Commit graph

357 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Liam Gallagher
0918b30e29
Tests for Run Conditions (#8035) 2023-03-13 15:39:25 +00:00
François
d8b7fed4fe
don't panic on unknown ambiguity (#7950) 2023-03-12 15:24:52 +00:00
JoJoJet
fd1af7c8b8
Replace multiple calls to add_system with add_systems (#8001) 2023-03-10 18:15:22 +00:00
Christian Hughes
8aa217cc8b
Add OnTransition schedule that is ran between OnExit and OnEnter (#7936) 2023-03-10 09:06:23 +00:00
JoJoJet
2e7b915ba4
Increase type safety and clarity for change detection (#7905) 2023-03-09 17:17:02 +00:00
JoJoJet
85c8fb9dfa Revise docs for system set marker traits (#7882)
# Objective

#7863 introduced a potential footgun. When trying to incorrectly add a user-defined type using `in_base_set`, the compiler will suggest that the user implement `BaseSystemSet` for their type. This is a reasonable-sounding suggestion, however this is not the correct way to make a base set, and will lead to a confusing panic message when a marker trait is implemented for the wrong type.

## Solution

Rewrite the documentation for these traits, making it more clear that `BaseSystemSet` is a marker for types that are already base sets, and not a way to define a base set.
2023-03-03 14:43:54 +00:00
JoJoJet
7cd2ee2bbd Use default-implemented methods for IntoSystemConfig<> (#7870)
# Objective

The trait `IntoSystemConfig<>` requires each implementer to repeat every single member method, even though they can all be implemented by just deferring to `SystemConfig`.

## Solution

Add default implementations to most member methods.
2023-03-02 17:19:47 +00:00
JoJoJet
9733613c07 Add marker traits to distinguish base sets from regular system sets (#7863)
# Objective

Base sets, added in #7466  are a special type of system set. Systems can only be added to base sets via `in_base_set`, while non-base sets can only be added via `in_set`. Unfortunately this is currently guarded by a runtime panic, which presents an unfortunate toe-stub when the wrong method is used. The delayed response between writing code and encountering the error (possibly hours) makes the distinction between base sets and other sets much more difficult to learn.

## Solution

Add the marker traits `BaseSystemSet` and `FreeSystemSet`. `in_base_set` and `in_set` now respectively accept these traits, which moves the runtime panic to a compile time error.

---

## Changelog

+ Added the marker trait `BaseSystemSet`, which is distinguished from a `FreeSystemSet`. These are both subtraits of `SystemSet`.

## Migration Guide

None if merged with 0.10
2023-03-02 13:22:58 +00:00
shuo
239b070674 Fix asset_debug_server hang. There should be at most one ThreadExecut… (#7825)
…or's ticker for one thread.

# Objective

- Fix debug_asset_server hang.

## Solution

- Reuse the thread_local executor for MainThreadExecutor resource, so there will be only one ThreadExecutor for main thread. 
- If ThreadTickers from same executor, they are conflict with each other. Then only tick one.
2023-03-02 08:40:25 +00:00
JoJoJet
4fd12d099d Improve the panic message for schedule build errors (#7860)
# Objective

The `ScheduleBuildError` type has a `Display` implementation which beautifully formats the error. However, schedule build errors are currently reported using `unwrap()`, which uses the `Debug` implementation and makes the error message look unfished.

## Solution

Use `unwrap_or_else` so we can customize the formatting of the error message.
2023-03-01 20:18:15 +00:00
shuo
002c9d8b7f fix whitespaces in comment (#7853)
fix double whitespaces in comments. (I know it's dumb commit, while reading code, double spaces hurts a little... :P)
2023-03-01 10:20:56 +00:00
JoJoJet
9e6ad4607f Use correct terminology for a NonSend run condition panic (#7841)
# Objective

There is a panic that occurs when creating a run condition that accesses `NonSend` resources, but it refers to them as 'thread-local' resources instead.

## Solution

Correct the terminology.
2023-02-28 03:38:02 +00:00
James Liu
107cdc10bc Use a bounded channel in the multithreaded executor (#7829)
# Objective
This is a follow-up to #7745. An unbounded `async_channel`  occasionally allocates whenever it exceeds the capacity of the current buffer in it's internal linked list. This is avoidable.

This also used to be a bounded channel before stageless, which was introduced in #4919.

## Solution
Use a bounded channel to avoid allocations on system completion.

This shouldn't conflict with #7745, as it's impossible for the scheduler to exceed the channel capacity, even if somehow every system completed at the same time.
2023-02-27 23:59:04 +00:00
shuo
de10dce10d use try_send to replace send.await, unbounded channel should always b… (#7745)
…e sendable, this improves performance

# Objective

- From prev experience, `.await` is not free, also I did a profiling a half year ago, bevy's multithread executor spend lots cycles on ArcWaker.

## Solution

-  this pr replace `sender.send().await` to `sender.try_send()` to cut some future/await cost.

benchmarked on `empty system`
```bash
➜ critcmp send_base send_optimize
group                                         send_base                              send_optimize
-----                                         ---------                              -------------
empty_systems/000_systems                     1.01      2.8±0.03ns        ? ?/sec    1.00      2.8±0.02ns        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/001_systems                     1.00      5.9±0.21µs        ? ?/sec    1.01      5.9±0.23µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/002_systems                     1.03      6.4±0.26µs        ? ?/sec    1.00      6.2±0.19µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/003_systems                     1.01      6.5±0.17µs        ? ?/sec    1.00      6.4±0.20µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/004_systems                     1.03      7.0±0.24µs        ? ?/sec    1.00      6.8±0.18µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/005_systems                     1.04      7.4±0.35µs        ? ?/sec    1.00      7.2±0.21µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/010_systems                     1.00      9.0±0.28µs        ? ?/sec    1.00      9.1±0.80µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/015_systems                     1.01     10.9±0.36µs        ? ?/sec    1.00     10.8±1.29µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/020_systems                     1.12     12.7±0.67µs        ? ?/sec    1.00     11.3±0.37µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/025_systems                     1.12     14.6±0.39µs        ? ?/sec    1.00     13.0±1.02µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/030_systems                     1.12     16.2±0.39µs        ? ?/sec    1.00     14.4±0.37µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/035_systems                     1.19     18.2±0.97µs        ? ?/sec    1.00     15.3±0.48µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/040_systems                     1.12     20.6±0.58µs        ? ?/sec    1.00     18.3±1.87µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/045_systems                     1.18     22.7±0.57µs        ? ?/sec    1.00     19.2±0.46µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/050_systems                     1.03     21.9±0.92µs        ? ?/sec    1.00     21.3±0.96µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/055_systems                     1.13     25.7±1.00µs        ? ?/sec    1.00     22.8±0.50µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/060_systems                     1.35     30.0±2.57µs        ? ?/sec    1.00     22.2±1.04µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/065_systems                     1.28     31.7±0.76µs        ? ?/sec    1.00     24.8±0.79µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/070_systems                     1.33    36.8±10.37µs        ? ?/sec    1.00     27.6±0.55µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/075_systems                     1.25     38.0±0.83µs        ? ?/sec    1.00     30.3±0.63µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/080_systems                     1.33     41.7±1.22µs        ? ?/sec    1.00     31.4±1.01µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/085_systems                     1.27     45.6±2.54µs        ? ?/sec    1.00     35.8±4.06µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/090_systems                     1.29     48.3±5.33µs        ? ?/sec    1.00     37.6±5.32µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/095_systems                     1.16     45.7±0.97µs        ? ?/sec    1.00     39.4±2.75µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/100_systems                     1.14     49.5±4.26µs        ? ?/sec    1.00     43.5±1.06µs        ? ?/sec
```
2023-02-27 09:26:32 +00:00
JoJoJet
b8263b55fb Support system.in_schedule() and system.on_startup() (#7790)
# Objective

Support the following syntax for adding systems:

```rust
App::new()
    .add_system(setup.on_startup())
    .add_systems((
        show_menu.in_schedule(OnEnter(GameState::Paused)),
        menu_ssytem.in_set(OnUpdate(GameState::Paused)),
        hide_menu.in_schedule(OnExit(GameState::Paused)),
    ))
```

## Solution

Add the traits `IntoSystemAppConfig{s}`, which provide the extension methods necessary for configuring which schedule a system belongs to. These extension methods return `IntoSystemAppConfig{s}`, which `App::add_system{s}` uses to choose which schedule to add systems to.

---

## Changelog

+ Added the extension methods `in_schedule(label)` and  `on_startup()` for configuring the schedule a system belongs to.

## Future Work

* Replace all uses of `add_startup_system` in the engine.
* Deprecate this method
2023-02-24 18:33:55 +00:00
JoJoJet
e27e04a4a7 Remove a duplicate lookup in apply_state_transitions (#7800)
# Objective

Remove a duplicate resource lookup and an unnecessary panic.
2023-02-24 10:49:14 +00:00
JoJoJet
695d30bd54 Clean up marker generics for systems (#7789)
# Objective

While we use `#[doc(hidden)]` to try and hide marker generics from the user, these types reveal themselves in compiler errors, adding visual noise and confusion.

## Solution

Replace the `AlreadyWasSystem` marker generic with `()`, to reduce visual noise in error messages. This also makes it possible to return `impl Condition<()>` from combinators.

For function systems, use their function signature as the marker type. This should drastically improve the legibility of some error messages.  
The `InputMarker` type has been removed, since it is unnecessary.
2023-02-23 05:11:12 +00:00
JoJoJet
ee4c8c5ecd Use consistent names for marker generics (#7788)
# Objective

Several places in the ECS use marker generics to avoid overlapping trait implementations, but different places alternately refer to it as `Params` and `Marker`. This is potentially confusing, since it might not be clear that the same pattern is being used. Additionally, users might be misled into thinking that the `Params` type corresponds to the `SystemParam`s of a system.

## Solution

Rename `Params` to `Marker`.
2023-02-23 04:37:08 +00:00
remiCzn
a0606393d7 Add example in Schedule docs (#7775)
# Objective

Fixes #3980

## Solution

Added examples to show how to run a `Schedule`, one with a unique system, and another with several systems

---

## Changelog

- Added: examples in docs to show how to run a `Schedule`


Co-authored-by: remiCzn <77072160+remiCzn@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-02-22 15:52:37 +00:00
JoJoJet
588af17aa3 Make boxed conditions read-only (#7786)
# Objective

The `BoxedCondition` type alias does not require the underlying system to be read-only.

## Solution

Define the type alias using `ReadOnlySystem` instead of `System`.
2023-02-22 15:25:40 +00:00
Cameron
3ec87e49ca Stageless: prettier cycle reporting (#7463)
Graph theory make head hurty. Closes #7367.

Basically, when we topologically sort the dependency graph, we already find its strongly-connected components (a really [neat algorithm][1]). This PR adds an algorithm that can dissect those into simple cycles, giving us more useful error reports.

test: `system_build_errors::dependency_cycle`
```
schedule has 1 before/after cycle(s):
cycle 1: system set 'A' must run before itself
system set 'A'
 ... which must run before system set 'B'
 ... which must run before system set 'A'
```
```
schedule has 1 before/after cycle(s):
cycle 1: system 'foo' must run before itself
system 'foo'
 ... which must run before system 'bar'
 ... which must run before system 'foo'
```

test: `system_build_errors::hierarchy_cycle`
```
schedule has 1 in_set cycle(s):
cycle 1: system set 'A' contains itself
system set 'A'
 ... which contains system set 'B'
 ... which contains system set 'A'
 ```

[1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarjan%27s_strongly_connected_components_algorithm
2023-02-21 13:42:20 +00:00
Rob Parrett
b39f83640f Fix some typos (#7763)
# Objective

Stumbled on a typo and went on a typo hunt.

## Solution

Fix em
2023-02-20 22:56:57 +00:00
Ida "Iyes
17d1fa4a8b Add more "common run conditions" (#7579)
Add some more useful common run conditions.

Some of these existed in `iyes_loopless`. I know people used them, and it would be a regression for those users, when they try to migrate to new Bevy stageless, if they are missing.

I also took the opportunity to add a few more new ones.

---

## Changelog

### Added
 - More "common run conditions": on_event, resource change detection, state_changed, any_with_component
2023-02-20 22:56:56 +00:00
JoJoJet
0c98f9a225 Add AND/OR combinators for run conditions (#7605)
# Objective

Fix #7584.

## Solution

Add an abstraction for creating custom system combinators with minimal boilerplate. Use this to implement AND/OR combinators. Use this to simplify the implementation of `PipeSystem`.

## Example

Feel free to bikeshed on the syntax.

I chose the names `and_then`/`or_else` to emphasize the fact that these short-circuit, while I chose method syntax to empasize that the arguments are *not* treated equally.

```rust
app.add_systems((
    my_system.run_if(resource_exists::<R>().and_then(resource_equals(R(0)))),
    our_system.run_if(resource_exists::<R>().or_else(resource_exists::<S>())),
));
```

---

## Todo

- [ ] Decide on a syntax
- [x] Write docs
- [x] Write tests

## Changelog

+ Added the extension methods `.and_then(...)` and `.or_else(...)` to run conditions, which allows combining run conditions with short-circuiting behavior.
+ Added the trait `Combine`, which can be used with the new `CombinatorSystem` to create system combinators with custom behavior.
2023-02-20 18:16:11 +00:00
Edgar Geier
acff2210c0 Add report_sets option to ScheduleBuildSettings (#7756)
# Objective

- Fixes #7442.

## Solution

- Added `report_sets` option to `ScheduleBuildSettings` like described in the linked issue.

