe_blocks` across the
workspace rather than only in `bevy_ecs`, `bevy_transform` and
`bevy_utils`. This adds a little awkwardness in a few areas of code that
have trivial safety or explain safety for multiple unsafe blocks with
one comment however automatically prevents these comments from being
missed.

## Solution

This adds `undocumented_unsafe_blocks = "warn"` to the workspace
`Cargo.toml` and fixes / adds a few missed safety comments. I also added
`#[allow(clippy::undocumented_unsafe_blocks)]` where the safety is
explained somewhere above.

There are a couple of safety comments I added I'm not 100% sure about in
`bevy_animation` and `bevy_render/src/view` and I'm not sure about the
use of `#[allow(clippy::undocumented_unsafe_blocks)]` compared to adding
comments like `// SAFETY: See above`.
2023-11-21 02:06:24 +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
TheBigCheese
865041de74
Add an Entry api to EntityWorldMut. (#10650)
# Objective

Adds `.entry` to `EntityWorldMut` with `Entry`, `OccupiedEntry` and
`VacantEntry` for easier in-situ modification, based on `HashMap.entry`.

Fixes #10635

## Solution

This adds the `entry` method to `EntityWorldMut` which returns an
`Entry`. This is an enum of `OccupiedEntry` and `VacantEntry` and has
the methods `and_modify`, `insert_entry`, `or_insert`, `or_insert_with`
and `or_default`. The only difference between `OccupiedEntry` and
`VacantEntry` is the type, they are both a mutable reference to the
`EntityWorldMut` and a marker for the component type, `HashMap` also
stores things to make it quicker to access the data in `OccupiedEntry`
but I wasn't sure if we had anything it would be logical to store to
make accessing/modifying the component faster? As such, the differences
are that `OccupiedEntry` assumes the entity has the component (because
nothing else can have an `EntityWorldMut` so it can't be changed outside
the entry api) and has different methods.

All the methods are based very closely off `hashbrown::HashMap` (because
its easier to read the source of) with a couple of quirks like
`OccupiedEntry.insert` doesn't return the old value because we don't
appear to have an api for mem::replacing components.

---

## Changelog

- Added a new function `EntityWorldMut.entry` which returns an `Entry`,
allowing easier in-situ modification of a component.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Pascal Hertleif <killercup@gmail.com>
2023-11-21 01:26:06 +00:00
Konstantin Kostiuk
eeb0c2f2e4
Allow #[derive(Bundle)] on tuple structs (take 3) (#10561)
- rework of old @Veykril's work in
[2499](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/2499)
- Fixes [3537](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/3537)
2023-11-21 01:09:16 +00:00
Ame
951c9bb1a2
Add [lints] table, fix adding #![allow(clippy::type_complexity)] everywhere (#10011)
# Objective

- Fix adding `#![allow(clippy::type_complexity)]` everywhere. like #9796

## Solution

- Use the new [lints] table that will land in 1.74
(https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/cargo/reference/unstable.html#lints)
- inherit lint to the workspace, crates and examples.
```
[lints]
workspace = true
```

## Changelog

- Bump rust version to 1.74
- Enable lints table for the workspace
```toml
[workspace.lints.clippy]
type_complexity = "allow"
```
- Allow type complexity for all crates and examples
```toml
[lints]
workspace = true
```

---------

Co-authored-by: Martín Maita <47983254+mnmaita@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-11-18 20:58:48 +00:00
Gonçalo Rica Pais da Silva
9c0fca072d
Optimise Entity with repr align & manual PartialOrd/Ord (#10558)
# Objective

- Follow up on https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/10519, diving
deeper into optimising `Entity` due to the `derive`d `PartialOrd`
`partial_cmp` not being optimal with codegen:
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/106107
- Fixes #2346.

## Solution

Given the previous PR's solution and the other existing LLVM codegen
bug, there seemed to be a potential further optimisation possible with
`Entity`. In exploring providing manual `PartialOrd` impl, it turned out
initially that the resulting codegen was not immediately better than the
derived version. However, once `Entity` was given `#[repr(align(8)]`,
the codegen improved remarkably, even more once the fields in `Entity`
were rearranged to correspond to a `u64` layout (Rust doesn't
automatically reorder fields correctly it seems). The field order and
`align(8)` additions also improved `to_bits` codegen to be a single
`mov` op. In turn, this led me to replace the previous
"non-shortcircuiting" impl of `PartialEq::eq` to use direct `to_bits`
comparison.

The result was remarkably better codegen across the board, even for
hastable lookups.

The current baseline codegen is as follows:
https://godbolt.org/z/zTW1h8PnY

Assuming the following example struct that mirrors with the existing
`Entity` definition:

```rust
#[derive(Clone, Copy, Eq, PartialEq, PartialOrd, Ord)]
pub struct FakeU64 {
    high: u32,
    low: u32,
}
```

the output for `to_bits` is as follows:

```
example::FakeU64::to_bits:
        shl     rdi, 32
        mov     eax, esi
        or      rax, rdi
        ret
```

Changing the struct to:
```rust
#[derive(Clone, Copy, Eq)]
#[repr(align(8))]
pub struct FakeU64 {
    low: u32,
    high: u32,
}
```
and providing manual implementations for `PartialEq`/`PartialOrd`/`Ord`,
`to_bits` now optimises to:
```
example::FakeU64::to_bits:
        mov     rax, rdi
        ret
```
The full codegen example for this PR is here for reference:
https://godbolt.org/z/n4Mjx165a

To highlight, `gt` comparison goes from
```
example::greater_than:
        cmp     edi, edx
        jae     .LBB3_2
        xor     eax, eax
        ret
.LBB3_2:
        setne   dl
        cmp     esi, ecx
        seta    al
        or      al, dl
        ret
```
to
```
example::greater_than:
        cmp     rdi, rsi
        seta    al
        ret
```

As explained on Discord by @scottmcm :

>The root issue here, as far as I understand it, is that LLVM's
middle-end is inexplicably unwilling to merge loads if that would make
them under-aligned. It leaves that entirely up to its target-specific
back-end, and thus a bunch of the things that you'd expect it to do that
would fix this just don't happen.

## Benchmarks

Before discussing benchmarks, everything was tested on the following
specs:

AMD Ryzen 7950X 16C/32T CPU
64GB 5200 RAM
AMD RX7900XT 20GB Gfx card
Manjaro KDE on Wayland

I made use of the new entity hashing benchmarks to see how this PR would
improve things there. With the changes in place, I first did an
implementation keeping the existing "non shortcircuit" `PartialEq`
implementation in place, but with the alignment and field ordering
changes, which in the benchmark is the `ord_shortcircuit` column. The
`to_bits` `PartialEq` implementation is the `ord_to_bits` column. The
main_ord column is the current existing baseline from `main` branch.


![Screenshot_20231114_132908](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/3116268/cb9090c9-ff74-4cc5-abae-8e4561332261)

My machine is not super set-up for benchmarking, so some results are
within noise, but there's not just a clear improvement between the
non-shortcircuiting implementation, but even further optimisation taking
place with the `to_bits` implementation.

On my machine, a fair number of the stress tests were not showing any
difference (indicating other bottlenecks), but I was able to get a clear
difference with `many_foxes` with a fox count of 10,000:

Test with `cargo run --example many_foxes --features
bevy/trace_tracy,wayland --release -- --count 10000`:


![Screenshot_20231114_144217](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/3116268/89bdc21c-7209-43c8-85ae-efbf908bfed3)

On avg, a framerate of about 28-29FPS was improved to 30-32FPS. "This
trace" represents the current PR's perf, while "External trace"
represents the `main` branch baseline.

## Changelog

Changed: micro-optimized Entity align and field ordering as well as
providing manual `PartialOrd`/`Ord` impls to help LLVM optimise further.