The output of the `3d_scene` example when reporting ambiguities with `report_sets` and `use_shortnames` set to `true` (and with #7755 applied) now looks like this: 
```
82 pairs of systems with conflicting data access have indeterminate execution order. Consider adding `before`, `after`, or `ambiguous_with` relationships between these:
 -- filesystem_watcher_system (LoadAssets) and apply_system_buffers (FirstFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- update_asset_storage_system<DynamicScene> (LoadAssets) and apply_system_buffers (FirstFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- update_asset_storage_system<Scene> (LoadAssets) and apply_system_buffers (FirstFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- update_asset_storage_system<Shader> (LoadAssets) and apply_system_buffers (FirstFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- update_asset_storage_system<Mesh> (LoadAssets) and apply_system_buffers (FirstFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- update_asset_storage_system<SkinnedMeshInverseBindposes> (LoadAssets) and apply_system_buffers (FirstFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- update_asset_storage_system<Image> (LoadAssets) and apply_system_buffers (FirstFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- update_asset_storage_system<TextureAtlas> (LoadAssets) and apply_system_buffers (FirstFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- update_asset_storage_system<ColorMaterial> (LoadAssets) and apply_system_buffers (FirstFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- update_asset_storage_system<Font> (LoadAssets) and apply_system_buffers (FirstFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- update_asset_storage_system<FontAtlasSet> (LoadAssets) and apply_system_buffers (FirstFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- update_asset_storage_system<StandardMaterial> (LoadAssets) and apply_system_buffers (FirstFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- update_asset_storage_system<Gltf> (LoadAssets) and apply_system_buffers (FirstFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- update_asset_storage_system<GltfNode> (LoadAssets) and apply_system_buffers (FirstFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- update_asset_storage_system<GltfPrimitive> (LoadAssets) and apply_system_buffers (FirstFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- update_asset_storage_system<GltfMesh> (LoadAssets) and apply_system_buffers (FirstFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- update_asset_storage_system<AudioSource> (LoadAssets) and apply_system_buffers (FirstFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- update_asset_storage_system<AudioSink> (LoadAssets) and apply_system_buffers (FirstFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- update_asset_storage_system<AnimationClip> (LoadAssets) and apply_system_buffers (FirstFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- scene_spawner_system (Update) and close_when_requested (Update)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- exit_on_all_closed (PostUpdate) and apply_system_buffers (CalculateBoundsFlush, PostUpdate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- exit_on_all_closed (PostUpdate) and apply_system_buffers (AddClustersFlush, PostUpdate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- camera_system<Projection> (CameraUpdateSystem, PostUpdate) and apply_system_buffers (CalculateBoundsFlush, PostUpdate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- camera_system<Projection> (CameraUpdateSystem, PostUpdate) and apply_system_buffers (AddClustersFlush, PostUpdate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- camera_system<OrthographicProjection> (CameraUpdateSystem, PostUpdate) and apply_system_buffers (CalculateBoundsFlush, PostUpdate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- camera_system<OrthographicProjection> (CameraUpdateSystem, PostUpdate) and apply_system_buffers (AddClustersFlush, PostUpdate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- camera_system<PerspectiveProjection> (CameraUpdateSystem, PostUpdate) and apply_system_buffers (CalculateBoundsFlush, PostUpdate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- camera_system<PerspectiveProjection> (CameraUpdateSystem, PostUpdate) and apply_system_buffers (AddClustersFlush, PostUpdate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- calculate_bounds (CalculateBounds, PostUpdate) and apply_system_buffers (AddClustersFlush, PostUpdate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- apply_system_buffers (CalculateBoundsFlush, PostUpdate) and visibility_propagate_system (PostUpdate, VisibilityPropagate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- apply_system_buffers (CalculateBoundsFlush, PostUpdate) and update_text2d_layout (PostUpdate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- apply_system_buffers (CalculateBoundsFlush, PostUpdate) and ui_stack_system (PostUpdate, Stack)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- apply_system_buffers (CalculateBoundsFlush, PostUpdate) and text_system (PostUpdate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- apply_system_buffers (CalculateBoundsFlush, PostUpdate) and update_image_calculated_size_system (PostUpdate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- apply_system_buffers (CalculateBoundsFlush, PostUpdate) and flex_node_system (Flex, PostUpdate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- apply_system_buffers (CalculateBoundsFlush, PostUpdate) and add_clusters (AddClusters, PostUpdate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- apply_system_buffers (CalculateBoundsFlush, PostUpdate) and apply_system_buffers (AddClustersFlush, PostUpdate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- apply_system_buffers (CalculateBoundsFlush, PostUpdate) and play_queued_audio_system<AudioSource> (PostUpdate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- apply_system_buffers (CalculateBoundsFlush, PostUpdate) and animation_player (PostUpdate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- apply_system_buffers (CalculateBoundsFlush, PostUpdate) and propagate_transforms (PostUpdate, TransformPropagate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- apply_system_buffers (CalculateBoundsFlush, PostUpdate) and sync_simple_transforms (PostUpdate, TransformPropagate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- apply_system_buffers (CalculateBoundsFlush, PostUpdate) and update_directional_light_cascades (PostUpdate, UpdateDirectionalLightCascades)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- apply_system_buffers (CalculateBoundsFlush, PostUpdate) and update_clipping_system (PostUpdate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- apply_system_buffers (CalculateBoundsFlush, PostUpdate) and update_frusta<Projection> (PostUpdate, UpdateProjectionFrusta)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- apply_system_buffers (CalculateBoundsFlush, PostUpdate) and update_frusta<PerspectiveProjection> (PostUpdate, UpdatePerspectiveFrusta)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- apply_system_buffers (CalculateBoundsFlush, PostUpdate) and update_frusta<OrthographicProjection> (PostUpdate, UpdateOrthographicFrusta)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- visibility_propagate_system (PostUpdate, VisibilityPropagate) and apply_system_buffers (AddClustersFlush, PostUpdate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- update_text2d_layout (PostUpdate) and apply_system_buffers (AddClustersFlush, PostUpdate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- ui_stack_system (PostUpdate, Stack) and apply_system_buffers (AddClustersFlush, PostUpdate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- text_system (PostUpdate) and apply_system_buffers (AddClustersFlush, PostUpdate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- update_image_calculated_size_system (PostUpdate) and apply_system_buffers (AddClustersFlush, PostUpdate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- flex_node_system (Flex, PostUpdate) and apply_system_buffers (AddClustersFlush, PostUpdate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- flex_node_system (Flex, PostUpdate) and animation_player (PostUpdate)
    conflict on: ["bevy_transform::components::transform::Transform"]
 -- apply_system_buffers (AddClustersFlush, PostUpdate) and play_queued_audio_system<AudioSource> (PostUpdate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- apply_system_buffers (AddClustersFlush, PostUpdate) and animation_player (PostUpdate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- apply_system_buffers (AddClustersFlush, PostUpdate) and propagate_transforms (PostUpdate, TransformPropagate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- apply_system_buffers (AddClustersFlush, PostUpdate) and sync_simple_transforms (PostUpdate, TransformPropagate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- apply_system_buffers (AddClustersFlush, PostUpdate) and update_directional_light_cascades (PostUpdate, UpdateDirectionalLightCascades)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- apply_system_buffers (AddClustersFlush, PostUpdate) and update_clipping_system (PostUpdate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- apply_system_buffers (AddClustersFlush, PostUpdate) and update_frusta<Projection> (PostUpdate, UpdateProjectionFrusta)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- apply_system_buffers (AddClustersFlush, PostUpdate) and update_frusta<PerspectiveProjection> (PostUpdate, UpdatePerspectiveFrusta)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- apply_system_buffers (AddClustersFlush, PostUpdate) and update_frusta<OrthographicProjection> (PostUpdate, UpdateOrthographicFrusta)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- apply_system_buffers (AddClustersFlush, PostUpdate) and check_visibility (CheckVisibility, PostUpdate)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- apply_system_buffers (AddClustersFlush, PostUpdate) and update_directional_light_frusta (PostUpdate, UpdateLightFrusta)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- Assets<Scene>::asset_event_system (AssetEvents) and apply_system_buffers (PostUpdateFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- Assets<Shader>::asset_event_system (AssetEvents) and apply_system_buffers (PostUpdateFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- Assets<Mesh>::asset_event_system (AssetEvents) and apply_system_buffers (PostUpdateFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- Assets<SkinnedMeshInverseBindposes>::asset_event_system (AssetEvents) and apply_system_buffers (PostUpdateFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- Assets<Image>::asset_event_system (AssetEvents) and apply_system_buffers (PostUpdateFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- Assets<TextureAtlas>::asset_event_system (AssetEvents) and apply_system_buffers (PostUpdateFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- Assets<ColorMaterial>::asset_event_system (AssetEvents) and apply_system_buffers (PostUpdateFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- Assets<Font>::asset_event_system (AssetEvents) and apply_system_buffers (PostUpdateFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- Assets<FontAtlasSet>::asset_event_system (AssetEvents) and apply_system_buffers (PostUpdateFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- Assets<StandardMaterial>::asset_event_system (AssetEvents) and apply_system_buffers (PostUpdateFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- Assets<Gltf>::asset_event_system (AssetEvents) and apply_system_buffers (PostUpdateFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- Assets<GltfNode>::asset_event_system (AssetEvents) and apply_system_buffers (PostUpdateFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- Assets<GltfPrimitive>::asset_event_system (AssetEvents) and apply_system_buffers (PostUpdateFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- Assets<GltfMesh>::asset_event_system (AssetEvents) and apply_system_buffers (PostUpdateFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- Assets<AudioSource>::asset_event_system (AssetEvents) and apply_system_buffers (PostUpdateFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- Assets<AudioSink>::asset_event_system (AssetEvents) and apply_system_buffers (PostUpdateFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- Assets<AnimationClip>::asset_event_system (AssetEvents) and apply_system_buffers (PostUpdateFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
 -- Assets<DynamicScene>::asset_event_system (AssetEvents) and apply_system_buffers (PostUpdateFlush)
    conflict on: bevy_ecs::world::World
```

Co-authored-by: Edgar Geier <geieredgar@gmail.com>
2023-02-20 15:31:10 +00:00
shuo
d46427b4e4 for disconnected, use Vec instead of HashSet to reduce insert overhead (#7744)
# Objective

- Improve `Schedule::initialize` performance

## Solution

- replace `disconnected`'s type from HashSet to Vec in `check_graph`
2023-02-19 16:35:39 +00:00
shuo
bd54c4d2d1 extract topsort logic to a new method, one pass to detect cycles and … (#7727)
…top sort. reduce mem alloc

# Objective

- Reduce alloc count.
- Improve code quality.

## Solution

- use `TarjanScc::run` directly, which calls a closure with each scc, in closure, we can detect cycles and flatten nodes
2023-02-19 16:35:38 +00:00
Edgar Geier
67a89e9c58 Add distributive_run_if to IntoSystemConfigs (#7724)
# Objective

- Fixes #7659.

## Solution

- This PR extracted the `distributive_run_if` part of #7676, because it does not require the controversial introduction of anonymous system sets.
- The distinctive name should make the user aware about the differences between `IntoSystemConfig::run_if` and `IntoSystemConfigs::distributive_run_if`.
- The documentation explains in detail the consequences of using the API and possible pit falls when using it.
- A test demonstrates the possibility of changing the condition result, resulting in some of the systems not being run.

---

## Changelog

### Added
- Add `distributive_run_if` to `IntoSystemConfigs` to enable adding a run condition to each system when using `add_systems`.
2023-02-18 21:33:09 +00:00
Jakob Hellermann
b2e1694c12 make ScheduleGraph::initialize public (#7723)
follow-up to https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/7716

# Objective

System access is only populated in `System::initialize`, so without calling `initialize` it's actually impossible to see most ambiguities.

## Solution


- make `initialize` public. The method is idempotent, so calling it multiple times doesn't hurt
2023-02-17 20:25:28 +00:00
James Liu
04256735f6 Cleanup ScheduleBuildSettings (#7721)
# Objective
Fix #7440. Fix #7441. 

## Solution

 * Remove builder functions on `ScheduleBuildSettings` in favor of public fields, move docs to the fields.
 * Add `use_shortnames` and use it in `get_node_name` to feed it through `bevy_utils::get_short_name`.
2023-02-17 15:17:52 +00:00
James Liu
69d3a15eae Default to using ExecutorKind::SingleThreaded on wasm32 (#7717)
# Objective
Web builds do not support running on multiple threads right now. Defaulting to the multi-threaded executor has significant overhead without any benefit.

## Solution
Default to the single threaded executor on wasm32 builds.
2023-02-17 00:22:56 +00:00
Jakob Hellermann
45442f7367 expose ambiguities of ScheduleGraph (#7716)
# Objective

- other tools (bevy_mod_debugdump) would like to have access to the ambiguities so that they can do their own reporting/visualization

## Solution

- store `conflicting_systems` in `ScheduleGraph` after calling `build_schedule`

The solution isn't very pretty and as pointed out it https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/7522, there may be a better way of exposing this, but this is the quick and dirty way if we want to have this functionality exposed in 0.10.
2023-02-17 00:22:55 +00:00
Jakob Hellermann
b1646e9cee change is_system_type() -> bool to system_type() -> Option<TypeId> (#7715)
# Objective

- it would be nice to be able to associate a `NodeId` of a system type set to the `NodeId` of the actual system (used in bevy_mod_debugdump)

## Solution

- make `system_type` return the type id of the system
  - that way you can check if a `dyn SystemSet` is the system type set of a `dyn System`
- I don't know if this information is already present somewhere else in the scheduler or if there is a better way to expose it
2023-02-16 22:25:48 +00:00
Edgar Geier
6a63940367 Allow adding systems to multiple sets that share the same base set (#7709)
# Objective

Fixes #7702.

## Solution

- Added an test that ensures that no error is returned if a system or set is inside two different sets that share the same base set.
- Added an check to only return an error if the two base sets are not equal.
2023-02-16 17:09:46 +00:00
Jakob Hellermann
b35818c0a3 expose ScheduleGraph for third party dependencies (#7522)
# Objective

The `ScheduleGraph` should be expose so that crates like [bevy_mod_debugdump](https://github.com/jakobhellermann/bevy_mod_debugdump/blob/stageless/docs/README.md) can access useful information. 

## Solution

- expose `ScheduleGraph`, `NodeId`, `BaseSetMembership`, `Dag`
- add accessor functions for sets and systems

## Changelog

- expose `ScheduleGraph` for use in third party tools

This does expose our use of `petgraph` as a graph library, so we can only change that as a breaking change.
2023-02-16 17:09:45 +00:00
dis-da-moe
8853bef6df implement TypeUuid for primitives and fix multiple-parameter generics having the same TypeUuid (#6633)
# Objective

- Fixes #5432 
- Fixes #6680

## Solution

- move code responsible for generating the `impl TypeUuid` from `type_uuid_derive` into a new function, `gen_impl_type_uuid`.
- this allows the new proc macro, `impl_type_uuid`, to call the code for generation.
- added struct `TypeUuidDef` and implemented `syn::Parse` to allow parsing of the input for the new macro.
- finally, used the new macro `impl_type_uuid` to implement `TypeUuid` for the standard library (in `crates/bevy_reflect/src/type_uuid_impl.rs`).
- fixes #6680 by doing a wrapping add of the param's index to its `TYPE_UUID`

Co-authored-by: dis-da-moe <84386186+dis-da-moe@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-02-16 17:09:44 +00:00
JoJoJet
81307290e2 Fix trait bounds for run conditions (#7688)
# Objective

The trait `Condition<>` is implemented for any type that can be converted into a `ReadOnlySystem` which takes no inputs and returns a bool. However, due to the current implementation, consumers of the trait cannot rely on the fact that `<T as Condition>::System` implements `ReadOnlySystem`. In cases such as the `not` combinator (added in #7559), we are required to add redundant `T::System: ReadOnlySystem` trait bounds, even though this should be implied by the `Condition<>` trait.

## Solution

Add a hidden associated type which allows the compiler to figure out that the `System` associated type implements `ReadOnlySystem`.
2023-02-16 16:45:48 +00:00
JoJoJet
4f57f380c7 Simplify generics for the SystemParamFunction trait (#7675)
# Objective

The `SystemParamFunction` (and `ExclusiveSystemParamFunction`) trait is very cumbersome to use, due to it requiring four generic type parameters. These are currently all used as marker parameters to satisfy rust's trait coherence rules.

### Example (before)

```rust
pub fn pipe<AIn, Shared, BOut, A, AParam, AMarker, B, BParam, BMarker>(
    mut system_a: A,
    mut system_b: B,
) -> impl FnMut(In<AIn>, ParamSet<(AParam, BParam)>) -> BOut
where
    A: SystemParamFunction<AIn, Shared, AParam, AMarker>,
    B: SystemParamFunction<Shared, BOut, BParam, BMarker>,
    AParam: SystemParam,
    BParam: SystemParam,
```

## Solution

Turn the `In`, `Out`, and `Param` generics into associated types. Merge the marker types together to retain coherence.

### Example (after)

```rust
pub fn pipe<A, B, AMarker, BMarker>(
    mut system_a: A,
    mut system_b: B,
) -> impl FnMut(In<A::In>, ParamSet<(A::Param, B::Param)>) -> B::Out
where
    A: SystemParamFunction<AMarker>,
    B: SystemParamFunction<BMarker, In = A::Out>,
```

---

## Changelog

+ Simplified the `SystemParamFunction` and `ExclusiveSystemParamFunction` traits.

## Migration Guide

For users of the `SystemParamFunction` trait, the generic type parameters `In`, `Out`, and `Param` have been turned into associated types. The same has been done with the `ExclusiveSystemParamFunction` trait.
2023-02-15 19:41:15 +00:00
Niklas Eicker
f1c0850b81 Rename state_equals condition to in_state (#7677)
# Objective

- Improve readability of the run condition for systems only running in a certain state

## Solution

- Rename `state_equals` to `in_state` (see [comment by cart](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/7634#issuecomment-1428740311) in #7634 )
- `.run_if(state_equals(variant))` now is `.run_if(in_state(variant))`

This breaks the naming pattern a bit with the related conditions `state_exists` and `state_exists_and_equals` but I could not think of better names for those and think the improved readability of `in_state` is worth it.
2023-02-14 21:30:14 +00:00
Alice Cecile
0a9c469d19 Remove .on_update method to improve API consistency and clarity (#7667)
# Objective

Fixes #7632.

As discussed in #7634, it can be quite challenging for users to intuit the mental model of how states now work.

## Solution

Rather than change the behavior of the `OnUpdate` system set, instead work on making sure it's easy to understand what's going on.

Two things have been done:

1. Remove the `.on_update` method from our bevy of system building traits. This was special-cased and made states feel much more magical than they need to.
2. Improve the docs for the `OnUpdate` system set.
2023-02-14 00:13:10 +00:00
张林伟
14a7689e1a Derive Debug for State and NextState (#7651)
# Objective

- Derive Debug for State and NextState
2023-02-13 18:20:31 +00:00
Hennadii Chernyshchyk
1ffeff19f9 Add condition negation (#7559)
# Objective

Closes #7202

## Solution

~~Introduce a `not` helper to pipe conditions. Opened mostly for discussion. Maybe create an extension trait with `not` method? Please, advice.~~
Introduce `not(condition)` condition that inverses the result of the passed.

---

## Changelog

### Added

- `not` condition.
2023-02-08 23:24:36 +00:00
Andrew Jakubowicz
978f7cd8bf Remove unused test resource in a bevy_ecs schedule unit test (#7551)
Small commit to remove an unused resource scoped within a single bevy_ecs unit test. Also rearranged the initialization to follow initialization conventions of surrounding tests. World/Schedule initialization followed by resource initialization.

This change was tested locally with `cargo test`, and `cargo fmt` was run.

Risk should be tiny as change is scoped to a single unit test and very tiny, and I can't see any way that this resource is being used in the test.

Thank you so much!
2023-02-07 22:59:19 +00:00
JoJoJet
5efc226290 Allow piping run conditions (#7547)
# Objective

Run conditions are a special type of system that do not modify the world, and which return a bool. Due to the way they are currently implemented, you can *only* use bare function systems as a run condition. Among other things, this prevents the use of system piping with run conditions. This make very basic constructs impossible, such as `my_system.run_if(my_condition.pipe(not))`.

Unblocks a basic solution for #7202.

## Solution

Add the trait `ReadOnlySystem`, which is implemented for any system whose parameters all implement `ReadOnlySystemParam`. Allow any `-> bool` system implementing this trait to be used as a run condition.

---

## Changelog

+ Added the trait `ReadOnlySystem`, which is implemented for any `System` type whose parameters all implement `ReadOnlySystemParam`.
+ Added the function `bevy::ecs::system::assert_is_read_only_system`.
2023-02-07 22:22:16 +00:00
SpecificProtagonist
6314f50e7b States derive macro (#7535)
# Objective
Implementing `States` manually is repetitive, so let's not.

One thing I'm unsure of is whether the macro import statement is in the right place.
2023-02-07 14:02:21 +00:00
Mike
d95df29fc0 early return from multithreaded executor (#7521)
# Objective

- There is a small perf cost for starting the multithreaded executor.

## Solution

- We can skip that cost when there are zero systems in the schedule. Overall not a big perf boost unless there are a lot of empty schedules that are trying to run, but it is something.

Below is a tracy trace of the run_fixed_update_schedule for many_foxes which has zero systems in it. Yellow is main and red is this pr. The time difference between the peaks of the humps is around 15us.

![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2180432/216884536-f3af8f5e-6224-4d0f-8fbd-67b0beb90baf.png)
2023-02-06 20:50:08 +00:00
张林伟
aa4170d9a4 Rename schedule v3 to schedule (#7519)
# Objective

- Follow up of https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/7267

## Solution

- Rename schedule_v3 to schedule
- Suppress "module inception" lint
2023-02-06 18:44:40 +00:00
Alice Cecile
206c7ce219 Migrate engine to Schedule v3 (#7267)
Huge thanks to @maniwani, @devil-ira, @hymm, @cart, @superdump and @jakobhellermann for the help with this PR.

# Objective

- Followup #6587.
- Minimal integration for the Stageless Scheduling RFC: https://github.com/bevyengine/rfcs/pull/45

## Solution

- [x]  Remove old scheduling module
- [x] Migrate new methods to no longer use extension methods
- [x] Fix compiler errors
- [x] Fix benchmarks
- [x] Fix examples
- [x] Fix docs
- [x] Fix tests

## Changelog

### Added

- a large number of methods on `App` to work with schedules ergonomically
- the `CoreSchedule` enum
- `App::add_extract_system` via the `RenderingAppExtension` trait extension method
- the private `prepare_view_uniforms` system now has a public system set for scheduling purposes, called `ViewSet::PrepareUniforms`

### Removed

- stages, and all code that mentions stages
- states have been dramatically simplified, and no longer use a stack
- `RunCriteriaLabel`
- `AsSystemLabel` trait
- `on_hierarchy_reports_enabled` run criteria (now just uses an ad hoc resource checking run condition)
- systems in `RenderSet/Stage::Extract` no longer warn when they do not read data from the main world
- `RunCriteriaLabel`
- `transform_propagate_system_set`: this was a nonstandard pattern that didn't actually provide enough control. The systems are already `pub`: the docs have been updated to ensure that the third-party usage is clear.

### Changed

- `System::default_labels` is now `System::default_system_sets`.
- `App::add_default_labels` is now `App::add_default_sets`
- `CoreStage` and `StartupStage` enums are now `CoreSet` and `StartupSet`
- `App::add_system_set` was renamed to `App::add_systems`
- The `StartupSchedule` label is now defined as part of the `CoreSchedules` enum
-  `.label(SystemLabel)` is now referred to as `.in_set(SystemSet)`
- `SystemLabel` trait was replaced by `SystemSet`
- `SystemTypeIdLabel<T>` was replaced by `SystemSetType<T>`
- The `ReportHierarchyIssue` resource now has a public constructor (`new`), and implements `PartialEq`
- Fixed time steps now use a schedule (`CoreSchedule::FixedTimeStep`) rather than a run criteria.
- Adding rendering extraction systems now panics rather than silently failing if no subapp with the `RenderApp` label is found.
- the `calculate_bounds` system, with the `CalculateBounds` label, is now in `CoreSet::Update`, rather than in `CoreSet::PostUpdate` before commands are applied. 
- `SceneSpawnerSystem` now runs under `CoreSet::Update`, rather than `CoreStage::PreUpdate.at_end()`.
- `bevy_pbr::add_clusters` is no longer an exclusive system
- the top level `bevy_ecs::schedule` module was replaced with `bevy_ecs::scheduling`
- `tick_global_task_pools_on_main_thread` is no longer run as an exclusive system. Instead, it has been replaced by `tick_global_task_pools`, which uses a `NonSend` resource to force running on the main thread.

## Migration Guide

- Calls to `.label(MyLabel)` should be replaced with `.in_set(MySet)`
- Stages have been removed. Replace these with system sets, and then add command flushes using the `apply_system_buffers` exclusive system where needed.
- The `CoreStage`, `StartupStage, `RenderStage` and `AssetStage`  enums have been replaced with `CoreSet`, `StartupSet, `RenderSet` and `AssetSet`. The same scheduling guarantees have been preserved.
  - Systems are no longer added to `CoreSet::Update` by default. Add systems manually if this behavior is needed, although you should consider adding your game logic systems to `CoreSchedule::FixedTimestep` instead for more reliable framerate-independent behavior.
  - Similarly, startup systems are no longer part of `StartupSet::Startup` by default. In most cases, this won't matter to you.
  - For example, `add_system_to_stage(CoreStage::PostUpdate, my_system)` should be replaced with 
  - `add_system(my_system.in_set(CoreSet::PostUpdate)`
- When testing systems or otherwise running them in a headless fashion, simply construct and run a schedule using `Schedule::new()` and `World::run_schedule` rather than constructing stages
- Run criteria have been renamed to run conditions. These can now be combined with each other and with states.
- Looping run criteria and state stacks have been removed. Use an exclusive system that runs a schedule if you need this level of control over system control flow.
- For app-level control flow over which schedules get run when (such as for rollback networking), create your own schedule and insert it under the `CoreSchedule::Outer` label.
- Fixed timesteps are now evaluated in a schedule, rather than controlled via run criteria. The `run_fixed_timestep` system runs this schedule between `CoreSet::First` and `CoreSet::PreUpdate` by default.
- Command flush points introduced by `AssetStage` have been removed. If you were relying on these, add them back manually.
- Adding extract systems is now typically done directly on the main app. Make sure the `RenderingAppExtension` trait is in scope, then call `app.add_extract_system(my_system)`.
- the `calculate_bounds` system, with the `CalculateBounds` label, is now in `CoreSet::Update`, rather than in `CoreSet::PostUpdate` before commands are applied. You may need to order your movement systems to occur before this system in order to avoid system order ambiguities in culling behavior.
- the `RenderLabel` `AppLabel` was renamed to `RenderApp` for clarity
- `App::add_state` now takes 0 arguments: the starting state is set based on the `Default` impl.
- Instead of creating `SystemSet` containers for systems that run in stages, simply use `.on_enter::<State::Variant>()` or its `on_exit` or `on_update` siblings.
- `SystemLabel` derives should be replaced with `SystemSet`. You will also need to add the `Debug`, `PartialEq`, `Eq`, and `Hash` traits to satisfy the new trait bounds.
- `with_run_criteria` has been renamed to `run_if`. Run criteria have been renamed to run conditions for clarity, and should now simply return a bool.
- States have been dramatically simplified: there is no longer a "state stack". To queue a transition to the next state, call `NextState::set`

## TODO

- [x] remove dead methods on App and World
- [x] add `App::add_system_to_schedule` and `App::add_systems_to_schedule`
- [x] avoid adding the default system set at inappropriate times
- [x] remove any accidental cycles in the default plugins schedule
- [x] migrate benchmarks
- [x] expose explicit labels for the built-in command flush points
- [x] migrate engine code
- [x] remove all mentions of stages from the docs
- [x] verify docs for States
- [x] fix uses of exclusive systems that use .end / .at_start / .before_commands
- [x] migrate RenderStage and AssetStage
- [x] migrate examples
- [x] ensure that transform propagation is exported in a sufficiently public way (the systems are already pub)
- [x] ensure that on_enter schedules are run at least once before the main app
- [x] re-enable opt-in to execution order ambiguities
- [x] revert change to `update_bounds` to ensure it runs in `PostUpdate`
- [x] test all examples
  - [x] unbreak directional lights
  - [x] unbreak shadows (see 3d_scene, 3d_shape, lighting, transparaency_3d examples)
  - [x] game menu example shows loading screen and menu simultaneously
  - [x] display settings menu is a blank screen
  - [x] `without_winit` example panics
- [x] ensure all tests pass
  - [x] SubApp doc test fails
  - [x] runs_spawn_local tasks fails
  - [x] [Fix panic_when_hierachy_cycle test hanging](https://github.com/alice-i-cecile/bevy/pull/120)

## Points of Difficulty and Controversy

**Reviewers, please give feedback on these and look closely**

1.  Default sets, from the RFC, have been removed. These added a tremendous amount of implicit complexity and result in hard to debug scheduling errors. They're going to be tackled in the form of "base sets" by @cart in a followup.
2. The outer schedule controls which schedule is run when `App::update` is called.
3. I implemented `Label for `Box<dyn Label>` for our label types. This enables us to store schedule labels in concrete form, and then later run them. I ran into the same set of problems when working with one-shot systems. We've previously investigated this pattern in depth, and it does not appear to lead to extra indirection with nested boxes.
4. `SubApp::update` simply runs the default schedule once. This sucks, but this whole API is incomplete and this was the minimal changeset.
5. `time_system` and `tick_global_task_pools_on_main_thread` no longer use exclusive systems to attempt to force scheduling order
6. Implemetnation strategy for fixed timesteps
7. `AssetStage` was migrated to `AssetSet` without reintroducing command flush points. These did not appear to be used, and it's nice to remove these bottlenecks.
8. Migration of `bevy_render/lib.rs` and pipelined rendering. The logic here is unusually tricky, as we have complex scheduling requirements.

## Future Work (ideally before 0.10)

- Rename schedule_v3 module to schedule or scheduling
- Add a derive macro to states, and likely a `EnumIter` trait of some form
- Figure out what exactly to do with the "systems added should basically work by default" problem
- Improve ergonomics for working with fixed timesteps and states
- Polish FixedTime API to match Time
- Rebase and merge #7415
- Resolve all internal ambiguities (blocked on better tools, especially #7442)
- Add "base sets" to replace the removed default sets.
2023-02-06 02:04:50 +00:00
Mike
e1b0bbf5ed Stageless: add a method to scope to always run a task on the scope thread (#7415)
# Objective

- Currently exclusive systems and applying buffers run outside of the multithreaded executor and just calls the funtions on the thread the schedule is running on. Stageless changes this to run these using tasks in a scope. Specifically It uses `spawn_on_scope` to run these. For the render thread this is incorrect as calling `spawn_on_scope` there runs tasks on the main thread. It should instead run these on the render thread and only run nonsend systems on the main thread.
 
## Solution

- Add another executor to `Scope` for spawning tasks on the scope. `spawn_on_scope` now always runs the task on the thread the scope is running on. `spawn_on_external` spawns onto the external executor than is optionally passed in. If None is passed `spawn_on_external` will spawn onto the scope executor.
- Eventually this new machinery will be able to be removed. This will happen once a fix for removing NonSend resources from the world lands. So this is a temporary fix to support stageless.

---

## Changelog

- add a spawn_on_external method to allow spawning on the scope's thread or an external thread

## Migration Guide

> No migration guide. The main thread executor was introduced in pipelined rendering which was merged for 0.10. spawn_on_scope now behaves the same way as on 0.9.
2023-02-05 21:44:46 +00:00
Mike
4f3ed196fa Stageless: move MainThreadExecutor to schedule_v3 (#7444)
# Objective

- Trying to move some of the fixes from https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/7267 to make that one easier to review
- The MainThreadExecutor is how the render world runs nonsend systems on the main thread for pipelined rendering.
- The multithread executor for stageless wasn't using the MainThreadExecutor.
- MainThreadExecutor was declared in the old executor_parallel module that is getting deleted.
- The way the MainThreadExecutor was getting passed to the scope was actually unsound as the resource could be dropped from the World while the schedule was running

## Solution

- Move MainThreadExecutor to the new multithreaded_executor's file.
- Make the multithreaded executor use the MainThreadExecutor
- Clone the MainThreadExecutor onto the stack and pass that ref in

## Changelog

- Move MainThreadExecutor for stageless migration.
2023-02-03 03:19:41 +00:00
Chris Ohk
3281aea5c2 Fix minor typos in code and docs (#7378)
# Objective

I found several words in code and docs are incorrect. This should be fixed.

## Solution

- Fix several minor typos

Co-authored-by: Chris Ohk <utilforever@gmail.com>
2023-01-27 12:12:53 +00:00
Mike
2027af4c54 Pipelined Rendering (#6503)
# Objective

- Implement pipelined rendering
- Fixes #5082
- Fixes #4718

## User Facing Description

Bevy now implements piplelined rendering! Pipelined rendering allows the app logic and rendering logic to run on different threads leading to large gains in performance.

![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2180432/202049871-3c00b801-58ab-448f-93fd-471e30aba55f.png)
*tracy capture of many_foxes example*

To use pipelined rendering, you just need to add the `PipelinedRenderingPlugin`. If you're using `DefaultPlugins` then it will automatically be added for you on all platforms except wasm. Bevy does not currently support multithreading on wasm which is needed for this feature to work. If you aren't using `DefaultPlugins` you can add the plugin manually.

```rust
use bevy::prelude::*;
use bevy::render::pipelined_rendering::PipelinedRenderingPlugin;

fn main() {
    App::new()
        // whatever other plugins you need
        .add_plugin(RenderPlugin)
        // needs to be added after RenderPlugin
        .add_plugin(PipelinedRenderingPlugin)
        .run();
}
```

If for some reason pipelined rendering needs to be removed. You can also disable the plugin the normal way.

```rust
use bevy::prelude::*;
use bevy::render::pipelined_rendering::PipelinedRenderingPlugin;

fn main() {
    App::new.add_plugins(DefaultPlugins.build().disable::<PipelinedRenderingPlugin>());
}
```

### A setup function was added to plugins

A optional plugin lifecycle function was added to the `Plugin trait`. This function is called after all plugins have been built, but before the app runner is called. This allows for some final setup to be done. In the case of pipelined rendering, the function removes the sub app from the main app and sends it to the render thread.

```rust
struct MyPlugin;
impl Plugin for MyPlugin {
    fn build(&self, app: &mut App) {
        
    }
    
    // optional function
    fn setup(&self, app: &mut App) {
        // do some final setup before runner is called
    }
}
```

### A Stage for Frame Pacing

In the `RenderExtractApp` there is a stage labelled `BeforeIoAfterRenderStart` that systems can be added to.  The specific use case for this stage is for a frame pacing system that can delay the start of main app processing in render bound apps to reduce input latency i.e. "frame pacing". This is not currently built into bevy, but exists as `bevy`

```text
|-------------------------------------------------------------------|
|         | BeforeIoAfterRenderStart | winit events | main schedule |
| extract |---------------------------------------------------------|
|         | extract commands | rendering schedule                   |
|-------------------------------------------------------------------|
```

### Small API additions

* `Schedule::remove_stage`
* `App::insert_sub_app`
* `App::remove_sub_app` 
* `TaskPool::scope_with_executor`

## Problems and Solutions

### Moving render app to another thread

Most of the hard bits for this were done with the render redo. This PR just sends the render app back and forth through channels which seems to work ok. I originally experimented with using a scope to run the render task. It was cuter, but that approach didn't allow render to start before i/o processing. So I switched to using channels. There is much complexity in the coordination that needs to be done, but it's worth it. By moving rendering during i/o processing the frame times should be much more consistent in render bound apps. See https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/4691.

### Unsoundness with Sending World with NonSend resources

Dropping !Send things on threads other than the thread they were spawned on is considered unsound. The render world doesn't have any nonsend resources. So if we tell the users to "pretty please don't spawn nonsend resource on the render world", we can avoid this problem.

More seriously there is this https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/6534 pr, which patches the unsoundness by aborting the app if a nonsend resource is dropped on the wrong thread. ~~That PR should probably be merged before this one.~~ For a longer term solution we have this discussion going https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/discussions/6552.

### NonSend Systems in render world

The render world doesn't have any !Send resources, but it does have a non send system. While Window is Send, winit does have some API's that can only be accessed on the main thread. `prepare_windows` in the render schedule thus needs to be scheduled on the main thread. Currently we run nonsend systems by running them on the thread the TaskPool::scope runs on. When we move render to another thread this no longer works.

To fix this, a new `scope_with_executor` method was added that takes a optional `TheadExecutor` that can only be ticked on the thread it was initialized on. The render world then holds a `MainThreadExecutor` resource which can be passed to the scope in the parallel executor that it uses to spawn it's non send systems on. 