## Migration Guide

Any `unsafe` code relying on field ordering of `Entity` or sufficiently
cursed shenanigans should change to reflect the different internal
representation and alignment requirements of `Entity`.

Co-authored-by: james7132 <contact@jamessliu.com>
Co-authored-by: NathanW <nathansward@comcast.net>
2023-11-18 20:04:37 +00:00
Stepan Koltsov
0c9f265423
Link to In in pipe documentation (#10596) 2023-11-17 15:34:58 +00:00
Stepan Koltsov
17e509748d
Some docs for IntoSystemSet (#10563)
Co-authored-by: Pascal Hertleif <killercup@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2023-11-16 17:44:42 +00:00
Zachary Harrold
3c689b9ca8
Update Event send methods to return EventId (#10551)
# Objective

- Fixes #10532

## Solution

I've updated the various `Event` send methods to return the sent
`EventId`(s). Since these methods previously returned nothing, and this
information is cheap to copy, there should be minimal negative
consequences to providing this additional information. In the case of
`send_batch`, an iterator is returned built from `Range` and `Map`,
which only consumes 16 bytes on the stack with no heap allocations for
all batch sizes. As such, the cost of this information is negligible.

These changes are reflected for `EventWriter` and `World`. For `World`,
the return types are optional to account for the possible lack of an
`Events` resource. Again, these methods previously returned no
information, so its inclusion should only be a benefit.

## Usage

Now when sending events, the IDs of those events is available for
immediate use:

```rust
// Example of a request-response system where the requester can track handled requests.

/// A system which can make and track requests
fn requester(
    mut requests: EventWriter<Request>,
    mut handled: EventReader<Handled>,
    mut pending: Local<HashSet<EventId<Request>>>,
) {
    // Check status of previous requests
    for Handled(id) in handled.read() {
        pending.remove(&id);
    }

    if !pending.is_empty() {
        error!("Not all my requests were handled on the previous frame!");
        pending.clear();
    }

    // Send a new request and remember its ID for later
    let request_id = requests.send(Request::MyRequest { /* ... */ });

    pending.insert(request_id);
}

/// A system which handles requests
fn responder(
    mut requests: EventReader<Request>,
    mut handled: EventWriter<Handled>,
) {
    for (request, id) in requests.read_with_id() {
        if handle(request).is_ok() {
            handled.send(Handled(id));
        }
    }
}
```

In the above example, a `requester` system can send request events, and
keep track of which ones are currently pending by `EventId`. Then, a
`responder` system can act on that event, providing the ID as a
reference that the `requester` can use. Before this PR, it was not
trivial for a system sending events to keep track of events by ID. This
is unfortunate, since for a system reading events, it is trivial to
access the ID of a event.

---

## Changelog

- Updated `Events`:
  - Added `send_batch`
  - Modified `send` to return the sent `EventId`
  - Modified `send_default` to return the sent `EventId`
- Updated `EventWriter`
  - Modified `send_batch` to return all sent `EventId`s
  - Modified `send` to return the sent `EventId`
  - Modified `send_default` to return the sent `EventId`
- Updated `World`
- Modified `send_event` to return the sent `EventId` if sent, otherwise
`None`.
- Modified `send_event_default` to return the sent `EventId` if sent,
otherwise `None`.
- Modified `send_event_batch` to return all sent `EventId`s if sent,
otherwise `None`.
- Added unit test `test_send_events_ids` to ensure returned `EventId`s
match the sent `Event`s
- Updated uses of modified methods.

## Migration Guide

### `send` / `send_default` / `send_batch`

For the following methods:

- `Events::send`
- `Events::send_default`
- `Events::send_batch`
- `EventWriter::send`
- `EventWriter::send_default`
- `EventWriter::send_batch`
- `World::send_event`
- `World::send_event_default`
- `World::send_event_batch`

Ensure calls to these methods either handle the returned value, or
suppress the result with `;`.

```rust
// Now fails to compile due to mismatched return type
fn send_my_event(mut events: EventWriter<MyEvent>) {
    events.send_default()
}

// Fix
fn send_my_event(mut events: EventWriter<MyEvent>) {
    events.send_default();
}
```

This will most likely be noticed within `match` statements:

```rust
// Before
match is_pressed {
    true => events.send(PlayerAction::Fire),
//                 ^--^ No longer returns ()
    false => {}
}

// After
match is_pressed {
    true => {
        events.send(PlayerAction::Fire);
    },
    false => {}
}
```

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Nicola Papale <nicopap@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-11-16 17:20:43 +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
scottmcm
713b1d8fa4
Optimize Entity::eq (#10519)
(This is my first PR here, so I've probably missed some things. Please
let me know what else I should do to help you as a reviewer!)

# Objective

Due to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/117800, the `derive`'d
`PartialEq::eq` on `Entity` isn't as good as it could be. Since that's
used in hashtable lookup, let's improve it.

## Solution

The derived `PartialEq::eq` short-circuits if the generation doesn't
match. However, having a branch there is sub-optimal, especially on
64-bit systems like x64 that could just load the whole `Entity` in one
load anyway.

Due to complications around `poison` in LLVM and the exact details of
what unsafe code is allowed to do with reference in Rust
(https://github.com/rust-lang/unsafe-code-guidelines/issues/346), LLVM
isn't allowed to completely remove the short-circuiting. `&Entity` is
marked `dereferencable(8)` so LLVM knows it's allowed to *load* all 8
bytes -- and does so -- but it has to assume that the `index` might be
undef/poison if the `generation` doesn't match, and thus while it finds
a way to do it without needing a branch, it has to do something slightly
more complicated than optimal to combine the results. (LLVM is allowed
to change non-short-circuiting code to use branches, but not the other
way around.)

Here's a link showing the codegen today:
<https://rust.godbolt.org/z/9WzjxrY7c>
```rust
#[no_mangle]
pub fn demo_eq_ref(a: &Entity, b: &Entity) -> bool {
    a == b
}
```
ends up generating the following assembly:
```asm
demo_eq_ref:
        movq    xmm0, qword ptr [rdi]
        movq    xmm1, qword ptr [rsi]
        pcmpeqd xmm1, xmm0
        pshufd  xmm0, xmm1, 80
        movmskpd        eax, xmm0
        cmp     eax, 3
        sete    al
        ret
```
(It's usually not this bad in real uses after inlining and LTO, but it
makes a strong demo.)

This PR manually implements `PartialEq::eq` *without* short-circuiting,
and because that tells LLVM that neither the generations nor the index
can be poison, it doesn't need to be so careful and can generate the
"just compare the two 64-bit values" code you'd have probably already
expected:
```asm
demo_eq_ref:
        mov     rax, qword ptr [rsi]
        cmp     qword ptr [rdi], rax
        sete    al
        ret
```

Since this doesn't change the representation of `Entity`, if it's
instead passed by *value*, then each `Entity` is two `u32` registers,
and the old and the new code do exactly the same thing. (Other
approaches, like changing `Entity` to be `[u32; 2]` or `u64`, affect
this case.)

This should hopefully merge easily with changes like
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/9907 that also want to change
`Entity`.

## Benchmarks

I'm not super-confident that I got my machine fully consistent for
benchmarking, but whether I run the old or the new one first I get
reasonably consistent results.

Here's a fairly typical example of the benchmarks I added in this PR:

![image](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/18526288/24226308-4616-4082-b0ff-88fc06285ef1)

Building the sets seems to be basically the same. It's usually reported
as noise, but sometimes I see a few percent slower or faster.

But lookup hits in particular -- since a hit checks that the key is
equal -- consistently shows around 10% improvement.