### Scopes executors between render and main should not share tasks

Since the render world and the app world share the `ComputeTaskPool`. Because `scope` has executors for the ComputeTaskPool a system from the main world could run on the render thread or a render system could run on the main thread. This can cause performance problems because it can delay a stage from finishing. See https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/6503#issuecomment-1309791442 for more details.

To avoid this problem, `TaskPool::scope` has been changed to not tick the ComputeTaskPool when it's used by the parallel executor. In the future when we move closer to the 1 thread to 1 logical core model we may want to overprovide threads, because the render and main app threads don't do much when executing the schedule.

## Performance

My machine is Windows 11, AMD Ryzen 5600x, RX 6600

### Examples

#### This PR with pipelining vs Main

> Note that these were run on an older version of main and the performance profile has probably changed due to optimizations

Seeing a perf gain from 29% on many lights to 7% on many sprites.

<html>
<body>
<!--StartFragment--><google-sheets-html-origin>

  | percent |   |   | Diff |   |   | Main |   |   | PR |   |  
-- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | --
tracy frame time | mean | median | sigma | mean | median | sigma | mean | median | sigma | mean | median | sigma
many foxes | 27.01% | 27.34% | -47.09% | 1.58 | 1.55 | -1.78 | 5.85 | 5.67 | 3.78 | 4.27 | 4.12 | 5.56
many lights | 29.35% | 29.94% | -10.84% | 3.02 | 3.03 | -0.57 | 10.29 | 10.12 | 5.26 | 7.27 | 7.09 | 5.83
many animated sprites | 13.97% | 15.69% | 14.20% | 3.79 | 4.17 | 1.41 | 27.12 | 26.57 | 9.93 | 23.33 | 22.4 | 8.52
3d scene | 25.79% | 26.78% | 7.46% | 0.49 | 0.49 | 0.15 | 1.9 | 1.83 | 2.01 | 1.41 | 1.34 | 1.86
many cubes | 11.97% | 11.28% | 14.51% | 1.93 | 1.78 | 1.31 | 16.13 | 15.78 | 9.03 | 14.2 | 14 | 7.72
many sprites | 7.14% | 9.42% | -85.42% | 1.72 | 2.23 | -6.15 | 24.09 | 23.68 | 7.2 | 22.37 | 21.45 | 13.35

<!--EndFragment-->
</body>
</html>

#### This PR with pipelining disabled vs Main

Mostly regressions here. I don't think this should be a problem as users that are disabling pipelined rendering are probably running single threaded and not using the parallel executor. The regression is probably mostly due to the switch to use `async_executor::run` instead of `try_tick` and also having one less thread to run systems on. I'll do a writeup on why switching to `run` causes regressions, so we can try to eventually fix it. Using try_tick causes issues when pipeline rendering is enable as seen [here](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/6503#issuecomment-1380803518)

<html>
<body>
<!--StartFragment--><google-sheets-html-origin>

  | percent |   |   | Diff |   |   | Main |   |   | PR no pipelining |   |  
-- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | --
tracy frame time | mean | median | sigma | mean | median | sigma | mean | median | sigma | mean | median | sigma
many foxes | -3.72% | -4.42% | -1.07% | -0.21 | -0.24 | -0.04 | 5.64 | 5.43 | 3.74 | 5.85 | 5.67 | 3.78
many lights | 0.29% | -0.30% | 4.75% | 0.03 | -0.03 | 0.25 | 10.29 | 10.12 | 5.26 | 10.26 | 10.15 | 5.01
many animated sprites | 0.22% | 1.81% | -2.72% | 0.06 | 0.48 | -0.27 | 27.12 | 26.57 | 9.93 | 27.06 | 26.09 | 10.2
3d scene | -15.79% | -14.75% | -31.34% | -0.3 | -0.27 | -0.63 | 1.9 | 1.83 | 2.01 | 2.2 | 2.1 | 2.64
many cubes | -2.85% | -3.30% | 0.00% | -0.46 | -0.52 | 0 | 16.13 | 15.78 | 9.03 | 16.59 | 16.3 | 9.03
many sprites | 2.49% | 2.41% | 0.69% | 0.6 | 0.57 | 0.05 | 24.09 | 23.68 | 7.2 | 23.49 | 23.11 | 7.15

<!--EndFragment-->
</body>
</html>

### Benchmarks

Mostly the same except empty_systems has got a touch slower. The maybe_pipelining+1 column has the compute task pool with an extra thread over default added. This is because pipelining loses one thread over main to execute systems on, since the main thread no longer runs normal systems.

<details>
<summary>Click Me</summary>

```text
group                                                             main                                         maybe-pipelining+1
-----                                                             -------------------------                ------------------
busy_systems/01x_entities_03_systems                              1.07     30.7±1.32µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     28.6±1.35µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/01x_entities_06_systems                              1.10     52.1±1.10µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     47.2±1.08µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/01x_entities_09_systems                              1.00     74.6±1.36µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     75.0±1.93µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/01x_entities_12_systems                              1.03    100.6±6.68µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     98.0±1.46µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/01x_entities_15_systems                              1.11    128.5±3.53µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    115.5±1.02µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/02x_entities_03_systems                              1.16     50.4±2.56µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     43.5±3.00µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/02x_entities_06_systems                              1.00     87.1±1.27µs        ? ?/sec      1.05     91.5±7.15µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/02x_entities_09_systems                              1.04    139.9±6.37µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    134.0±1.06µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/02x_entities_12_systems                              1.05    179.2±3.47µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    170.1±3.17µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/02x_entities_15_systems                              1.01    219.6±3.75µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    218.1±2.55µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/03x_entities_03_systems                              1.10     70.6±2.33µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     64.3±0.69µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/03x_entities_06_systems                              1.02    130.2±3.11µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    128.0±1.34µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/03x_entities_09_systems                              1.00   195.0±10.11µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    194.8±1.41µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/03x_entities_12_systems                              1.01    261.7±4.05µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    259.8±4.11µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/03x_entities_15_systems                              1.00    318.0±3.04µs        ? ?/sec      1.06   338.3±20.25µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/04x_entities_03_systems                              1.00     82.9±0.63µs        ? ?/sec      1.02     84.3±0.63µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/04x_entities_06_systems                              1.01    181.7±3.65µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    179.8±1.76µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/04x_entities_09_systems                              1.04    265.0±4.68µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    255.3±1.98µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/04x_entities_12_systems                              1.00    335.9±3.00µs        ? ?/sec      1.05   352.6±15.84µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/04x_entities_15_systems                              1.00   418.6±10.26µs        ? ?/sec      1.08   450.2±39.58µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/05x_entities_03_systems                              1.07    114.3±0.95µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    106.9±1.52µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/05x_entities_06_systems                              1.08    229.8±2.90µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    212.3±4.18µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/05x_entities_09_systems                              1.03    329.3±1.99µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    319.2±2.43µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/05x_entities_12_systems                              1.06    454.7±6.77µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    430.1±3.58µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/05x_entities_15_systems                              1.03    554.6±6.15µs        ? ?/sec      1.00   538.4±23.87µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/01x_entities_03_systems                                 1.00     14.0±0.15µs        ? ?/sec      1.08     15.1±0.21µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/01x_entities_06_systems                                 1.04     28.5±0.37µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     27.4±0.44µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/01x_entities_09_systems                                 1.00     41.5±4.38µs        ? ?/sec      1.02     42.2±2.24µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/01x_entities_12_systems                                 1.06     55.9±1.49µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     52.6±1.36µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/01x_entities_15_systems                                 1.02     68.0±2.00µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     66.5±0.78µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/02x_entities_03_systems                                 1.03     25.2±0.38µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     24.6±0.52µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/02x_entities_06_systems                                 1.00     46.3±0.49µs        ? ?/sec      1.04     48.1±4.13µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/02x_entities_09_systems                                 1.02     70.4±0.99µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     68.8±1.04µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/02x_entities_12_systems                                 1.06     96.8±1.49µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     91.5±0.93µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/02x_entities_15_systems                                 1.02    116.2±0.95µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    114.2±1.42µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/03x_entities_03_systems                                 1.00     33.2±0.38µs        ? ?/sec      1.01     33.6±0.45µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/03x_entities_06_systems                                 1.00     62.4±0.73µs        ? ?/sec      1.01     63.3±1.05µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/03x_entities_09_systems                                 1.02     96.4±0.85µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     94.8±3.02µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/03x_entities_12_systems                                 1.01    126.3±4.67µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    125.6±2.27µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/03x_entities_15_systems                                 1.03    160.2±9.37µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    156.0±1.53µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/04x_entities_03_systems                                 1.02     41.4±3.39µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     40.5±0.52µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/04x_entities_06_systems                                 1.00     78.9±1.61µs        ? ?/sec      1.02     80.3±1.06µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/04x_entities_09_systems                                 1.02    121.8±3.97µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    119.2±1.46µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/04x_entities_12_systems                                 1.00    157.8±1.48µs        ? ?/sec      1.01    160.1±1.72µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/04x_entities_15_systems                                 1.00    197.9±1.47µs        ? ?/sec      1.08   214.2±34.61µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/05x_entities_03_systems                                 1.00     49.1±0.33µs        ? ?/sec      1.01     49.7±0.75µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/05x_entities_06_systems                                 1.00     95.0±0.93µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     94.6±0.94µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/05x_entities_09_systems                                 1.01    143.2±1.68µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    142.2±2.00µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/05x_entities_12_systems                                 1.00    191.8±2.03µs        ? ?/sec      1.01    192.7±7.88µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/05x_entities_15_systems                                 1.02    239.7±3.71µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    235.8±4.11µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/000_systems                                         1.01     47.8±0.67ns        ? ?/sec      1.00     47.5±2.02ns        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/001_systems                                         1.00  1743.2±126.14ns        ? ?/sec     1.01  1761.1±70.10ns        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/002_systems                                         1.01      2.2±0.04µs        ? ?/sec      1.00      2.2±0.02µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/003_systems                                         1.02      2.7±0.09µs        ? ?/sec      1.00      2.7±0.16µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/004_systems                                         1.00      3.1±0.11µs        ? ?/sec      1.00      3.1±0.24µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/005_systems                                         1.00      3.5±0.05µs        ? ?/sec      1.11      3.9±0.70µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/010_systems                                         1.00      5.5±0.12µs        ? ?/sec      1.03      5.7±0.17µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/015_systems                                         1.00      7.9±0.19µs        ? ?/sec      1.06      8.4±0.16µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/020_systems                                         1.00     10.4±1.25µs        ? ?/sec      1.02     10.6±0.18µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/025_systems                                         1.00     12.4±0.39µs        ? ?/sec      1.14     14.1±1.07µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/030_systems                                         1.00     15.1±0.39µs        ? ?/sec      1.05     15.8±0.62µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/035_systems                                         1.00     16.9±0.47µs        ? ?/sec      1.07     18.0±0.37µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/040_systems                                         1.00     19.3±0.41µs        ? ?/sec      1.05     20.3±0.39µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/045_systems                                         1.00     22.4±1.67µs        ? ?/sec      1.02     22.9±0.51µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/050_systems                                         1.00     24.4±1.67µs        ? ?/sec      1.01     24.7±0.40µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/055_systems                                         1.05     28.6±5.27µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     27.2±0.70µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/060_systems                                         1.02     29.9±1.64µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     29.3±0.66µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/065_systems                                         1.02     32.7±3.15µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     32.1±0.98µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/070_systems                                         1.00     33.0±1.42µs        ? ?/sec      1.03     34.1±1.44µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/075_systems                                         1.00     34.8±0.89µs        ? ?/sec      1.04     36.2±0.70µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/080_systems                                         1.00     37.0±1.82µs        ? ?/sec      1.05     38.7±1.37µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/085_systems                                         1.00     38.7±0.76µs        ? ?/sec      1.05     40.8±0.83µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/090_systems                                         1.00     41.5±1.09µs        ? ?/sec      1.04     43.2±0.82µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/095_systems                                         1.00     43.6±1.10µs        ? ?/sec      1.04     45.2±0.99µs        ? ?/sec
empty_systems/100_systems                                         1.00     46.7±2.27µs        ? ?/sec      1.03     48.1±1.25µs        ? ?/sec
```
</details>

## Migration Guide

### App `runner` and SubApp `extract` functions are now required to be Send 

This was changed to enable pipelined rendering. If this breaks your use case please report it as these new bounds might be able to be relaxed.

## ToDo

* [x] redo benchmarking
* [x] reinvestigate the perf of the try_tick -> run change for task pool scope
2023-01-19 23:45:46 +00:00
张林伟
0d2cdb450d Fix beta clippy lints (#7154)
# Objective

- When I run `cargo run -p ci` for my pr locally using latest beta toolchain, the ci failed due to [uninlined_format_args](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#uninlined_format_args) and [needless_lifetimes](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#needless_lifetimes) lints

## Solution

- Fix lints according to clippy suggestions.
2023-01-11 09:51:22 +00:00
James Liu
aaf384ae58 Panic on dropping NonSend in non-origin thread. (#6534)
# Objective

Fixes #3310. Fixes #6282. Fixes #6278. Fixes #3666.

## Solution
Split out `!Send` resources into `NonSendResources`. Add a `origin_thread_id` to all `!Send` Resources, check it on dropping `NonSendResourceData`, if there's a mismatch, panic. Moved all of the checks that `MainThreadValidator` would do into `NonSendResources` instead.

All `!Send` resources now individually track which thread they were inserted from. This is validated against for every access, mutation, and drop that could be done against the value. 

A regression test using an altered version of the example from #3310 has been added.

This is a stopgap solution for the current status quo. A full solution may involve fully removing `!Send` resources/components from `World`, which will likely require a much more thorough design on how to handle the existing in-engine and ecosystem use cases.

This PR also introduces another breaking change:

```rust
    use bevy_ecs::prelude::*;

    #[derive(Resource)]
    struct Resource(u32);

    fn main() {
        let mut world = World::new();
        world.insert_resource(Resource(1));
        world.insert_non_send_resource(Resource(2));
        let res = world.get_resource_mut::<Resource>().unwrap();
        assert_eq!(res.0, 2);
    }
```

This code will run correctly on 0.9.1 but not with this PR, since NonSend resources and normal resources have become actual distinct concepts storage wise.

## Changelog
Changed: Fix soundness bug with `World: Send`. Dropping a `World` that contains a `!Send` resource on the wrong thread will now panic.

## Migration Guide
Normal resources and `NonSend` resources no longer share the same backing storage. If `R: Resource`, then `NonSend<R>` and `Res<R>` will return different instances from each other. If you are using both `Res<T>` and `NonSend<T>` (or their mutable variants), to fetch the same resources, it's strongly advised to use `Res<T>`.
2023-01-09 20:40:34 +00:00
Mike
d76b53bf4d Separate Extract from Sub App Schedule (#7046)
# Objective

- This pulls out some of the changes to Plugin setup and sub apps from #6503 to make that PR easier to review.
- Separate the extract stage from running the sub app's schedule to allow for them to be run on separate threads in the future
- Fixes #6990

## Solution

- add a run method to `SubApp` that runs the schedule
- change the name of `sub_app_runner` to extract to make it clear that this function is only for extracting data between the main app and the sub app
- remove the extract stage from the sub app schedule so it can be run separately. This is done by adding a `setup` method to the `Plugin` trait that runs after all plugin build methods run. This is required to allow the extract stage to be removed from the schedule after all the plugins have added their systems to the stage. We will also need the setup method for pipelined rendering to setup the render thread. See e3267965e1/crates/bevy_render/src/pipelined_rendering.rs (L57-L98)

## Changelog

- Separate SubApp Extract stage from running the sub app schedule.

## Migration Guide

### SubApp `runner` has conceptually been changed to an `extract` function.

The `runner` no longer is in charge of running the sub app schedule. It's only concern is now moving data between the main world and the sub app. The `sub_app.app.schedule` is now run for you after the provided function is called.

```rust
// before
fn main() {
    let sub_app = App::empty();
    sub_app.add_stage(MyStage, SystemStage::parallel());
    
    App::new().add_sub_app(MySubApp, sub_app, move |main_world, sub_app| {
        extract(app_world, render_app);
        render_app.app.schedule.run();
    });
}

// after
fn main() {
        let sub_app = App::empty();
    sub_app.add_stage(MyStage, SystemStage::parallel());
    
    App::new().add_sub_app(MySubApp, sub_app, move |main_world, sub_app| {
        extract(app_world, render_app);
        // schedule is automatically called for you after extract is run
    });
}
```
2023-01-09 19:24:54 +00:00
Rob Parrett
3dd8b42f72 Fix various typos (#7096)
I stumbled across a typo in some docs. Fixed some more while I was in there.
2023-01-06 00:43:30 +00:00
James Liu
79b9231b74 Move system_commands spans into apply_buffers (#6900)
# Objective
A separate `tracing` span for running a system's commands is created, even if the system doesn't have commands. This is adding extra measuring overhead (see #4892) where it's not needed.