`cargo run --example many_cubes --features bevy/trace_tracy --release --
--benchmark` showed as slightly faster with this change, though if I had
to bet I'd probably say it's more noise than meaningful (but at least
it's not worse either):

![image](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/18526288/58bb8c96-9c45-487f-a5ab-544bbfe9fba0)

This is my first PR here -- and my first time running Tracy -- so please
let me know what else I should run, or run things on your own more
reliable machines to double-check.

---

## Changelog

(probably not worth including)

Changed: micro-optimized `Entity::eq` to help LLVM slightly.

## Migration Guide

(I really hope nobody was using this on uninitialized entities where
sufficiently tortured `unsafe` could could technically notice that this
has changed.)
2023-11-14 02:06:21 +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
Lixou
003765a878
Remove unnecessary if statement in scheduler (#10446)
# Objective

There is an if statement checking if a node is present in a graph
moments after it explicitly being added.
Unless the edge function has super weird side effects and the tests
don't pass, this is unnecessary.

## Solution

Removed it
2023-11-09 00:57:22 +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
BD103
04ceb46fe0
Use EntityHashMap for EntityMapper (#10415)
# Objective

- There is a specialized hasher for entities:
[`EntityHashMap`](https://docs.rs/bevy/latest/bevy/utils/type.EntityHashMap.html)
- [`EntityMapper`] currently uses a normal `HashMap<Entity, Entity>`
- Fixes #10391

## Solution

- Replace the normal `HashMap` with the more performant `EntityHashMap`

## Questions

- This does change public API. Should a system be implemented to help
migrate code?
  - Perhaps an `impl From<HashMap<K, V, S>> for EntityHashMap<K, V>`
- I updated to docs for each function that I changed, but I may have
missed something

---

## Changelog

- Changed `EntityMapper` to use `EntityHashMap` instead of normal
`HashMap`

## Migration Guide

If you are using the following types, update their listed methods to use
the new `EntityHashMap`. `EntityHashMap` has the same methods as the
normal `HashMap`, so you just need to replace the name.

### `EntityMapper`

- `get_map`
- `get_mut_map`
- `new`
- `world_scope`

### `ReflectMapEntities`

- `map_all_entities`
- `map_entities`
- `write_to_world`

### `InstanceInfo`

- `entity_map`
  - This is a property, not a method.

---

This is my first time contributing in a while, and I'm not familiar with
the usage of `EntityMapper`. I changed the type definition and fixed all
errors, but there may have been things I've missed. Please keep an eye
out for me!
2023-11-07 08:23:04 +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
Pixelstorm
faa1b57de5
Global TaskPool API improvements (#10008)
# Objective

Reduce code duplication and improve APIs of Bevy's [global
taskpools](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/blob/main/crates/bevy_tasks/src/usages.rs).

## Solution

- As all three of the global taskpools have identical implementations
and only differ in their identifiers, this PR moves the implementation
into a macro to reduce code duplication.
- The `init` method is renamed to `get_or_init` to more accurately
reflect what it really does.
- Add a new `try_get` method that just returns `None` when the pool is
uninitialized, to complement the other getter methods.
- Minor documentation improvements to accompany the above changes.

---

## Changelog

- Added a new `try_get` method to the global TaskPools
- The global TaskPools' `init` method has been renamed to `get_or_init`
for clarity
- Documentation improvements

## Migration Guide

- Uses of `ComputeTaskPool::init`, `AsyncComputeTaskPool::init` and
`IoTaskPool::init` should be changed to `::get_or_init`.
2023-10-23 20:48:48 +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
Kanabenki
569e2ac80f
Make builder types take and return Self (#10001)
# Objective

Closes #9955.

Use the same interface for all "pure" builder types: taking and
returning `Self` (and not `&mut Self`).

## Solution

Changed `DynamicSceneBuilder`, `SceneFilter` and `TableBuilder` to take
and return `Self`.

## Changelog

### Changed

- `DynamicSceneBuilder` and `SceneBuilder` methods in `bevy_ecs` now
take and return `Self`.

## Migration guide

When using `bevy_ecs::DynamicSceneBuilder` and `bevy_ecs::SceneBuilder`,
instead of binding the builder to a variable, directly use it. Methods
on those types now consume `Self`, so you will need to re-bind the
builder if you don't `build` it immediately.

Before:
```rust
let mut scene_builder = DynamicSceneBuilder::from_world(&world);
let scene = scene_builder.extract_entity(a).extract_entity(b).build();
```

After:
 ```rust
let scene = DynamicSceneBuilder::from_world(&world)
    .extract_entity(a)
    .extract_entity(b)
    .build();
```
2023-10-09 19:46:17 +00:00
radiish
262846e702
reflect: TypePath part 2 (#8768)
# Objective

- Followup to #7184.
- ~Deprecate `TypeUuid` and remove its internal references.~ No longer
part of this PR.
- Use `TypePath` for the type registry, and (de)serialisation instead of
`std::any::type_name`.
- Allow accessing type path information behind proxies.

## Solution
- Introduce methods on `TypeInfo` and friends for dynamically querying
type path. These methods supersede the old `type_name` methods.
- Remove `Reflect::type_name` in favor of `DynamicTypePath::type_path`
and `TypeInfo::type_path_table`.
- Switch all uses of `std::any::type_name` in reflection, non-debugging
contexts to use `TypePath`.

---

## Changelog

- Added `TypePathTable` for dynamically accessing methods on `TypePath`
through `TypeInfo` and the type registry.
- Removed `type_name` from all `TypeInfo`-like structs.
- Added `type_path` and `type_path_table` methods to all `TypeInfo`-like
structs.
- Removed `Reflect::type_name` in favor of
`DynamicTypePath::reflect_type_path` and `TypeInfo::type_path`.
- Changed the signature of all `DynamicTypePath` methods to return
strings with a static lifetime.

## Migration Guide

- Rely on `TypePath` instead of `std::any::type_name` for all stability
guarantees and for use in all reflection contexts, this is used through
with one of the following APIs:
  - `TypePath::type_path` if you have a concrete type and not a value.
- `DynamicTypePath::reflect_type_path` if you have an `dyn Reflect`
value without a concrete type.
- `TypeInfo::type_path` for use through the registry or if you want to
work with the represented type of a `DynamicFoo`.
  
- Remove `type_name` from manual `Reflect` implementations.
- Use `type_path` and `type_path_table` in place of `type_name` on
`TypeInfo`-like structs.
- Use `get_with_type_path(_mut)` over `get_with_type_name(_mut)`.

## Note to reviewers

I think if anything we were a little overzealous in merging #7184 and we
should take that extra care here.

In my mind, this is the "point of no return" for `TypePath` and while I
think we all agree on the design, we should carefully consider if the
finer details and current implementations are actually how we want them
moving forward.

For example [this incorrect `TypePath` implementation for
`String`](3fea3c6c0b/crates/bevy_reflect/src/impls/std.rs (L90))
(note that `String` is in the default Rust prelude) snuck in completely
under the radar.
2023-10-09 19:33:03 +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
Mike
7c5b324484
Ignore ambiguous components or resources (#9895)
# Objective

- Fixes #9884
- Add API for ignoring ambiguities on certain resource or components.

## Solution

- Add a `IgnoreSchedulingAmbiguitiy` resource to the world which holds
the `ComponentIds` to be ignored
- Filter out ambiguities with those component id's.

## Changelog

- add `allow_ambiguous_component` and `allow_ambiguous_resource` apis
for ignoring ambiguities

---------

Co-authored-by: Ryan Johnson <ryanj00a@gmail.com>
2023-10-04 02:34:28 +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
Joseph
8cc255c2f0
Hide UnsafeWorldCell::unsafe_world (#9741)
# Objective

We've done a lot of work to remove the pattern of a `&World` with
interior mutability (#6404, #8833). However, this pattern still persists
within `bevy_ecs` via the `unsafe_world` method.