## Solution
Move the span into `ParallelCommandState` and `CommandQueue`'s `SystemParamState::apply`. To get the right metadata for the span, a additional `&SystemMeta` parameter was added to `SystemParamState::apply`.

---

## Changelog
Added: `SystemMeta::name`
Changed: Systems without `Commands` and  `ParallelCommands` will no longer show a "system_commands" span when profiling.
Changed: `SystemParamState::apply` now takes a `&SystemMeta` parameter in addition to the provided `&mut World`.
2022-12-11 23:04:04 +00:00
TimJentzsch
694c980c82 Fix clippy::iter_with_drain (#6485)
# Objective

Fixes #6483.

- Fix the [`clippy::iter_with_drain`](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#iter_with_drain) warnings
- From the docs: "`.into_iter()` is simpler with better performance"

## Solution

- Replace `.drain(..)` for `Vec` with `.into_iter()`
2022-11-06 01:42:15 +00:00
Jakob Hellermann
e71c4d2802 fix nightly clippy warnings (#6395)
# Objective

- fix new clippy lints before they get stable and break CI

## Solution

- run `clippy --fix` to auto-fix machine-applicable lints
- silence `clippy::should_implement_trait` for `fn HandleId::default<T: Asset>`

## Changes
- always prefer `format!("{inline}")` over `format!("{}", not_inline)`
- prefer `Box::default` (or `Box::<T>::default` if necessary) over `Box::new(T::default())`
2022-10-28 21:03:01 +00:00
Alice Cecile
c0a93aa7a4 Rename system chaining to system piping (#6230)
# Objective

> System chaining is a confusing name: it implies the ability to construct non-linear graphs, and suggests a sense of system ordering that is only incidentally true. Instead, it actually works by passing data from one system to the next, much like the pipe operator.

> In the accepted [stageless RFC](https://github.com/bevyengine/rfcs/blob/main/rfcs/45-stageless.md), this concept is renamed to piping, and "system chaining" is used to construct groups of systems with ordering dependencies between them.

Fixes #6225.

## Changelog

System chaining has been renamed to system piping to improve clarity (and free up the name for new ordering APIs). 

## Migration Guide

The `.chain(handler_system)` method on systems is now `.pipe(handler_system)`.
The `IntoChainSystem` trait is now `IntoPipeSystem`, and the `ChainSystem` struct is now `PipeSystem`.
2022-10-11 15:21:12 +00:00
targrub
9a597b758e Adding Debug implementations for App, Stage, Schedule, Query, QueryState, etc. (#6214)
# Objective

- Adding Debug implementations for App, Stage, Schedule, Query, QueryState.
- Fixes #1130.

## Solution

- Implemented std::fmt::Debug for a number of structures.

---

## Changelog

Also added Debug implementations for ParallelSystemExecutor, SingleThreadedExecutor, various RunCriteria structures, SystemContainer, and SystemDescriptor.

Opinions are sure to differ as to what information to provide in a Debug implementation.  Best guess was taken for this initial version for these structures.


Co-authored-by: targrub <62773321+targrub@users.noreply.github.com>
2022-10-10 20:59:38 +00:00
JoJoJet
3321d68a75 Add methods for silencing system-order ambiguity warnings (#6158)
# Background

Incremental implementation of #4299. The code is heavily borrowed from that PR.

# Objective

The execution order ambiguity checker often emits false positives, since bevy is not aware of invariants upheld by the user.

## Solution

Title

---

## Changelog

+ Added methods `SystemDescriptor::ignore_all_ambiguities` and `::ambiguous_with`. These allow you to silence warnings for specific system-order ambiguities.

## Migration Guide

***Note for maintainers**: This should replace the migration guide for #5916*

Ambiguity sets have been replaced with a simpler API.

```rust
// These systems technically conflict, but we don't care which order they run in.
fn jump_on_click(mouse: Res<Input<MouseButton>>, mut transforms: Query<&mut Transform>) { ... }
fn jump_on_spacebar(keys: Res<Input<KeyCode>>, mut transforms: Query<&mut Transform>) { ... }

//
// Before

#[derive(AmbiguitySetLabel)]
struct JumpSystems;

app
  .add_system(jump_on_click.in_ambiguity_set(JumpSystems))
  .add_system(jump_on_spacebar.in_ambiguity_set(JumpSystems));

//
// After

app
  .add_system(jump_on_click.ambiguous_with(jump_on_spacebar))
  .add_system(jump_on_spacebar);

```
2022-10-10 16:34:21 +00:00
JoJoJet
8a268129f9 Deduplicate ambiguity reporting code (#6149)
# Objective

Now that #6083 has been merged, we can clean up some ugly ambiguity detection code.

# Solution

Deduplicate code.
2022-10-03 16:57:31 +00:00
Mike
d22d310ad5 Nested spawns on scope (#4466)
# Objective

- Add ability to create nested spawns. This is needed for stageless. The current executor spawns tasks for each system early and runs the system by communicating through a channel. In stageless we want to spawn the task late, so that archetypes can be updated right before the task is run. The executor is run on a separate task, so this enables the scope to be passed to the spawned executor.
- Fixes #4301

## Solution

- Instantiate a single threaded executor on the scope and use that instead of the LocalExecutor. This allows the scope to be Send, but still able to spawn tasks onto the main thread the scope is run on. This works because while systems can access nonsend data. The systems themselves are Send. Because of this change we lose the ability to spawn nonsend tasks on the scope, but I don't think this is being used anywhere. Users would still be able to use spawn_local on TaskPools.
- Steals the lifetime tricks the `std:🧵:scope` uses to allow nested spawns, but disallow scope to be passed to tasks or threads not associated with the scope.
- Change the storage for the tasks to a `ConcurrentQueue`. This is to allow a &Scope to be passed for spawning instead of a &mut Scope. `ConcurrentQueue` was chosen because it was already in our dependency tree because `async_executor` depends on it.
- removed the optimizations for 0 and 1 spawned tasks. It did improve those cases, but made the cases of more than 1 task slower.
---

## Changelog

Add ability to nest spawns

```rust
fn main() {
    let pool = TaskPool::new();
    pool.scope(|scope| {
        scope.spawn(async move {
            // calling scope.spawn from an spawn task was not possible before
            scope.spawn(async move {
                // do something
            });
        });
    })
}
```

## Migration Guide

If you were using explicit lifetimes and Passing Scope you'll need to specify two lifetimes now.

```rust
fn scoped_function<'scope>(scope: &mut Scope<'scope, ()>) {}
// should become
fn scoped_function<'scope>(scope: &Scope<'_, 'scope, ()>) {}
```

`scope.spawn_local` changed to `scope.spawn_on_scope` this should cover cases where you needed to run tasks on the local thread, but does not cover spawning Nonsend Futures.

## TODO
* [x] think real hard about all the lifetimes
* [x] add doc about what 'env and 'scope mean.
* [x] manually check that the single threaded task pool still works
* [x] Get updated perf numbers
* [x] check and make sure all the transmutes are necessary
* [x] move commented out test into a compile fail test
* [x] look through the tests for scope on std and see if I should add any more tests

Co-authored-by: Michael Hsu <myhsu@benjaminelectric.com>
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
2022-09-28 01:59:10 +00:00
Carter Anderson
dc3f801239 Exclusive Systems Now Implement System. Flexible Exclusive System Params (#6083)
# Objective

The [Stageless RFC](https://github.com/bevyengine/rfcs/pull/45) involves allowing exclusive systems to be referenced and ordered relative to parallel systems. We've agreed that unifying systems under `System` is the right move.

This is an alternative to #4166 (see rationale in the comments I left there). Note that this builds on the learnings established there (and borrows some patterns).

## Solution

This unifies parallel and exclusive systems under the shared `System` trait, removing the old `ExclusiveSystem` trait / impls. This is accomplished by adding a new `ExclusiveFunctionSystem` impl similar to `FunctionSystem`. It is backed by `ExclusiveSystemParam`, which is similar to `SystemParam`. There is a new flattened out SystemContainer api (which cuts out a lot of trait and type complexity). 

This means you can remove all cases of `exclusive_system()`:

```rust
// before
commands.add_system(some_system.exclusive_system());
// after
commands.add_system(some_system);
```

I've also implemented `ExclusiveSystemParam` for `&mut QueryState` and `&mut SystemState`, which makes this possible in exclusive systems:

```rust
fn some_exclusive_system(
    world: &mut World,
    transforms: &mut QueryState<&Transform>,
    state: &mut SystemState<(Res<Time>, Query<&Player>)>,
) {
    for transform in transforms.iter(world) {
        println!("{transform:?}");
    }
    let (time, players) = state.get(world);
    for player in players.iter() {
        println!("{player:?}");
    }
}
```

Note that "exclusive function systems" assume `&mut World` is present (and the first param). I think this is a fair assumption, given that the presence of `&mut World` is what defines the need for an exclusive system.

I added some targeted SystemParam `static` constraints, which removed the need for this:
``` rust
fn some_exclusive_system(state: &mut SystemState<(Res<'static, Time>, Query<&'static Player>)>) {}
```

## Related

- #2923
- #3001
- #3946

## Changelog

- `ExclusiveSystem` trait (and implementations) has been removed in favor of sharing the `System` trait.
- `ExclusiveFunctionSystem` and `ExclusiveSystemParam` were added, enabling flexible exclusive function systems
- `&mut SystemState` and `&mut QueryState` now implement `ExclusiveSystemParam`
- Exclusive and parallel System configuration is now done via a unified `SystemDescriptor`, `IntoSystemDescriptor`, and `SystemContainer` api.

## Migration Guide

Calling `.exclusive_system()` is no longer required (or supported) for converting exclusive system functions to exclusive systems:

```rust
// Old (0.8)
app.add_system(some_exclusive_system.exclusive_system());
// New (0.9)
app.add_system(some_exclusive_system);
```

Converting "normal" parallel systems to exclusive systems is done by calling the exclusive ordering apis:

```rust
// Old (0.8)
app.add_system(some_system.exclusive_system().at_end());
// New (0.9)
app.add_system(some_system.at_end());
```

Query state in exclusive systems can now be cached via ExclusiveSystemParams, which should be preferred for clarity and performance reasons:
```rust
// Old (0.8)
fn some_system(world: &mut World) {
  let mut transforms = world.query::<&Transform>();
  for transform in transforms.iter(world) {
  }
}
// New (0.9)
fn some_system(world: &mut World, transforms: &mut QueryState<&Transform>) {
  for transform in transforms.iter(world) {
  }
}
```
2022-09-26 23:57:07 +00:00
Carter Anderson
01aedc8431 Spawn now takes a Bundle (#6054)
# Objective

Now that we can consolidate Bundles and Components under a single insert (thanks to #2975 and #6039), almost 100% of world spawns now look like `world.spawn().insert((Some, Tuple, Here))`. Spawning an entity without any components is an extremely uncommon pattern, so it makes sense to give spawn the "first class" ergonomic api. This consolidated api should be made consistent across all spawn apis (such as World and Commands).

## Solution

All `spawn` apis (`World::spawn`, `Commands:;spawn`, `ChildBuilder::spawn`, and `WorldChildBuilder::spawn`) now accept a bundle as input:

```rust
// before:
commands
  .spawn()
  .insert((A, B, C));
world
  .spawn()
  .insert((A, B, C);

// after
commands.spawn((A, B, C));
world.spawn((A, B, C));
```

All existing instances of `spawn_bundle` have been deprecated in favor of the new `spawn` api. A new `spawn_empty` has been added, replacing the old `spawn` api.  

By allowing `world.spawn(some_bundle)` to replace `world.spawn().insert(some_bundle)`, this opened the door to removing the initial entity allocation in the "empty" archetype / table done in `spawn()` (and subsequent move to the actual archetype in `.insert(some_bundle)`).

This improves spawn performance by over 10%:
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2694663/191627587-4ab2f949-4ccd-4231-80eb-80dd4d9ad6b9.png)

To take this measurement, I added a new `world_spawn` benchmark.

Unfortunately, optimizing `Commands::spawn` is slightly less trivial, as Commands expose the Entity id of spawned entities prior to actually spawning. Doing the optimization would (naively) require assurances that the `spawn(some_bundle)` command is applied before all other commands involving the entity (which would not necessarily be true, if memory serves). Optimizing `Commands::spawn` this way does feel possible, but it will require careful thought (and maybe some additional checks), which deserves its own PR. For now, it has the same performance characteristics of the current `Commands::spawn_bundle` on main.

**Note that 99% of this PR is simple renames and refactors. The only code that needs careful scrutiny is the new `World::spawn()` impl, which is relatively straightforward, but it has some new unsafe code (which re-uses battle tested BundlerSpawner code path).** 

---

## Changelog

- All `spawn` apis (`World::spawn`, `Commands:;spawn`, `ChildBuilder::spawn`, and `WorldChildBuilder::spawn`) now accept a bundle as input
- All instances of `spawn_bundle` have been deprecated in favor of the new `spawn` api
- World and Commands now have `spawn_empty()`, which is equivalent to the old `spawn()` behavior.  

## Migration Guide

```rust
// Old (0.8):
commands
  .spawn()
  .insert_bundle((A, B, C));
// New (0.9)
commands.spawn((A, B, C));

// Old (0.8):
commands.spawn_bundle((A, B, C));
// New (0.9)
commands.spawn((A, B, C));

// Old (0.8):
let entity = commands.spawn().id();
// New (0.9)
let entity = commands.spawn_empty().id();

// Old (0.8)
let entity = world.spawn().id();
// New (0.9)
let entity = world.spawn_empty();
```
2022-09-23 19:55:54 +00:00
JoJoJet
fb74ca3d46 Add ambiguity detection tests (#6053)
# Objective

- Add unit tests for ambiguity detection reporting.
- Incremental implementation of #4299.

## Solution

- Refactor ambiguity detection internals to make it testable. As a bonus, this should make it easier to extend in the future.

## Notes

* This code was copy-pasted from #4299 and modified. Credit goes to @alice-i-cecile and @afonsolage, though I'm not sure who wrote what at this point.
2022-09-22 20:01:54 +00:00
Carter Anderson
cd15f0f5be Accept Bundles for insert and remove. Deprecate insert/remove_bundle (#6039)
# Objective

Take advantage of the "impl Bundle for Component" changes in #2975 / add the follow up changes discussed there.

## Solution

- Change `insert` and `remove` to accept a Bundle instead of a Component (for both Commands and World)
- Deprecate `insert_bundle`, `remove_bundle`, and `remove_bundle_intersection`
- Add `remove_intersection`

---

## Changelog

- Change `insert` and `remove` now accept a Bundle instead of a Component (for both Commands and World)
- `insert_bundle` and `remove_bundle` are deprecated
 

## Migration Guide

Replace `insert_bundle` with `insert`:
```rust
// Old (0.8)
commands.spawn().insert_bundle(SomeBundle::default());
// New (0.9)
commands.spawn().insert(SomeBundle::default());
```

Replace `remove_bundle` with `remove`:
```rust
// Old (0.8)
commands.entity(some_entity).remove_bundle::<SomeBundle>();
// New (0.9)
commands.entity(some_entity).remove::<SomeBundle>();
```

Replace `remove_bundle_intersection` with `remove_intersection`:
```rust
// Old (0.8)
world.entity_mut(some_entity).remove_bundle_intersection::<SomeBundle>();
// New (0.9)
world.entity_mut(some_entity).remove_intersection::<SomeBundle>();
```

Consider consolidating as many operations as possible to improve ergonomics and cut down on archetype moves:
```rust
// Old (0.8)
commands.spawn()
  .insert_bundle(SomeBundle::default())
  .insert(SomeComponent);

// New (0.9) - Option 1
commands.spawn().insert((
  SomeBundle::default(),
  SomeComponent,
))

// New (0.9) - Option 2
commands.spawn_bundle((
  SomeBundle::default(),
  SomeComponent,
))
```

## Next Steps

Consider changing `spawn` to accept a bundle and deprecate `spawn_bundle`.
2022-09-21 21:47:53 +00:00
James Liu
5d821fe1a7 Start running systems while prepare_systems is running (#4919)
# Objective
While using the ParallelExecutor, systems do not actually start until `prepare_systems` completes. In stages where there are large numbers of "empty" systems with very little work to do, this delay adds significant overhead, which can add up over many stages.

## Solution
Immediately and synchronously signal the start of systems that can run without dependencies inside `prepare_systems` instead of waiting for the first executor iteration after `prepare_systems` completes. Any system that is dependent on them still cannot run until after `prepare_systems` completes, but there are a large number of unconstrained systems in the base engine where this is a general benefit in almost every case.