## Solution

* Make `unsafe_world` private. Adjust any callsites to use
`UnsafeWorldCell` for interior mutability.
* Add `UnsafeWorldCell::removed_components`, since it is always safe to
access the removed components collection through `UnsafeWorldCell`.

## Future Work

Remove/hide `UnsafeWorldCell::world_metadata`, once we have provided
safe ways of accessing all world metadata.

---

## Changelog

+ Added `UnsafeWorldCell::removed_components`, which provides read-only
access to a world's collection of removed components.
2023-10-02 12:46:43 +00:00
Testare
dfdc9f8369
as_deref_mut() method for Mut-like types (#9912)
# Objective

Add a new method so you can do `set_if_neq` with dereferencing
components: `as_deref_mut()`!

## Solution

Added an as_deref_mut method so that we can use `set_if_neq()` without
having to wrap up types for derefencable components

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Joseph <21144246+JoJoJet@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-10-02 00:53:12 +00:00
Christian Hughes
9c004439b8
Remove States::variants and remove enum-only restriction its derive (#9945)
# Objective

The `States::variants` method was once used to construct `OnExit` and
`OnEnter` schedules for every possible value of a given `States` type.
[Since the switch to lazily initialized
schedules](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/8028/files#diff-b2fba3a0c86e496085ce7f0e3f1de5960cb754c7d215ed0f087aa556e529f97f),
we no longer need to track every possible value.

This also opens the door to `States` types that aren't enums.

## Solution

- Remove the unused `States::variants` method and its associated type.
- Remove the enum-only restriction on derived States types.

---

## Changelog

- Removed `States::variants` and its associated type.
- Derived `States` can now be datatypes other than enums.

## Migration Guide

- `States::variants` no longer exists. If you relied on this function,
consider using a library that provides enum iterators.
2023-09-30 22:32:39 +00:00
James Liu
95813b87f7
Cache parallel iteration spans (#9950)
# Objective
We cached system spans in #9390, but another common span seen in most
Bevy apps when enabling tracing are Query::par_iter(_mut) related spans.

## Solution
Cache them in QueryState. The one downside to this is that we pay for
the memory for every Query(State) instantiated, not just those that are
used for parallel iteration, but this shouldn't be a significant cost
unless the app is creating hundreds of thousands of Query(State)s
regularly.

## Metrics
Tested against `cargo run --profile stress-test --features trace_tracy
--example many_cubes`. Yellow is this PR, red is main.

`sync_simple_transforms`:


![image](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/3137680/d60f6d69-5586-4424-9d78-aac78992aacd)

`check_visibility`:


![image](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/3137680/096a58d2-a330-4a32-b806-09cd524e6e15)

Full frame:


![image](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/3137680/3b088cf8-9487-4bc7-a308-026e172d6672)
2023-09-30 08:03:35 +00:00
SADIK KUZU
483f2464a8
Fix typos (#9965)
# Objective

- There were a few typos in the project.
- This PR fixes these typos.

## Solution

- Fixing the typos.

Signed-off-by: SADIK KUZU <sadikkuzu@hotmail.com>
2023-09-29 12:26:41 +00:00
Bruce Mitchener
a5a457c3c8
docs: Use intradoc links for method references. (#9958)
# Objective

- Use intradoc links to let the compiler verify correctness.

## Solution

- Use intradoc links.
2023-09-29 07:09:14 +00:00
Robert Swain
b6ead2be95
Use EntityHashMap<Entity, T> for render world entity storage for better performance (#9903)
# Objective

- Improve rendering performance, particularly by avoiding the large
system commands costs of using the ECS in the way that the render world
does.

## Solution

- Define `EntityHasher` that calculates a hash from the
`Entity.to_bits()` by `i | (i.wrapping_mul(0x517cc1b727220a95) << 32)`.
`0x517cc1b727220a95` is something like `u64::MAX / N` for N that gives a
value close to π and that works well for hashing. Thanks for @SkiFire13
for the suggestion and to @nicopap for alternative suggestions and
discussion. This approach comes from `rustc-hash` (a.k.a. `FxHasher`)
with some tweaks for the case of hashing an `Entity`. `FxHasher` and
`SeaHasher` were also tested but were significantly slower.
- Define `EntityHashMap` type that uses the `EntityHashser`
- Use `EntityHashMap<Entity, T>` for render world entity storage,
including:
- `RenderMaterialInstances` - contains the `AssetId<M>` of the material
associated with the entity. Also for 2D.
- `RenderMeshInstances` - contains mesh transforms, flags and properties
about mesh entities. Also for 2D.
- `SkinIndices` and `MorphIndices` - contains the skin and morph index
for an entity, respectively
  - `ExtractedSprites`
  - `ExtractedUiNodes`

## Benchmarks

All benchmarks have been conducted on an M1 Max connected to AC power.
The tests are run for 1500 frames. The 1000th frame is captured for
comparison to check for visual regressions. There were none.

### 2D Meshes

`bevymark --benchmark --waves 160 --per-wave 1000 --mode mesh2d`

#### `--ordered-z`

This test spawns the 2D meshes with z incrementing back to front, which
is the ideal arrangement allocation order as it matches the sorted
render order which means lookups have a high cache hit rate.

<img width="1112" alt="Screenshot 2023-09-27 at 07 50 45"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/302146/e140bc98-7091-4a3b-8ae1-ab75d16d2ccb">

-39.1% median frame time.

#### Random

This test spawns the 2D meshes with random z. This not only makes the
batching and transparent 2D pass lookups get a lot of cache misses, it
also currently means that the meshes are almost certain to not be
batchable.

<img width="1108" alt="Screenshot 2023-09-27 at 07 51 28"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/302146/29c2e813-645a-43ce-982a-55df4bf7d8c4">

-7.2% median frame time.

### 3D Meshes

`many_cubes --benchmark`

<img width="1112" alt="Screenshot 2023-09-27 at 07 51 57"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/302146/1a729673-3254-4e2a-9072-55e27c69f0fc">

-7.7% median frame time.

### Sprites

**NOTE: On `main` sprites are using `SparseSet<Entity, T>`!**

`bevymark --benchmark --waves 160 --per-wave 1000 --mode sprite`

#### `--ordered-z`

This test spawns the sprites with z incrementing back to front, which is
the ideal arrangement allocation order as it matches the sorted render
order which means lookups have a high cache hit rate.

<img width="1116" alt="Screenshot 2023-09-27 at 07 52 31"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/302146/bc8eab90-e375-4d31-b5cd-f55f6f59ab67">

+13.0% median frame time.

#### Random

This test spawns the sprites with random z. This makes the batching and
transparent 2D pass lookups get a lot of cache misses.

<img width="1109" alt="Screenshot 2023-09-27 at 07 53 01"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/302146/22073f5d-99a7-49b0-9584-d3ac3eac3033">

+0.6% median frame time.

### UI

**NOTE: On `main` UI is using `SparseSet<Entity, T>`!**

`many_buttons`

<img width="1111" alt="Screenshot 2023-09-27 at 07 53 26"
src="https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/302146/66afd56d-cbe4-49e7-8b64-2f28f6043d85">

+15.1% median frame time.

## Alternatives

- Cart originally suggested trying out `SparseSet<Entity, T>` and indeed
that is slightly faster under ideal conditions. However,
`PassHashMap<Entity, T>` has better worst case performance when data is
randomly distributed, rather than in sorted render order, and does not
have the worst case memory usage that `SparseSet`'s dense `Vec<usize>`
that maps from the `Entity` index to sparse index into `Vec<T>`. This
dense `Vec` has to be as large as the largest Entity index used with the
`SparseSet`.
- I also tested `PassHashMap<u32, T>`, intending to use `Entity.index()`
as the key, but this proved to sometimes be slower and mostly no
different.
- The only outstanding approach that has not been implemented and tested
is to _not_ clear the render world of its entities each frame. That has
its own problems, though they could perhaps be solved.
- Performance-wise, if the entities and their component data were not
cleared, then they would incur table moves on spawn, and should not
thereafter, rather just their component data would be overwritten.
Ideally we would have a neat way of either updating data in-place via
`&mut T` queries, or inserting components if not present. This would
likely be quite cumbersome to have to remember to do everywhere, but
perhaps it only needs to be done in the more performance-sensitive
systems.
- The main problem to solve however is that we want to both maintain a
mapping between main world entities and render world entities, be able
to run the render app and world in parallel with the main app and world
for pipelined rendering, and at the same time be able to spawn entities
in the render world in such a way that those Entity ids do not collide
with those spawned in the main world. This is potentially quite
solvable, but could well be a lot of ECS work to do it in a way that
makes sense.

---

## Changelog

- Changed: Component data for entities to be drawn are no longer stored
on entities in the render world. Instead, data is stored in a
`EntityHashMap<Entity, T>` in various resources. This brings significant
performance benefits due to the way the render app clears entities every
frame. Resources of most interest are `RenderMeshInstances` and
`RenderMaterialInstances`, and their 2D counterparts.

## Migration Guide

Previously the render app extracted mesh entities and their component
data from the main world and stored them as entities and components in
the render world. Now they are extracted into essentially
`EntityHashMap<Entity, T>` where `T` are structs containing an
appropriate group of data. This means that while extract set systems
will continue to run extract queries against the main world they will
store their data in hash maps. Also, systems in later sets will either
need to look up entities in the available resources such as
`RenderMeshInstances`, or maintain their own `EntityHashMap<Entity, T>`
for their own data.

Before:
```rust
fn queue_custom(
    material_meshes: Query<(Entity, &MeshTransforms, &Handle<Mesh>), With<InstanceMaterialData>>,
) {
    ...
    for (entity, mesh_transforms, mesh_handle) in &material_meshes {
        ...
    }
}
```

After:
```rust
fn queue_custom(
    render_mesh_instances: Res<RenderMeshInstances>,
    instance_entities: Query<Entity, With<InstanceMaterialData>>,
) {
    ...
    for entity in &instance_entities {
        let Some(mesh_instance) = render_mesh_instances.get(&entity) else { continue; };
        // The mesh handle in `AssetId<Mesh>` form, and the `MeshTransforms` can now
        // be found in `mesh_instance` which is a `RenderMeshInstance`
        ...
    }
}
```

---------

Co-authored-by: robtfm <50659922+robtfm@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-09-27 08:28:28 +00:00
Rob Parrett
7063c86ed4
Fix some typos (#9934)
# Objective

To celebrate the turning of the seasons, I took a small walk through the
codebase guided by the "[code spell
checker](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=streetsidesoftware.code-spell-checker)"
VS Code extension and fixed a few typos.
2023-09-26 19:46:24 +00:00
Bruce Mitchener
ae95ba5278
Fix typos. (#9922)
# Objective

- Have docs with fewer typos.1

## Solution

- Fix typos as they are found.
2023-09-25 18:35:46 +00:00
James Liu
8ace2ff9e3
Only run event systems if they have tangible work to do (#7728)
# Objective
Scheduling low cost systems has significant overhead due to task pool
contention and the extra machinery to schedule and run them. Event
update systems are the prime example of a low cost system, requiring a
guaranteed O(1) operation, and there are a *lot* of them.

## Solution
Add a run condition to every event system so they only run when there is
an event in either of it's two internal Vecs.

---

## Changelog
Changed: Event update systems will not run if there are no events to
process.

## Migration Guide
`Events<T>::update_system` has been split off from the the type and can
be found at `bevy_ecs::event::event_update_system`.

---------

Co-authored-by: IceSentry <IceSentry@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-09-24 00:16:33 +00:00
Joseph
e60249e59d
Improve codegen for world validation (#9464)
# Objective

Improve code-gen for `QueryState::validate_world` and
`SystemState::validate_world`.

## Solution

* Move panics into separate, non-inlined functions, to reduce the code
size of the outer methods.
* Mark the panicking functions with `#[cold]` to help the compiler
optimize for the happy path.
* Mark the functions with `#[track_caller]` to make debugging easier.

---------

Co-authored-by: James Liu <contact@jamessliu.com>
2023-09-21 20:57:06 +00:00
Sludge
e07c427dea
#[derive(Clone)] on Component{Info,Descriptor} (#9812)
# Objective

Occasionally, it is useful to pull `ComponentInfo` or
`ComponentDescriptor` out of the `Components` collection so that they
can be inspected without borrowing the whole `World`.

## Solution

Make `ComponentInfo` and `ComponentDescriptor` `Clone`, so that
reflection-heavy code can store them in a side table.

---

## Changelog

- Implement `Clone` for `ComponentInfo` and `ComponentDescriptor`
2023-09-20 19:35:53 +00:00
Ethereumdegen
3ee9edf280
add try_insert to entity commands (#9844)
# Objective

- I spoke with some users in the ECS channel of bevy discord today and
they suggested that I implement a fallible form of .insert for
components.

- In my opinion, it would be nice to have a fallible .insert like
.try_insert (or to just make insert be fallible!) because it was causing
a lot of panics in my game. In my game, I am spawning terrain chunks and
despawning them in the Update loop. However, this was causing bevy_xpbd
to panic because it was trying to .insert some physics components on my
chunks and a race condition meant that its check to see if the entity
exists would pass but then the next execution step it would not exist
and would do an .insert and then panic. This means that there is no way
to avoid a panic with conditionals.

Luckily, bevy_xpbd does not care about inserting these components if the
entity is being deleted and so if there were a .try_insert, like this PR
provides it could use that instead in order to NOT panic.

( My interim solution for my own game has been to run the entity despawn
events in the Last schedule but really this is just a hack and I should
not be expected to manage the scheduling of despawns like this - it
should just be easy and simple. IF it just so happened that bevy_xpbd
ran .inserts in the Last schedule also, this would be an untenable soln
overall )

## Solution

- Describe the solution used to achieve the objective above.

Add a new command named TryInsert (entitycommands.try_insert) which
functions exactly like .insert except if the entity does not exist it
will not panic. Instead, it will log to info. This way, crates that are
attaching components in ways which they do not mind that the entity no
longer exists can just use try_insert instead of insert.

---

## Changelog

 

## Additional Thoughts

In my opinion, NOT panicing should really be the default and having an
.insert that does panic should be the odd edgecase but removing the
panic! from .insert seems a bit above my paygrade -- although i would
love to see it. My other thought is it would be good for .insert to
return an Option AND not panic but it seems it uses an event bus right
now so that seems to be impossible w the current architecture.
2023-09-20 19:34:30 +00:00
Nicola Papale
9e52697572
Add mutual exclusion safety info on filter_fetch (#9836)
# Objective

Currently, in bevy, it's valid to do `Query<&mut Foo, Changed<Foo>>`.

This assumes that `filter_fetch` and `fetch` are mutually exclusive,
because of the mutable reference to the tick that `Mut<Foo>` implies and
the reference that `Changed<Foo>` implies. However nothing guarantees
that.

## Solution

Documenting this assumption as a safety invariant is the least thing.
2023-09-19 21:49:33 +00:00
Trashtalk217
e4b368721d
One Shot Systems (#8963)
I'm adopting this ~~child~~ PR.