## Performance

This change was tested against `many_foxes` in the default configuration. As this change is sensitive to the overhead around scheduling systems, the spans for measuring system timing, system overhead, and system commands were all commented out for these measurements.

The median stage timings between `main` and this PR are as follows:

|stage|main|this PR|
|:--|:--|:--|
|First|75.54 us|61.61 us|
|LoadAssets|51.05 us|42.32 us|
|PreUpdate|54.6 us|55.56 us|
|Update|61.89 us|51.5 us|
|PostUpdate|7.27 ms|6.71 ms|
|AssetEvents|47.82 us|35.95 us|
|Last|39.19 us|37.71 us|
|reserve_and_flush|57.83 us|48.2 us|
|Extract|1.41 ms|1.28 ms|
|Prepare|554.49 us|502.53 us|
|Queue|216.29 us|207.51 us|
|Sort|67.03 us|60.99 us|
|Render|1.73 ms|1.58 ms|
|Cleanup|33.55 us|30.76 us|
|Clear Entities|18.56 us|17.05 us|
|**full frame**|**11.9 ms**|**10.91 ms**|

For the first few stages, the benefit is small but cumulative over each. For PostUpdate in particular, this allows `parent_update` to run while prepare_systems is running, which is required for the animation and transform propagation systems, which dominate the time spent in the stage, but also frontloads the contention as the other "empty" systems are also running while `parent_update` is running. For Render, where there is just a single large exclusive system, the benefit comes from not waiting on a spuriously scheduled task on the task pool to kick off the system: it's immediately scheduled to run.
2022-09-13 19:28:13 +00:00
Alice Cecile
ca3fa9dd6f Move ambiguity detection into its own file (#5918)
# Objective

This code is very disjoint, and the `stage.rs` file that it's in is already very long.

All I've done is move the code and clean up the compiler errors that result.

Followup to #5916, split out from #4299.
2022-09-09 18:44:47 +00:00
Alice Cecile
c96b7ffb50 Remove ambiguity sets (#5916)
# Objective

Ambiguity sets are used to ignore system order ambiguities between groups of systems. However, they are not very useful: they are clunky, poorly integrated, and generally hampered by the difficulty using (or discovering) the ambiguity detector.

As a first step to the work in #4299, we're removing them.

## Migration Guide

Ambiguity sets have been removed.
2022-09-09 17:21:50 +00:00
JoJoJet
697d297b55 Remove last uses of string-labels (#5420)
# Objective

* Related: #4341
* Remove all remaining uses of stringly-typed labels in the repo. Right now, it's just a bunch of tests and examples.
2022-09-03 18:06:41 +00:00
JoJoJet
3221e569e0 Remove an outdated workaround for impl Trait (#5659)
# Objective

Rust 1.63 resolved [an issue](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/83701) that prevents you from combining explicit generic arguments with `impl Trait` arguments.

Now, we no longer need to use dynamic dispatch to work around this.

## Migration Guide

The methods `Schedule::get_stage` and `get_stage_mut` now accept `impl StageLabel` instead of `&dyn StageLabel`.

### Before
```rust
let stage = schedule.get_stage_mut::<SystemStage>(&MyLabel)?;
```

### After
```rust
let stage = schedule.get_stage_mut::<SystemStage>(MyLabel)?;
```
2022-08-16 23:40:24 +00:00
ira
992681b59b Make Resource trait opt-in, requiring #[derive(Resource)] V2 (#5577)
*This PR description is an edited copy of #5007, written by @alice-i-cecile.*
# Objective
Follow-up to https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/2254. The `Resource` trait currently has a blanket implementation for all types that meet its bounds.

While ergonomic, this results in several drawbacks:

* it is possible to make confusing, silent mistakes such as inserting a function pointer (Foo) rather than a value (Foo::Bar) as a resource
* it is challenging to discover if a type is intended to be used as a resource
* we cannot later add customization options (see the [RFC](https://github.com/bevyengine/rfcs/blob/main/rfcs/27-derive-component.md) for the equivalent choice for Component).
* dependencies can use the same Rust type as a resource in invisibly conflicting ways
* raw Rust types used as resources cannot preserve privacy appropriately, as anyone able to access that type can read and write to internal values
* we cannot capture a definitive list of possible resources to display to users in an editor
## Notes to reviewers
 * Review this commit-by-commit; there's effectively no back-tracking and there's a lot of churn in some of these commits.
   *ira: My commits are not as well organized :')*
 * I've relaxed the bound on Local to Send + Sync + 'static: I don't think these concerns apply there, so this can keep things simple. Storing e.g. a u32 in a Local is fine, because there's a variable name attached explaining what it does.
 * I think this is a bad place for the Resource trait to live, but I've left it in place to make reviewing easier. IMO that's best tackled with https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/4981.

## Changelog
`Resource` is no longer automatically implemented for all matching types. Instead, use the new `#[derive(Resource)]` macro.

## Migration Guide
Add `#[derive(Resource)]` to all types you are using as a resource.

If you are using a third party type as a resource, wrap it in a tuple struct to bypass orphan rules. Consider deriving `Deref` and `DerefMut` to improve ergonomics.

`ClearColor` no longer implements `Component`. Using `ClearColor` as a component in 0.8 did nothing.
Use the `ClearColorConfig` in the `Camera3d` and `Camera2d` components instead.


Co-authored-by: Alice <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: devil-ira <justthecooldude@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
2022-08-08 21:36:35 +00:00
JoJoJet
56e9a3de88 improve documentation for macro-generated label types (#5367)
# Objective

I noticed while working on #5366 that the documentation for label types wasn't working correctly. Having experimented with this for a few weeks, I believe that generating docs in macros is more effort than it's worth.

## Solution

Add more boilerplate, copy-paste and edit the docs across types. This also lets us add custom doctests for specific types. Also, we don't need `concat_idents` as a dependency anymore.
2022-07-20 19:39:42 +00:00
JoJoJet
c43295af80 Simplify design for *Labels (#4957)
# Objective

- Closes #4954 
- Reduce the complexity of the `{System, App, *}Label` APIs.

## Solution

For the sake of brevity I will only refer to `SystemLabel`, but everything applies to all of the other label types as well.

- Add `SystemLabelId`, a lightweight, `copy` struct.
- Convert custom types into `SystemLabelId` using the trait `SystemLabel`.

## Changelog

- String literals implement `SystemLabel` for now, but this should be changed with #4409 .

## Migration Guide

- Any previous use of `Box<dyn SystemLabel>` should be replaced with `SystemLabelId`.
- `AsSystemLabel` trait has been modified.
    - No more output generics.
    - Method `as_system_label` now returns `SystemLabelId`, removing an unnecessary level of indirection.
- If you *need* a label that is determined at runtime, you can use `Box::leak`. Not recommended.

## Questions for later

* Should we generate a `Debug` impl along with `#[derive(*Label)]`?
* Should we rename `as_str()`?
* Should we remove the extra derives (such as `Hash`) from builtin `*Label` types?
* Should we automatically derive types like `Clone, Copy, PartialEq, Eq`?
* More-ergonomic comparisons between `Label` and `LabelId`.
* Move `Dyn{Eq, Hash,Clone}` somewhere else.
* Some API to make interning dynamic labels easier.
* Optimize string representation
    * Empty string for unit structs -- no debug info but faster comparisons
    * Don't show enum types -- same tradeoffs as asbove.
2022-07-14 18:23:01 +00:00
ira
234e5af882 Implement From<bool> for ShouldRun. (#5306)
Make writing simple yes/no run criteria easier.


Co-authored-by: devil-ira <justthecooldude@gmail.com>
2022-07-14 17:26:40 +00:00
ira
4847f7e3ad Update codebase to use IntoIterator where possible. (#5269)
Remove unnecessary calls to `iter()`/`iter_mut()`.
Mainly updates the use of queries in our code, docs, and examples.

```rust
// From
for _ in list.iter() {
for _ in list.iter_mut() {

// To
for _ in &list {
for _ in &mut list {
```

We already enable the pedantic lint [clippy::explicit_iter_loop](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/stable/) inside of Bevy. However, this only warns for a few known types from the standard library.

## Note for reviewers
As you can see the additions and deletions are exactly equal.
Maybe give it a quick skim to check I didn't sneak in a crypto miner, but you don't have to torture yourself by reading every line.
I already experienced enough pain making this PR :) 


Co-authored-by: devil-ira <justthecooldude@gmail.com>
2022-07-11 15:28:50 +00:00
Daniel McNab
7b2cf98896 Make RenderStage::Extract run on the render world (#4402)
# Objective

- Currently, the `Extract` `RenderStage` is executed on the main world, with the render world available as a resource.
- However, when needing access to resources in the render world (e.g. to mutate them), the only way to do so was to get exclusive access to the whole `RenderWorld` resource.
- This meant that effectively only one extract which wrote to resources could run at a time.
- We didn't previously make `Extract`ing writing to the world a non-happy path, even though we want to discourage that.

## Solution

- Move the extract stage to run on the render world.
- Add the main world as a `MainWorld` resource.
- Add an `Extract` `SystemParam` as a convenience to access a (read only) `SystemParam` in the main world during `Extract`.

## Future work

It should be possible to avoid needing to use `get_or_spawn` for the render commands, since now the `Commands`' `Entities` matches up with the world being executed on.
We need to determine how this interacts with https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/3519
It's theoretically possible to remove the need for the `value` method on `Extract`. However, that requires slightly changing the `SystemParam` interface, which would make it more complicated. That would probably mess up the `SystemState` api too.

## Todo
I still need to add doc comments to `Extract`.

---

## Changelog

### Changed
- The `Extract` `RenderStage` now runs on the render world (instead of the main world as before).
   You must use the `Extract` `SystemParam` to access the main world during the extract phase.
   Resources on the render world can now be accessed using `ResMut` during extract.

### Removed
- `Commands::spawn_and_forget`. Use `Commands::get_or_spawn(e).insert_bundle(bundle)` instead

## Migration Guide

The `Extract` `RenderStage` now runs on the render world (instead of the main world as before).
You must use the `Extract` `SystemParam` to access the main world during the extract phase. `Extract` takes a single type parameter, which is any system parameter (such as `Res`, `Query` etc.). It will extract this from the main world, and returns the result of this extraction when `value` is called on it.

For example, if previously your extract system looked like:
```rust
fn extract_clouds(mut commands: Commands, clouds: Query<Entity, With<Cloud>>) {
    for cloud in clouds.iter() {
        commands.get_or_spawn(cloud).insert(Cloud);
    }
}
```
the new version would be:
```rust
fn extract_clouds(mut commands: Commands, mut clouds: Extract<Query<Entity, With<Cloud>>>) {
    for cloud in clouds.value().iter() {
        commands.get_or_spawn(cloud).insert(Cloud);
    }
}
```
The diff is:
```diff
--- a/src/clouds.rs
+++ b/src/clouds.rs
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
-fn extract_clouds(mut commands: Commands, clouds: Query<Entity, With<Cloud>>) {
-    for cloud in clouds.iter() {
+fn extract_clouds(mut commands: Commands, mut clouds: Extract<Query<Entity, With<Cloud>>>) {
+    for cloud in clouds.value().iter() {
         commands.get_or_spawn(cloud).insert(Cloud);
     }
 }
```
You can now also access resources from the render world using the normal system parameters during `Extract`:
```rust
fn extract_assets(mut render_assets: ResMut<MyAssets>, source_assets: Extract<Res<MyAssets>>) {
     *render_assets = source_assets.clone();
}
```
Please note that all existing extract systems need to be updated to match this new style; even if they currently compile they will not run as expected. A warning will be emitted on a best-effort basis if this is not met.

Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
2022-07-08 23:56:33 +00:00
Alice Cecile
2c9bc0b31f Remove dead SystemLabelMarker struct (#5190)
This struct had no internal use, docs, or intuitable external use.

It has been removed.
2022-07-04 15:12:35 +00:00
Jakob Hellermann
d38a8dfdd7 add more SAFETY comments and lint for missing ones in bevy_ecs (#4835)
# Objective

`SAFETY` comments are meant to be placed before `unsafe` blocks and should contain the reasoning of why in this case the usage of unsafe is okay. This is useful when reading the code because it makes it clear which assumptions are required for safety, and makes it easier to spot possible unsoundness holes. It also forces the code writer to think of something to write and maybe look at the safety contracts of any called unsafe methods again to double-check their correct usage.

There's a clippy lint called `undocumented_unsafe_blocks` which warns when using a block without such a comment. 

## Solution

- since clippy expects `SAFETY` instead of `SAFE`, rename those
- add `SAFETY` comments in more places
- for the last remaining 3 places, add an `#[allow()]` and `// TODO` since I wasn't comfortable enough with the code to justify their safety
- add ` #![warn(clippy::undocumented_unsafe_blocks)]` to `bevy_ecs`


### Note for reviewers

The first commit only renames `SAFETY` to `SAFE` so it doesn't need a thorough review.
cb042a416e..55cef2d6fa is the diff for all other changes.

### Safety comments where I'm not too familiar with the code

774012ece5/crates/bevy_ecs/src/entity/mod.rs (L540-L546)

774012ece5/crates/bevy_ecs/src/world/entity_ref.rs (L249-L252)

### Locations left undocumented with a `TODO` comment

5dde944a30/crates/bevy_ecs/src/schedule/executor_parallel.rs (L196-L199)

5dde944a30/crates/bevy_ecs/src/world/entity_ref.rs (L287-L289)

5dde944a30/crates/bevy_ecs/src/world/entity_ref.rs (L413-L415)

Co-authored-by: Jakob Hellermann <hellermann@sipgate.de>
2022-07-04 14:44:24 +00:00
Jakob Hellermann
5b5660ea08 remove unnecessary unsafe impl of Send+Sync for ParallelSystemContainer (#5137)
`ParallelSystemContainer` has no `!Send` or `!Sync` fields, so it doesn't need unsafe impls of these traits.
2022-06-29 15:44:33 +00:00
Chris Dawkins
b7d784de6e Bugfix State::set transition condition infinite loop (#4890)
# Objective

- Fixes #4271

## Solution

- Check for a pending transition in addition to a scheduled operation.
- I don't see a valid reason for updating the state unless both `scheduled` and `transition` are empty.
2022-06-12 19:34:26 +00:00
James Liu
012ae07dc8 Add global init and get accessors for all newtyped TaskPools (#2250)
Right now, a direct reference to the target TaskPool is required to launch tasks on the pools, despite the three newtyped pools (AsyncComputeTaskPool, ComputeTaskPool, and IoTaskPool) effectively acting as global instances. The need to pass a TaskPool reference adds notable friction to spawning subtasks within existing tasks. Possible use cases for this may include chaining tasks within the same pool like spawning separate send/receive I/O tasks after waiting on a network connection to be established, or allowing cross-pool dependent tasks like starting dependent multi-frame computations following a long I/O load. 

Other task execution runtimes provide static access to spawning tasks (i.e. `tokio::spawn`), which is notably easier to use than the reference passing required by `bevy_tasks` right now.

This PR makes does the following:

 * Adds `*TaskPool::init` which initializes a `OnceCell`'ed with a provided TaskPool. Failing if the pool has already been initialized.
 * Adds `*TaskPool::get` which fetches the initialized global pool of the respective type or panics. This generally should not be an issue in normal Bevy use, as the pools are initialized before they are accessed.
 * Updated default task pool initialization to either pull the global handles and save them as resources, or if they are already initialized, pull the a cloned global handle as the resource.

This should make it notably easier to build more complex task hierarchies for dependent tasks. It should also make writing bevy-adjacent, but not strictly bevy-only plugin crates easier, as the global pools ensure it's all running on the same threads.

One alternative considered is keeping a thread-local reference to the pool for all threads in each pool to enable the same `tokio::spawn` interface. This would spawn tasks on the same pool that a task is currently running in. However this potentially leads to potential footgun situations where long running blocking tasks run on `ComputeTaskPool`.
2022-06-09 02:43:24 +00:00
Alex Saveau
caef967d14 Derive default on ReportExecutionOrderAmbiguities (#4873) 2022-05-31 15:54:38 +00:00
Félix Lescaudey de Maneville
f000c2b951 Clippy improvements (#4665)
# Objective

Follow up to my previous MR #3718 to add new clippy warnings to bevy:

- [x] [~~option_if_let_else~~](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/#option_if_let_else) (reverted)
- [x] [redundant_else](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/#redundant_else)
- [x] [match_same_arms](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/#match_same_arms)
- [x] [semicolon_if_nothing_returned](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/#semicolon_if_nothing_returned)
- [x] [explicit_iter_loop](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/#explicit_iter_loop)
- [x] [map_flatten](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/#map_flatten)

There is one commit per clippy warning, and the matching flags are added to the CI execution.

To test the CI execution you may run `cargo run -p ci -- clippy` at the root.