# Objective

- Working with exclusive world access is not always easy: in many cases,
a standard system or three is more ergonomic to write, and more
modularly maintainable.
- For small, one-off tasks (commonly handled with scripting), running an
event-reader system incurs a small but flat overhead cost and muddies
the schedule.
- Certain forms of logic (e.g. turn-based games) want very fine-grained
linear and/or branching control over logic.
- SystemState is not automatically cached, and so performance can suffer
and change detection breaks.
- Fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/2192.
- Partial workaround for https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/279.

## Solution

- Adds a SystemRegistry resource to the World, which stores initialized
systems keyed by their SystemSet.
- Allows users to call world.run_system(my_system) and
commands.run_system(my_system), without re-initializing or losing state
(essential for change detection).
- Add a Callback type to enable convenient use of dynamic one shot
systems and reduce the mental overhead of working with Box<dyn
SystemSet>.
- Allow users to run systems based on their SystemSet, enabling more
complex user-made abstractions.

## Future work

- Parameterized one-shot systems would improve reusability and bring
them closer to events and commands. The API could be something like
run_system_with_input(my_system, my_input) and use the In SystemParam.
- We should evaluate the unification of commands and one-shot systems
since they are two different ways to run logic on demand over a World.

### Prior attempts

- https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/2234
- https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/2417
- https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/4090
- https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/7999

This PR continues the work done in
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/7999.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Federico Rinaldi <gisquerin@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: MinerSebas <66798382+MinerSebas@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Aevyrie <aevyrie@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Alejandro Pascual Pozo <alejandro.pascual.pozo@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Rob Parrett <robparrett@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: François <mockersf@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Dmytro Banin <banind@cs.washington.edu>
Co-authored-by: James Liu <contact@jamessliu.com>
2023-09-19 20:17:05 +00:00
Joseph
d5d355ae1f
Fix the clippy::explicit_iter_loop lint (#9834)
# Objective

Replace instances of

```rust
for x in collection.iter{_mut}() {
```

with

```rust
for x in &{mut} collection {
```

This also changes CI to no longer suppress this lint. Note that since
this lint only shows up when using clippy in pedantic mode, it was
probably unnecessary to suppress this lint in the first place.
2023-09-19 03:35:22 +00:00
Bruce Mitchener
444245106e
docs: Improve some ComponentId doc cross-linking. (#9839)
# Objective

- When reading API docs and seeing a reference to `ComponentId`, it
isn't immediately clear how to get one from your `Component`. It could
be made to be more clear.

## Solution

- Improve cross-linking of docs about `ComponentId`
2023-09-18 21:42:04 +00:00
Bruce Mitchener
5e91e5f3ce
Improve doc formatting. (#9840)
# Objective

- Identifiers in docs should be marked up with backticks.

## Solution

- Mark up more identifiers in the docs with backticks.
2023-09-18 19:43:56 +00:00
Michael Johnson
68fa81e42d
Round up for the batch size to improve par_iter performance (#9814)
# Objective

The default division for a `usize` rounds down which means the batch
sizes were too small when the `max_size` isn't exactly divisible by the
batch count.

## Solution

Changing the division to round up fixes this which can dramatically
improve performance when using `par_iter`.

I created a small example to proof this out and measured some results. I
don't know if it's worth committing this permanently so I left it out of
the PR for now.

```rust
use std::{thread, time::Duration};

use bevy::{
    prelude::*,
    window::{PresentMode, WindowPlugin},
};

fn main() {
    App::new()
        .add_plugins((DefaultPlugins.set(WindowPlugin {
            primary_window: Some(Window {
                present_mode: PresentMode::AutoNoVsync,
                ..default()
            }),
            ..default()
        }),))
        .add_systems(Startup, spawn)
        .add_systems(Update, update_counts)
        .run();
}

#[derive(Component, Default, Debug, Clone, Reflect)]
pub struct Count(u32);

fn spawn(mut commands: Commands) {
    // Worst case
    let tasks = bevy::tasks::available_parallelism() * 5 - 1;
    // Best case
    // let tasks = bevy::tasks::available_parallelism() * 5 + 1;
    for _ in 0..tasks {
        commands.spawn(Count(0));
    }
}

// changing the bounds of the text will cause a recomputation
fn update_counts(mut count_query: Query<&mut Count>) {
    count_query.par_iter_mut().for_each(|mut count| {
        count.0 += 1;
        thread::sleep(Duration::from_millis(10))
    });
}
```

## Results

I ran this four times, with and without the change, with best case
(should favour the old maths) and worst case (should favour the new
maths) task numbers.

### Worst case

Before the change the batches were 9 on each thread, plus the 5
remainder ran on one of the threads in addition. With the change its 10
on each thread apart from one which has 9. The results show a decrease
from ~140ms to ~100ms which matches what you would expect from the maths
(`10 * 10ms` vs `(9 + 4) * 10ms`).

![Screenshot from 2023-09-14
20-24-36](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/1353401/82099ee4-83a8-47f4-bb6b-944f1e87a818)

### Best case

Before the change the batches were 10 on each thread, plus the 1
remainder ran on one of the threads in addition. With the change its 11
on each thread apart from one which has 5. The results slightly favour
the new change but are basically identical as the total time is
determined by the worse case which is `11 * 10ms` for both tests.

![Screenshot from 2023-09-14
20-48-51](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/1353401/4532211d-ab36-435b-b864-56af3370d90e)
2023-09-18 16:02:58 +00:00
Nicola Papale
0bd4ea7ced
Provide getters for fields of ReflectFromPtr (#9748)
# Objective

The reasoning is similar to #8687.

I'm building a dynamic query. Currently, I store the ReflectFromPtr in
my dynamic `Fetch` type.

[See relevant
code](97ba68ae1e/src/fetches.rs (L14-L17))

However, `ReflectFromPtr` is:

- 16 bytes for TypeId
- 8 bytes for the non-mutable function pointer
- 8 bytes for the mutable function pointer

It's a lot, it adds 32 bytes to my base `Fetch` which is only
`ComponendId` (8 bytes) for a total of 40 bytes.

I only need one function per fetch, reducing the total dynamic fetch
size to 16 bytes.

Since I'm querying the components by the ComponendId associated with the
function pointer I'm using, I don't need the TypeId, it's a redundant
check.

In fact, I've difficulties coming up with situations where checking the
TypeId beforehand is relevant. So to me, if ReflectFromPtr makes sense
as a public API, exposing the function pointers also makes sense.

## Solution

- Make the fields public through methods.

---

## Changelog

- Add `from_ptr` and `from_ptr_mut` methods to `ReflectFromPtr` to
access the underlying function pointers
- `ReflectFromPtr::as_reflect_ptr` is now `ReflectFromPtr::as_reflect`
- `ReflectFromPtr::as_reflect_ptr_mut` is now
`ReflectFromPtr::as_reflect_mut`

## Migration guide

- `ReflectFromPtr::as_reflect_ptr` is now `ReflectFromPtr::as_reflect`
- `ReflectFromPtr::as_reflect_ptr_mut` is now
`ReflectFromPtr::as_reflect_mut`
2023-09-18 13:41:51 +00:00
Rob Parrett
26359f9b37
Remove some old references to CoreSet (#9833)
# Objective

Remove some references to `CoreSet` which was removed in #8079.
2023-09-18 01:07:11 +00:00
louis-le-cam
9ee9d627d7
Rename RemovedComponents::iter/iter_with_id to read/read_with_id (#9778)
# Objective

Rename RemovedComponents::iter/iter_with_id to read/read_with_id to make
it clear that it consume the data

Fixes #9755.

(It's my first pull request, if i've made any mistake, please let me
know)

## Solution

Refactor RemovedComponents::iter/iter_with_id to read/read_with_id



## Changelog

Refactor RemovedComponents::iter/iter_with_id to read/read_with_id

Deprecate RemovedComponents::iter/iter_with_id

Remove IntoIterator implementation

Update removal_detection example accordingly

---

## Migration Guide

Rename calls of RemovedComponents::iter/iter_with_id to
read/read_with_id

Replace IntoIterator iteration (&mut <RemovedComponents>) with .read()

---------

Co-authored-by: denshi_ika <mojang2824@gmail.com>
2023-09-15 12:37:20 +00:00
Joseph
90b741d3d3
Return a boolean from set_if_neq (#9801)
# Objective

When using `set_if_neq`, sometimes you'd like to know if the new value
was different from the old value so that you can perform some additional
branching.

## Solution

Return a bool from this function, which indicates whether or not the
value was overwritten.

---

## Changelog

* `DetectChangesMut::set_if_neq` now returns a boolean indicating
whether or not the value was changed.

## Migration Guide

The trait method `DetectChangesMut::set_if_neq` now returns a boolean
value indicating whether or not the value was changed. If you were
implementing this function manually, you must now return `true` if the
value was overwritten and `false` if the value was not.
2023-09-14 01:44:53 +00:00
Mike
324c057b71
Cache System Tracing Spans (#9390)
# Objective

- Reduce the overhead of tracing by caching the system spans.

Yellow is this pr. Red is main.


![image](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/2180432/fe9bb7c2-ae9a-4522-80a9-75a943a562b6)
2023-09-13 19:10:11 +00:00
Nicola Papale
d3beaff56f
Clarify a comment in Option WorldQuery impl (#9749)
I found a comment a bit confusing

## Solution

Reword it.

---------

Co-authored-by: Joseph <21144246+JoJoJet@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-09-11 19:27:21 +00:00
Nicola Papale
19c53578e6
Fix naming on "tick" Column and ComponentSparseSet methods (#9744)
# Objective

- The tick access methods mention "ticks" (as in: plural). Yet, most of
them only access a single tick.

## Solution

- Rename those methods and fix docs to reflect the singular aspect of
the return values

---

## Migration Guide

The following method names were renamed, from `foo_ticks_bar` to
`foo_tick_bar` (`ticks` is now singular, `tick`):
- `ComponentSparseSet::get_added_ticks` → `get_added_tick`
- `ComponentSparseSet::get_changed_ticks` → `get_changed_tick`
- `Column::get_added_ticks` → `get_added_tick`
- `Column::get_changed_ticks` → `get_changed_tick`
- `Column::get_added_ticks_unchecked` → `get_added_tick_unchecked`
- `Column::get_changed_ticks_unchecked` → `get_changed_tick_unchecked`
2023-09-11 19:25:06 +00:00
Johan Klokkhammer Helsing
4fe2b1220d
Implement Reflect for State<S> and NextState<S> (#9742)
# Objective

- Make it possible to snapshot/save states
- Useful for re-using parts of the state system for rollback safe states
- Or to save states with scenes/savegames

## Solution

- Conditionally add the derive if the `bevy_reflect` is enabled

---

## Changelog

- `NextState<S>` and `State<S>` now implement `Reflect` as long as `S`
does.
2023-09-11 19:18:47 +00:00
Zachary Harrold
4c6b6fc24a
Moved get_component(_unchecked_mut) from Query to QueryState (#9686)
# Objective

- Fixes #9683

## Solution

- Moved `get_component` from `Query` to `QueryState`.
- Moved `get_component_unchecked_mut` from `Query` to `QueryState`.
- Moved `QueryComponentError` from `bevy_ecs::system` to
`bevy_ecs::query`. Minor Breaking Change.
- Narrowed scope of `unsafe` blocks in `Query` methods.

---

## Migration Guide

- `use bevy_ecs::system::QueryComponentError;` -> `use
bevy_ecs::query::QueryComponentError;`

## Notes

I am not very familiar with unsafe Rust nor its use within Bevy, so I
may have committed a Rust faux pas during the migration.

---------

Co-authored-by: Zac Harrold <zharrold@c5prosolutions.com>
Co-authored-by: Tristan Guichaoua <33934311+tguichaoua@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-09-11 19:04:22 +00:00
Joseph
8eb6ccdd87
Remove useless single tuples and trailing commas (#9720)
# Objective

Title
2023-09-08 21:46:54 +00:00
Edgar Geier
118509e4aa
Replace IntoSystemSetConfig with IntoSystemSetConfigs (#9247)
# Objective

- Fixes #9244.

## Solution


- Changed the `(Into)SystemSetConfigs` traits and structs be more like
the `(Into)SystemConfigs` traits and structs.
- Replaced uses of `IntoSystemSetConfig` with `IntoSystemSetConfigs`
- Added generic `ItemConfig` and `ItemConfigs` types.
- Changed `SystemConfig(s)` and `SystemSetConfig(s)` to be type aliases
to `ItemConfig(s)`.
- Added generic `process_configs` to `ScheduleGraph`.
- Changed `configure_sets_inner` and `add_systems_inner` to reuse
`process_configs`.

---

## Changelog

- Added `run_if` to `IntoSystemSetConfigs`
- Deprecated `Schedule::configure_set` and `App::configure_set`
- Removed `IntoSystemSetConfig`

## Migration Guide

- Use `App::configure_sets` instead of `App::configure_set`
- Use `Schedule::configure_sets` instead of `Schedule::configure_set`

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2023-09-05 17:15:27 +00:00
Hennadii Chernyshchyk
9309d89bb8
Add panicking helpers for getting components from Query (#9659)
# Objective

- Currently we don't have panicking alternative for getting components
from `Query` like for resources. Partially addresses #9443.

## Solution

- Add these functions.

---

## Changelog

### Added

- `Query::component` and `Query::component_mut` to get specific
component from query and panic on error.
2023-09-04 12:31:12 +00:00
Joseph
58f7dac689
Fix unsoundness in QueryState::is_empty (#9463)
# Objective

`QueryState::is_empty` is unsound, as it does not validate the world. If
a mismatched world is passed in, then the query filter may cast a
component to an incorrect type, causing undefined behavior.

## Solution

Add world validation. To prevent a performance regression in `Query`
(whose world does not need to be validated), the unchecked function
`is_empty_unsafe_world_cell` has been added. This also allows us to
remove one of the last usages of the private function
`UnsafeWorldCell::unsafe_world`, which takes us a step towards being
able to remove that method entirely.
2023-09-02 23:43:22 +00:00
Félix Lescaudey de Maneville
a2b5d7a198
Fix some nightly warnings (#9672)
# Objective

Fix some nightly warnings found by running

`cargo +nightly clippy`

## Solution

Fix the following warnings:
- [x]
[elided_lifetimes_in_associated_constant](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/115010)
221986134d
- [x]
[unwrap_or_default](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#/unwrap_or_default)
32e21c78f9
- [x]
[needless_pass_by_ref_mut](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#/needless_pass_by_ref_mut)
c85d6d4a10

There is no breaking change, some internal `bevy_ecs` code no longer
uses a few mutable references but I don't think it should cause any
regression or be performance sensitive, but there might be some ECS
magic I'm unaware of that could break because of those changes
2023-09-02 18:35:06 +00:00
Mike
02025eff0b
Fix anonymous set name stack overflow (#9650)
# Objective

- Fixes #9641
- Anonymous sets are named by their system members. When
`ScheduleBuildSettings::report_sets` is on, systems are named by their
sets. So when getting the anonymous set name this would cause an
infinite recursion.

## Solution
- When getting the anonymous system set name, don't get their system's
names with the sets the systems belong to.