I choose the add the flags in the `ci` tool crate to avoid having them in every `lib.rs` but I guess it could become an issue with suprise warnings coming up after a commit/push


Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
2022-05-31 01:38:07 +00:00
Mike
9a54e2bed6 Add a tracing span for run criteria. (#4709)
# Objective

Adds a tracing span for run critieria.

This change will be invalidated by stageless, but it was a simple change.

Fixes #4681.

## Changelog

Shows how long a run criteria takes to run when tracing is enabled.
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2180432/167517447-93dba7db-8c85-4686-90e0-30e9636f120f.png)
2022-05-10 20:18:58 +00:00
Joy
fca1c861d2 Make change lifespan deterministic and update docs (#3956)
## Objective

- ~~Make absurdly long-lived changes stay detectable for even longer (without leveling up to `u64`).~~
- Give all changes a consistent maximum lifespan.
- Improve code clarity.

## Solution

- ~~Increase the frequency of `check_tick` scans to increase the oldest reliably-detectable change.~~
(Deferred until we can benchmark the cost of a scan.)
- Ignore changes older than the maximum reliably-detectable age.
- General refactoring—name the constants, use them everywhere, and update the docs.
- Update test cases to check for the specified behavior.

## Related

This PR addresses (at least partially) the concerns raised in:

- #3071
- #3082 (and associated PR #3084)

## Background

- #1471

Given the minimum interval between `check_ticks` scans, `N`, the oldest reliably-detectable change is `u32::MAX - (2 * N - 1)` (or `MAX_CHANGE_AGE`). Reducing `N` from ~530 million (current value) to something like ~2 million would extend the lifetime of changes by a billion.

| minimum `check_ticks` interval | oldest reliably-detectable change  | usable % of `u32::MAX` |
| --- | --- | --- |
| `u32::MAX / 8`  (536,870,911) | `(u32::MAX / 4) * 3` | 75.0% |
| `2_000_000` | `u32::MAX - 3_999_999` | 99.9% |

Similarly, changes are still allowed to be between `MAX_CHANGE_AGE`-old and `u32::MAX`-old in the interim between `check_tick` scans. While we prevent their age from overflowing, the test to detect changes still compares raw values. This makes failure ultimately unreliable, since when ancient changes stop being detected varies depending on when the next scan occurs.

## Open Question

Currently, systems and system states are incorrectly initialized with their `last_change_tick` set to `0`, which doesn't handle wraparound correctly.

For consistent behavior, they should either be initialized to the world's `last_change_tick` (and detect no changes) or to `MAX_CHANGE_AGE` behind the world's current `change_tick` (and detect everything as a change). I've currently gone with the latter since that was closer to the existing behavior.

## Follow-up Work

(Edited: entire section)

We haven't actually profiled how long a `check_ticks` scan takes on a "large" `World` , so we don't know if it's safe to increase their frequency. However, we are currently relying on play sessions not lasting long enough to trigger a scan and apps not having enough entities/archetypes for it to be "expensive" (our assumption). That isn't a real solution. (Either scanning never costs enough to impact frame times or we provide an option to use `u64` change ticks. Nobody will accept random hiccups.)

To further extend the lifetime of changes, we actually only need to increment the world tick if a system has `Fetch: !ReadOnlySystemParamFetch`. The behavior will be identical because all writes are sequenced, but I'm not sure how to implement that in a way that the compiler can optimize the branch out.

Also, since having no false positives depends on a `check_ticks` scan running at least every `2 * N - 1` ticks, a `last_check_tick` should also be stored in the `World` so that any lull in system execution (like a command flush) could trigger a scan if needed. To be completely robust, all the systems initialized on the world should be scanned, not just those in the current stage.
2022-05-09 14:00:16 +00:00
Daniel McNab
9d440fbcb5 Make RunOnce a non-manual System impl (#3922)
# Objective

- `RunOnce` was a manual `System` implementation.
- Adding run criteria to stages was yet to be systemyoten

## Solution

- Make it a normal function
- yeet

##  Changelog

- Replaced `RunOnce` with `ShouldRun::once`

## Migration guide

The run criterion `RunOnce`, which would make the controlled systems run only once, has been replaced with a new run criterion function `ShouldRun::once`. Replace all instances of `RunOnce` with `ShouldRun::once`.
2022-05-04 18:41:37 +00:00
bjorn3
ddce22b614 Decouple some dependencies (#3886)
# Objective

Reduce from scratch build time.

## Solution

Reduce the size of the critical path by removing dependencies between crates where not necessary. For `cargo check --no-default-features` this reduced build time from ~51s to ~45s. For some commits I am not completely sure if the tradeoff between build time reduction and convenience caused by the commit is acceptable. If not, I can drop them.
2022-04-27 19:08:11 +00:00
SpecificProtagonist
46acb7753c SystemSet::before and after: take AsSystemLabel (#4503)
# Objective

`AsSystemLabel` has been introduced on system descriptors to make ordering systems more convenient, but `SystemSet::before` and `SystemSet::after` still take `SystemLabels` directly:

    use bevy::ecs::system::AsSystemLabel;
    /*…*/ SystemSet::new().before(foo.as_system_label()) /*…*/

is currently necessary instead of

    /*…*/ SystemSet::new().before(foo) /*…*/

## Solution

Use `AsSystemLabel` for `SystemSet`
2022-04-23 06:03:50 +00:00
Torne Wuff
b1afe2dcca Make System responsible for updating its own archetypes (#4115)
# Objective

- Make it possible to use `System`s outside of the scheduler/executor without having to define logic to track new archetypes and call `System::add_archetype()` for each.

## Solution

- Replace `System::add_archetype(&Archetype)` with `System::update_archetypes(&World)`, making systems responsible for tracking their own most recent archetype generation the way that `SystemState` already does.

This has minimal (or simplifying) effect on most of the code with the exception of `FunctionSystem`, which must now track the latest `ArchetypeGeneration` it saw instead of relying on the executor to do it.

Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
2022-04-07 20:50:43 +00:00
Daniel McNab
21a875d67b Some small changes related to run criteria piping (#3923)
Remove the 'chaining' api, as it's peculiar

~~Implement the label traits for `Box<dyn ThatTrait>` (n.b. I'm not confident about this change, but it was the quickest path to not regressing)~~

Remove the need for '`.system`' when using run criteria piping
2022-04-07 19:08:08 +00:00
Carter Anderson
b1c3e9862d Auto-label function systems with SystemTypeIdLabel (#4224)
This adds the concept of "default labels" for systems (currently scoped to "parallel systems", but this could just as easily be implemented for "exclusive systems"). Function systems now include their function's `SystemTypeIdLabel` by default.

This enables the following patterns:

```rust
// ordering two systems without manually defining labels
app
  .add_system(update_velocity)
  .add_system(movement.after(update_velocity))

// ordering sets of systems without manually defining labels
app
  .add_system(foo)
  .add_system_set(
    SystemSet::new()
      .after(foo)
      .with_system(bar)
      .with_system(baz)
  )
```

Fixes: #4219
Related to: #4220 

Credit to @aevyrie @alice-i-cecile @DJMcNab (and probably others) for proposing (and supporting) this idea about a year ago. I was a big dummy that both shut down this (very good) idea and then forgot I did that. Sorry. You all were right!
2022-03-23 22:53:56 +00:00
Carter Anderson
de677dbfc9 Use more ergonomic span syntax (#4246)
Tracing added support for "inline span entering", which cuts down on a lot of complexity:

```rust
let span = info_span!("my_span").entered();
```

This adapts our code to use this pattern where possible, and updates our docs to recommend it.

This produces equivalent tracing behavior. Here is a side by side profile of "before" and "after" these changes.
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2694663/158912137-b0aa6dc8-c603-425f-880f-6ccf5ad1b7ef.png)
2022-03-18 04:19:21 +00:00
Harry Barber
cf46baa172 Add clear_schedule (#3941)
# Objective

Adds `clear_schedule` method to `State`.

Closes #3932
2022-03-05 21:53:17 +00:00
Alice Cecile
557ab9897a Make get_resource (and friends) infallible (#4047)
# Objective

- In the large majority of cases, users were calling `.unwrap()` immediately after `.get_resource`.
- Attempting to add more helpful error messages here resulted in endless manual boilerplate (see #3899 and the linked PRs).

## Solution

- Add an infallible variant named `.resource` and so on.
- Use these infallible variants over `.get_resource().unwrap()` across the code base.

## Notes

I did not provide equivalent methods on `WorldCell`, in favor of removing it entirely in #3939.

## Migration Guide

Infallible variants of `.get_resource` have been added that implicitly panic, rather than needing to be unwrapped.

Replace `world.get_resource::<Foo>().unwrap()` with `world.resource::<Foo>()`.

## Impact

- `.unwrap` search results before: 1084
- `.unwrap` search results after: 942
- internal `unwrap_or_else` calls added: 4
- trivial unwrap calls removed from tests and code: 146
- uses of the new `try_get_resource` API: 11
- percentage of the time the unwrapping API was used internally: 93%
2022-02-27 22:37:18 +00:00
Daniel McNab
c1a4a2f6c5 Remove the config api (#3633)
# Objective

- Fix the ugliness of the `config` api. 
- Supercedes #2440, #2463, #2491

## Solution

- Since #2398, capturing closure systems have worked.
- Use those instead where we needed config before
- Remove the rest of the config api. 
- Related: #2777
2022-02-25 03:10:59 +00:00
danieleades
d8974e7c3d small and mostly pointless refactoring (#2934)
What is says on the tin.

This has got more to do with making `clippy` slightly more *quiet* than it does with changing anything that might greatly impact readability or performance.

that said, deriving `Default` for a couple of structs is a nice easy win
2022-02-13 22:33:55 +00:00
Alice Cecile
bdbf626341 Implement init_resource for Commands and World (#3079)
# Objective

- Fixes #3078
- Fixes #1397

## Solution

- Implement Commands::init_resource.
- Also implement for World, for consistency and to simplify internal structure.
- While we're here, clean up some of the docs for Command and World resource modification.
2022-02-08 23:04:19 +00:00
Daniel McNab
6615b7bf64 Deprecate .system (#3302)
# Objective

- Using `.system()` is no longer idiomatic.

## Solution

- Give a warning when using it
2022-02-08 04:00:58 +00:00
François
1468211e2b fix unreachable macro calls for rust 2021 (#3889)
# Objective

- It was decided in Rust 2021 to make macro like `panic` require a string literal to format instead of directly an object
- `unreachable` was missed during the first pass but it was decided to go for it anyway now: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/92137#issuecomment-1019519285
- this is making Bevy CI fail now: https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/runs/5102586734?check_suite_focus=true

## Solution

- Fix calls to `unreachable`
2022-02-08 02:59:54 +00:00
MrGVSV
f00aec2454 Added method to restart the current state (#3328)
# Objective

It would be useful to be able to restart a state (such as if an operation fails and needs to be retried from `on_enter`). Currently, it seems the way to restart a state is to transition to a dummy state and then transition back.

## Solution

The solution is to add a `restart` method on `State<T>` that allows for transitioning to the already-active state.

## Context

Based on [this](https://discord.com/channels/691052431525675048/742884593551802431/920335041756815441) question from the Discord.

Closes #2385


Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
2022-02-04 03:07:18 +00:00
bilsen
1f99363de9 Add &World as SystemParam (#2923)
# Objective
Make it possible to use `&World` as a system parameter

## Solution
It seems like all the pieces were already in place, very simple impl


Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
2022-02-03 23:43:25 +00:00
Niklas Eicker
fbab01a40d Add missing closing ticks for inline examples and some cleanup (#3573)
# Objective

- clean up documentation and inline examples

## Solution

- add missing closing "```"
- remove stray "```"
- remove whitespace in inline examples
- unify inline examples (remove some `rust` labels)
2022-01-07 09:25:12 +00:00
Michael Dorst
507441d96f Fix doc_markdown lints in bevy_ecs (#3473)
#3457 adds the `doc_markdown` clippy lint, which checks doc comments to make sure code identifiers are escaped with backticks. This causes a lot of lint errors, so this is one of a number of PR's that will fix those lint errors one crate at a time.

This PR fixes lints in the `bevy_ecs` crate.
2022-01-06 00:43:37 +00:00
Mike
851b5939ce add tracing spans for parallel executor and system overhead (#3416)
This PR adds tracing spans for the parallel executor and system overhead.

![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2180432/147172747-b78026e3-1c30-4120-92c8-693c6f1564cd.png)
2021-12-23 19:03:44 +00:00
Daniel McNab
0ee4195fb0 Remove some superfluous unsafe code (#3297)
# Objective

- This `unsafe` is weird

## Solution

- Don't use `unsafe` here

Hopefully this isn't already in an open PR.
2021-12-11 22:58:46 +00:00
Carter Anderson
7dd92e72d4 More Bevy ECS schedule spans (#3281)
Fills in some gaps we had in our Bevy ECS tracing spans:

* Exclusive systems
* System Commands (for `apply_buffers = true` cases)
* System archetype updates
* Parallel system execution prep
2021-12-08 23:43:03 +00:00
François
c6fec1f0c2 Fix clippy lints for 1.57 (#3238)
# Objective

- New clippy lints with rust 1.57 are failing

## Solution

- Fixed clippy lints following suggestions
- I ignored clippy in old renderer because there was many and it will be removed soon
2021-12-02 23:40:37 +00:00
Carter Anderson
8009af3879 Merge New Renderer 2021-11-22 23:57:42 -08:00
Carter Anderson
fde5d2fe46 Add System Command apply and RenderGraph node spans (#3069)
This fills in most of the gaps in tracing visualizations and should help with discovering bottlenecks.
2021-11-06 20:15:36 +00:00
Marc Parenteau
225d6a138f remove Box from ExclusiveSystemFn (#3063)
Minor refactor to remove the boxing of the function pointer stored in ExclusiveSystemFn.
2021-11-04 20:55:28 +00:00
Christopher Durham
0887f41b58 Fix bevy_ecs::schedule::executor_parallel::system span management (#2905)
# Objective

- Fixes #2904 (see for context)

## Solution

- Simply hoist span creation out of the threaded task
- Confirmed to solve the issue locally

Now all events have the full span parent tree up through `bevy_ecs::schedule::stage` all the way to `bevy_app::app::bevy_app` (and its parents in bevy-consumer code, if any).
2021-10-06 19:00:35 +00:00
Christopher Durham
a60fe30ada Avoid some format! into immediate format! (#2913)
# Objective

- Avoid usages of `format!` that ~immediately get passed to another `format!`. This avoids a temporary allocation and is just generally cleaner.

## Solution

- `bevy_derive::shader_defs` does a `format!("{}", val.to_string())`, which is better written as just `format!("{}", val)`
- `bevy_diagnostic::log_diagnostics_plugin` does a `format!("{:>}", format!(...))`, which is better written as `format!("{:>}", format_args!(...))`
- `bevy_ecs::schedule` does `tracing::info!(..., name = &*format!("{:?}", val))`, which is better written with the tracing shorthand `tracing::info!(..., name = ?val)`
- `bevy_reflect::reflect` does `f.write_str(&format!(...))`, which is better written as `write!(f, ...)` (this could also be written using `f.debug_tuple`, but I opted to maintain alt debug behavior)
- `bevy_reflect::serde::{ser, de}` do `serde::Error::custom(format!(...))`, which is better written as `Error::custom(format_args!(...))`, as `Error::custom` takes `impl Display` and just immediately calls `format!` again
2021-10-06 18:34:33 +00:00
Paweł Grabarz
07ed1d053e Implement and require #[derive(Component)] on all component structs (#2254)
This implements the most minimal variant of #1843 - a derive for marker trait. This is a prerequisite to more complicated features like statically defined storage type or opt-out component reflection.

In order to make component struct's purpose explicit and avoid misuse, it must be annotated with `#[derive(Component)]` (manual impl is discouraged for compatibility). Right now this is just a marker trait, but in the future it might be expanded. Making this change early allows us to make further changes later without breaking backward compatibility for derive macro users.

This already prevents a lot of issues, like using bundles in `insert` calls. Primitive types are no longer valid components as well. This can be easily worked around by adding newtype wrappers and deriving `Component` for them.

One funny example of prevented bad code (from our own tests) is when an newtype struct or enum variant is used. Previously, it was possible to write `insert(Newtype)` instead of `insert(Newtype(value))`. That code compiled, because function pointers (in this case newtype struct constructor) implement `Send + Sync + 'static`, so we allowed them to be used as components. This is no longer the case and such invalid code will trigger a compile error.