## Other Possible solutions
- An alternate solution might be to skip anonymous sets when getting the
system's name for an anonymous set's name.
2023-08-31 22:52:59 +00:00
Mike
c2b85f9b52
fix ambiguity reporting (#9648)
# Objective

- I broke ambiguity reporting in one of my refactors.
`conflicts_to_string` should have been using the passed in parameter
rather than the one stored on self.
2023-08-31 19:06:13 +00:00
lelo
42e6dc8987
Refactor EventReader::iter to read (#9631)
# Objective

- The current `EventReader::iter` has been determined to cause confusion
among new Bevy users. It was suggested by @JoJoJet to rename the method
to better clarify its usage.
- Solves #9624 

## Solution

- Rename `EventReader::iter` to `EventReader::read`.
- Rename `EventReader::iter_with_id` to `EventReader::read_with_id`.
- Rename `ManualEventReader::iter` to `ManualEventReader::read`.
- Rename `ManualEventReader::iter_with_id` to
`ManualEventReader::read_with_id`.

---

## Changelog

- `EventReader::iter` has been renamed to `EventReader::read`.
- `EventReader::iter_with_id` has been renamed to
`EventReader::read_with_id`.
- `ManualEventReader::iter` has been renamed to
`ManualEventReader::read`.
- `ManualEventReader::iter_with_id` has been renamed to
`ManualEventReader::read_with_id`.
- Deprecated `EventReader::iter`
- Deprecated `EventReader::iter_with_id`
- Deprecated `ManualEventReader::iter`
- Deprecated `ManualEventReader::iter_with_id`

## Migration Guide

- Existing usages of `EventReader::iter` and `EventReader::iter_with_id`
will have to be changed to `EventReader::read` and
`EventReader::read_with_id` respectively.
- Existing usages of `ManualEventReader::iter` and
`ManualEventReader::iter_with_id` will have to be changed to
`ManualEventReader::read` and `ManualEventReader::read_with_id`
respectively.
2023-08-30 14:20:03 +00:00
Ame :]
fb094eab87
Move default docs (#9638)
# Objective

- Make the default docs more useful like suggested in
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/9600#issuecomment-1696452118

## Solution

- Move the documentation to the `fn default()` method instead of the
`impl Default`.

Allows you to view the docs directly on the function without having to
go to the implementation.

### Before
![Screenshot 2023-08-29 at 18 21
03](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/104745335/6d31591e-f190-4b8e-8bc3-a570ada294f0)

### After
![Screenshot 2023-08-29 at 18 19
54](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/104745335/e2442ec1-593d-47f3-b539-8c77a170f0b6)
2023-08-30 01:13:04 +00:00
Nicola Papale
4f212a5b0c
Remove IntoIterator impl for &mut EventReader (#9583)
# Objective

The latest `clippy` release has a much more aggressive application of
the
[`explicit_iter_loop`](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#/explicit_into_iter_loop?groups=pedantic)
pedantic lint.

As a result, clippy now suggests the following:

```diff
-for event in events.iter() {
+for event in &mut events {
```

I'm generally in favor of this lint. Using `for mut item in &mut query`
is also recommended over `for mut item in query.iter_mut()` for good
reasons IMO.

But, it is my personal belief that `&mut events` is much less clear than
`events.iter()`.

Why? The reason is that the events from `EventReader` **are not
mutable**, they are immutable references to each event in the event
reader. `&mut events` suggests we are getting mutable access to events —
similarly to `&mut query` — which is not the case. Using `&mut events`
is therefore misleading.

`IntoIterator` requires a mutable `EventReader` because it updates the
internal `last_event_count`, not because it let you mutate it.

So clippy's suggested improvement is a downgrade.

## Solution

Do not implement `IntoIterator` for `&mut events`.

Without the impl, clippy won't suggest its "fix". This also prevents
generally people from using `&mut events` for iterating `EventReader`s,
which makes the ecosystem every-so-slightly better.

---

## Changelog

- Removed `IntoIterator` impl for `&mut EventReader`

## Migration Guide

- `&mut EventReader` does not implement `IntoIterator` anymore. replace
`for foo in &mut events` by `for foo in events.iter()`
2023-08-29 15:29:46 +00:00
Mike
da9a070d6f
port old ambiguity tests over (#9617)
# Objective

- Some of the old ambiguity tests didn't get ported over during schedule
v3.

## Solution

- Port over tests from
15ee98db8d/crates/bevy_ecs/src/schedule/ambiguity_detection.rs (L279-L612)
with minimal changes
- Make a method to convert the ambiguity conflicts to a string for
easier verification of correct results.
2023-08-29 14:53:26 +00:00
Joseph
bc8bf34818
Allow disjoint mutable world access via EntityMut (#9419)
# Objective

Fix #4278
Fix #5504
Fix #9422

Provide safe ways to borrow an entire entity, while allowing disjoint
mutable access. `EntityRef` and `EntityMut` are not suitable for this,
since they provide access to the entire world -- they are just helper
types for working with `&World`/`&mut World`.

This has potential uses for reflection and serialization

## Solution

Remove `EntityRef::world`, which allows it to soundly be used within
queries.

`EntityMut` no longer supports structural world mutations, which allows
multiple instances of it to exist for different entities at once.
Structural world mutations are performed using the new type
`EntityWorldMut`.

```rust
fn disjoint_system(
     q2: Query<&mut A>,
     q1: Query<EntityMut, Without<A>>,
) { ... }

let [entity1, entity2] = world.many_entities_mut([id1, id2]);
*entity1.get_mut::<T>().unwrap() = *entity2.get().unwrap();

for entity in world.iter_entities_mut() {
    ...
}
```

---

## Changelog

- Removed `EntityRef::world`, to fix a soundness issue with queries.
+ Removed the ability to structurally mutate the world using
`EntityMut`, which allows it to be used in queries.
+ Added `EntityWorldMut`, which is used to perform structural mutations
that are no longer allowed using `EntityMut`.

## Migration Guide

**Note for maintainers: ensure that the guide for #9604 is updated
accordingly.**

Removed the method `EntityRef::world`, to fix a soundness issue with
queries. If you need access to `&World` while using an `EntityRef`,
consider passing the world as a separate parameter.

`EntityMut` can no longer perform 'structural' world mutations, such as
adding or removing components, or despawning the entity. Additionally,
`EntityMut::world`, `EntityMut::world_mut` , and
`EntityMut::world_scope` have been removed.
Instead, use the newly-added type `EntityWorldMut`, which is a helper
type for working with `&mut World`.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2023-08-28 23:30:59 +00:00
Mike
33fdc5f5db
Move schedule name into Schedule (#9600)
# Objective

- Move schedule name into `Schedule` to allow the schedule name to be
used for errors and tracing in Schedule methods
- Fixes #9510

## Solution

- Move label onto `Schedule` and adjust api's on `World` and `Schedule`
to not pass explicit label where it makes sense to.
- add name to errors and tracing.
- `Schedule::new` now takes a label so either add the label or use
`Schedule::default` which uses a default label. `default` is mostly used
in doc examples and tests.

---

## Changelog

- move label onto `Schedule` to improve error message and logging for
schedules.

## Migration Guide

`Schedule::new` and `App::add_schedule`
```rust
// old
let schedule = Schedule::new();
app.add_schedule(MyLabel, schedule);

// new
let schedule = Schedule::new(MyLabel);
app.add_schedule(schedule);
```

if you aren't using a label and are using the schedule struct directly
you can use the default constructor.
```rust
// old
let schedule = Schedule::new();
schedule.run(world);

// new
let schedule = Schedule::default();
schedule.run(world);
```

`Schedules:insert`
```rust
// old
let schedule = Schedule::new();
schedules.insert(MyLabel, schedule);

// new
let schedule = Schedule::new(MyLabel);
schedules.insert(schedule);
```

`World::add_schedule`
```rust
// old
let schedule = Schedule::new();
world.add_schedule(MyLabel, schedule);

// new
let schedule = Schedule::new(MyLabel);
world.add_schedule(schedule);
```
2023-08-28 20:44:48 +00:00