Co-authored-by: = <=>
Co-authored-by: TheRawMeatball <therawmeatball@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
2021-10-03 19:23:44 +00:00
Daniel McNab
5ba2b9adcf Unique WorldId (#2827)
# Objective

Fixes these issues:
- `WorldId`s currently aren't necessarily unique
    - I want to guarantee that they're unique to safeguard my librarified version of https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/discussions/2805
    - There probably hasn't been a collision yet, but they could technically collide
- `SystemId` isn't used for anything
  - It's no longer used now that `Locals` are stored within the `System`.
- `bevy_ecs` depends on rand

## Solution

- Instead of randomly generating `WorldId`s, just use an incrementing atomic counter, panicing on overflow.
- Remove `SystemId` 
    - We do need to allow Locals for exclusive systems at some point, but exclusive systems couldn't access their own `SystemId` anyway.
- Now that these don't depend on rand, move it to a dev-dependency

## Todo

Determine if `WorldId` should be `u32` based instead
2021-09-30 20:54:47 +00:00
Federico Rinaldi
615d43b998 Improve bevy_ecs and bevy_app API docs where referenced by the new Bevy Book (#2365)
## Objective

The upcoming Bevy Book makes many references to the API documentation of bevy.

Most references belong to the first two chapters of the Bevy Book:

- bevyengine/bevy-website#176
- bevyengine/bevy-website#182

This PR attempts to improve the documentation of `bevy_ecs` and `bevy_app` in order to help readers of the Book who want to delve deeper into technical details.

## Solution

- Add crate and level module documentation
- Document the most important items (basically those included in the preludes), with the following style, where applicable:
    - **Summary.** Short description of the item.
    - **Second paragraph.** Detailed description of the item, without going too much in the implementation.
    - **Code example(s).**
    - **Safety or panic notes.**

## Collaboration

Any kind of collaboration is welcome, especially corrections, wording, new ideas and guidelines on where the focus should be put in.

---

### Related issues

- Fixes #2246
2021-09-17 18:00:29 +00:00
Carter Anderson
11b41206eb Add upstream bevy_ecs and prepare for custom-shaders merge (#2815)
This updates the `pipelined-rendering` branch to use the latest `bevy_ecs` from `main`. This accomplishes a couple of goals:

1. prepares for upcoming `custom-shaders` branch changes, which were what drove many of the recent bevy_ecs changes on `main`
2. prepares for the soon-to-happen merge of `pipelined-rendering` into `main`. By including bevy_ecs changes now, we make that merge simpler / easier to review. 

I split this up into 3 commits:

1. **add upstream bevy_ecs**: please don't bother reviewing this content. it has already received thorough review on `main` and is a literal copy/paste of the relevant folders (the old folders were deleted so the directories are literally exactly the same as `main`).
2. **support manual buffer application in stages**: this is used to enable the Extract step. we've already reviewed this once on the `pipelined-rendering` branch, but its worth looking at one more time in the new context of (1).
3. **support manual archetype updates in QueryState**: same situation as (2).
2021-09-14 06:14:19 +00:00
Garett Cooper
47ccebf486 Implement IntoSystemDescriptor for SystemDescriptor (#2718)
# Objective

- Fixes  #2716

## Solution

- Implements the the IntoSystemDescriptor trait for SystemDescriptor, which simply returns itself
2021-08-24 17:46:53 +00:00
Zicklag
e290a7e29c Implement Sub-App Labels (#2695)
This is a rather simple but wide change, and it involves adding a new `bevy_app_macros` crate. Let me know if there is a better way to do any of this!

---

# Objective

- Allow adding and accessing sub-apps by using a label instead of an index

## Solution

- Migrate the bevy label implementation and derive code to the `bevy_utils` and `bevy_macro_utils` crates and then add a new `SubAppLabel` trait to the `bevy_app` crate that is used when adding or getting a sub-app from an app.
2021-08-24 00:31:21 +00:00
bjorn3
d84c7f9066 Reduce visibility of various types and fields (#2690)
See the individual commits.
2021-08-19 20:02:25 +00:00
Boxy
0b800e547b Fix some nightly clippy lints (#2522)
on nightly these two clippy lints fail:
- [needless_borrow](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/#needless_borrow)
- [unused_unit](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/#unused_unit)
2021-07-29 19:36:39 -07:00
Boxy
5ffff03b33 Fix some nightly clippy lints (#2522)
on nightly these two clippy lints fail:
- [needless_borrow](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/#needless_borrow)
- [unused_unit](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/#unused_unit)
2021-07-29 20:52:15 +00:00
François
b724a0f586 Down with the system! (#2496)
# Objective

- Remove all the `.system()` possible.
- Check for remaining missing cases.

## Solution

- Remove all `.system()`, fix compile errors
- 32 calls to `.system()` remains, mostly internals, the few others should be removed after #2446
2021-07-27 23:42:36 +00:00
bjorn3
6d6bc2a8b4 Merge AppBuilder into App (#2531)
This is extracted out of eb8f973646476b4a4926ba644a77e2b3a5772159 and includes some additional changes to remove all references to AppBuilder and fix examples that still used App::build() instead of App::new(). In addition I didn't extract the sub app feature as it isn't ready yet.

You can use `git diff --diff-filter=M eb8f973646476b4a4926ba644a77e2b3a5772159` to find all differences in this PR. The `--diff-filtered=M` filters all files added in the original commit but not in this commit away.

Co-Authored-By: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
2021-07-27 20:21:06 +00:00
Carter Anderson
4ac2ed7cc6 pipelined rendering proof of concept 2021-07-24 16:43:37 -07:00
François
5c4909dbb2 update archetypes for run criterias (#2177)
fixes #2000 

archetypes were not updated for run criteria on a stage or on a system set
2021-07-13 22:12:21 +00:00
Alexander Sepity
11485decca Optional .system(), part 4 (run criteria) (#2431)
# Objective

- Continue work of #2398 and friends.
- Make `.system()` optional in run criteria APIs.

## Solution

- Slight change to `RunCriteriaDescriptorCoercion` signature and implementors.
- Implement `IntoRunCriteria` for `IntoSystem` rather than `System`.
- Remove some usages of `.system()` with run criteria in tests of `stage.rs`, to verify the implementation.
2021-07-08 07:18:00 +00:00
Alexander Sepity
10f2dd3ec5 Optional .system(), part 2 (#2403)
# Objective

- Extend work done in #2398.
- Make `.system()` syntax optional when using system descriptor API.

## Solution

- Slight change to `ParallelSystemDescriptorCoercion` signature and implementors.

---

I haven't touched exclusive systems, because it looks like the only two other solutions are going back to doubling our system insertion methods, or starting to lean into stageless. The latter will invalidate the former, so I think exclusive systems should remian pariahs until stageless.

I can grep & nuke `.system()` thorughout the codebase now, which might take a while, or we can do that in subsequent PR(s).
2021-06-29 19:47:46 +00:00
Daniel McNab
c893b99224 Optional .system (#2398)
This can be your 6 months post-christmas present.

# Objective

- Make `.system` optional
- yeet
- It's ugly
- Alternative title: `.system` is dead; long live `.system`
- **yeet**

## Solution

- Use a higher ranked lifetime, and some trait magic.

N.B. This PR does not actually remove any `.system`s, except in a couple of examples. Once this is merged we can do that piecemeal across crates, and decide on syntax for labels.
2021-06-27 00:40:09 +00:00
Paweł Grabarz
93cc7219bc small ecs cleanup and remove_bundle drop bugfix (#2172)
- simplified code around archetype generations a little bit, as the special case value is not actually needed
- removed unnecessary UnsafeCell around pointer value that is never updated through shared references
- fixed and added a test for correct drop behaviour when removing sparse components through remove_bundle command
2021-05-18 19:25:57 +00:00
Federico Rinaldi
1f0988be87 Improve legibility of RunOnce::run_unsafe param (#2181)
During PR #2046 @cart suggested that the `(): ()` notation is less legible than `_input: ()`. The first notation still managed to slip in though. This PR applies the second writing.
2021-05-18 00:10:17 +00:00
Paweł Grabarz
3cf10e2ef2 prevent memory leak when dropping ParallelSystemContainer (#2176)
`ParallelSystemContainer`'s `system` pointer was extracted from box, but it was never deallocated. This change adds missing drop implementation that cleans up that memory.
2021-05-17 20:01:25 +00:00
bjorn3
1d652941ea Some cleanups (#2170)
The first commit monomorphizes `add_system_inner` which I think was intended to be monomorphized anyway. The second commit moves the type argument of `GraphNode` to an associated type.
2021-05-17 19:06:05 +00:00
bjorn3
3af3334cfe Various cleanups (#2046)
This includes a few safety improvements and a variety of other cleanups. See the individual commits.
2021-05-01 20:07:06 +00:00
bjorn3
2fcd8a3fb0 Monomorphize various things (#1914)
Based on #1910

This shrinks breakout from 310k to 293k. Most of the win is in outlining the drop glue of `App`. The other two commits save about 800 bytes total when using two empty systems and two simple resources.

After this PR the full disassembly for

```rust
fn main() {
    App::build().run();
}
```

is about as minimal as it gets, so pretty much all other costs scale linear in the amount of resources, systems, etc.

```asm
0000000000001100 <_ZN4core3ptr54drop_in_place$LT$bevy_app..app_builder..AppBuilder$GT$17h76850422c20653deE>:
    1100:       ff 25 52 21 00 00       jmpq   *0x2152(%rip)        # 3258 <_ZN60_$LT$bevy_app..app..App$u20$as$u20$core..ops..drop..Drop$GT$4drop17h67d177ae549d917bE@Base>
    1106:       cc                      int3   
    1107:       cc                      int3   
    1108:       cc                      int3   
    1109:       cc                      int3   
    110a:       cc                      int3   
    110b:       cc                      int3   
    110c:       cc                      int3   
    110d:       cc                      int3   
    110e:       cc                      int3   
    110f:       cc                      int3   

0000000000001110 <_ZN8breakout4main17h7cbe07b319de1042E>:
    1110:       53                      push   %rbx
    1111:       48 81 ec 00 03 00 00    sub    $0x300,%rsp
    1118:       48 8d 5c 24 08          lea    0x8(%rsp),%rbx
    111d:       48 89 df                mov    %rbx,%rdi
    1120:       ff 15 3a 21 00 00       callq  *0x213a(%rip)        # 3260 <_ZN8bevy_app3app3App5build17h8b0ea6be9050d6ccE@Base>
    1126:       48 89 df                mov    %rbx,%rdi
    1129:       ff 15 39 21 00 00       callq  *0x2139(%rip)        # 3268 <_ZN8bevy_app11app_builder10AppBuilder3run17hfc8cf50692acdbdeE@Base>
    112f:       48 8d 7c 24 08          lea    0x8(%rsp),%rdi
    1134:       ff 15 1e 21 00 00       callq  *0x211e(%rip)        # 3258 <_ZN60_$LT$bevy_app..app..App$u20$as$u20$core..ops..drop..Drop$GT$4drop17h67d177ae549d917bE@Base>
    113a:       48 81 c4 00 03 00 00    add    $0x300,%rsp
    1141:       5b                      pop    %rbx
    1142:       c3                      retq   
    1143:       48 89 c3                mov    %rax,%rbx
    1146:       48 8d 7c 24 08          lea    0x8(%rsp),%rdi
    114b:       e8 b0 ff ff ff          callq  1100 <_ZN4core3ptr54drop_in_place$LT$bevy_app..app_builder..AppBuilder$GT$17h76850422c20653deE>
    1150:       48 89 df                mov    %rbx,%rdi
    1153:       e8 18 01 00 00          callq  1270 <_Unwind_Resume@plt>
    1158:       0f 0b                   ud2    
    115a:       cc                      int3   
    115b:       cc                      int3   
    115c:       cc                      int3   
    115d:       cc                      int3   
    115e:       cc                      int3   
    115f:       cc                      int3   

0000000000001160 <main>:
    1160:       48 83 ec 08             sub    $0x8,%rsp
    1164:       48 89 f1                mov    %rsi,%rcx
    1167:       48 63 d7                movslq %edi,%rdx
    116a:       48 8d 05 9f ff ff ff    lea    -0x61(%rip),%rax        # 1110 <_ZN8breakout4main17h7cbe07b319de1042E>
    1171:       48 89 04 24             mov    %rax,(%rsp)
    1175:       48 8d 35 94 1e 00 00    lea    0x1e94(%rip),%rsi        # 3010 <__init_array_end>
    117c:       48 89 e7                mov    %rsp,%rdi
    117f:       ff 15 eb 20 00 00       callq  *0x20eb(%rip)        # 3270 <_ZN3std2rt19lang_start_internal17he77194431b0ee4a2E@Base>
    1185:       59                      pop    %rcx
    1186:       c3                      retq   
    1187:       cc                      int3   
    1188:       cc                      int3   
    1189:       cc                      int3   
    118a:       cc                      int3   
    118b:       cc                      int3   
    118c:       cc                      int3   
    118d:       cc                      int3   
    118e:       cc                      int3   
    118f:       cc                      int3   

0000000000001190 <_ZN3std2rt10lang_start28_$u7b$$u7b$closure$u7d$$u7d$17h83a5b8d55f23dff8E.llvm.909376793398482062>:
    1190:       48 83 ec 08             sub    $0x8,%rsp
    1194:       48 8b 3f                mov    (%rdi),%rdi
    1197:       e8 54 ff ff ff          callq  10f0 <_ZN3std10sys_common9backtrace28__rust_begin_short_backtrace17h6e238af75680eb28E>
    119c:       31 c0                   xor    %eax,%eax
    119e:       59                      pop    %rcx
    119f:       c3                      retq   

00000000000011a0 <_ZN4core3ops8function6FnOnce40call_once$u7b$$u7b$vtable.shim$u7d$$u7d$17hb05d591cd29dea4fE.llvm.909376793398482062>:
    11a0:       48 83 ec 08             sub    $0x8,%rsp
    11a4:       48 8b 3f                mov    (%rdi),%rdi
    11a7:       e8 44 ff ff ff          callq  10f0 <_ZN3std10sys_common9backtrace28__rust_begin_short_backtrace17h6e238af75680eb28E>
    11ac:       31 c0                   xor    %eax,%eax
    11ae:       59                      pop    %rcx
    11af:       c3                      retq   

00000000000011b0 <_ZN4core3ptr85drop_in_place$LT$std..rt..lang_start$LT$$LP$$RP$$GT$..$u7b$$u7b$closure$u7d$$u7d$$GT$17he9aeeba375093b99E.llvm.909376793398482062>:
    11b0:       c3                      retq   
    11b1:       cc                      int3   
    11b2:       cc                      int3   
    11b3:       cc                      int3   
    11b4:       cc                      int3   
    11b5:       cc                      int3   
    11b6:       cc                      int3   
    11b7:       cc                      int3   
    11b8:       cc                      int3   
    11b9:       cc                      int3   
    11ba:       cc                      int3   
    11bb:       cc                      int3   
    11bc:       cc                      int3   
    11bd:       cc                      int3   
    11be:       cc                      int3   
    11bf:       cc                      int3
```
2021-04-28 19:04:00 +00:00
François
6f7da027c7 Automatic System Spans (#2033)
As mentioned in https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/2025#issuecomment-827867660, systems used to have spans by default.

* add spans by default for every system executed
* create folder if missing for feature `wgpu_trace`
2021-04-28 18:41:16 +00:00
TehPers
d653ad2bda Updated docs for ShouldRun (#1987)
The documentation for `ShouldRun` doesn't completely explain what each of the variants you can return does. For instance, it isn't very clear that looping systems aren't executed again until after all the systems in a stage have had a chance to run.

This PR adds to the documentation for `ShouldRun`, and hopefully clarifies what is happening during a stage's execution when run criteria are checked and systems are being executed.
2021-04-23 18:38:18 +00:00
Alice Cecile
e4e32598a9 Cargo fmt with unstable features (#1903)
Fresh version of #1670 off the latest main.

Mostly fixing documentation wrapping.
2021-04-21 23:19:34 +00:00
Jakob Hellermann
ed36c21e7e fix 'attempted to subtract with overflow' for State::inactives (#1668) 2021-04-10 16:33:35 +00:00
TheRawMeatball
b657a9b39f Add on_in_stack_update to SystemSet (#1792) 2021-03-31 20:24:04 +00:00
Ixentus
80bd378aa0 Fix tiny state docs inconsistency (#1764)
@TheRawMeatball
2021-03-26 18:30:28 +00:00
Alexander Sepity
500d7469e7 Fixed criteria-less systems being re-ran unnecessarily (#1754)
Fixes #1753.

The problem was introduced while reworking the logic around stages' own criteria. Before #1675 they used to be stored and processed inline with the systems' criteria, and systems without criteria used that of their stage. After, criteria-less systems think they should run, always. This PR more or less restores previous behavior; a less cludge solution can wait until after 0.5 - ideally, until stageless.

Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
2021-03-26 00:31:58 +00:00
Carter Anderson
1d7196da4f Add state app builder docs (#1746)
This is intended to help protect users against #1671. It doesn't resolve the issue, but I think its a good stop-gap solution for 0.5. A "full" fix would be very involved (and maybe not worth the added complexity).
2021-03-25 06:12:14 +00:00
TheRawMeatball
78edec2e45 Change State::*_next to *_replace, add proper next (#1676)
In the current impl, next clears out the entire stack and replaces it with a new state. This PR moves this functionality into a replace method, and changes the behavior of next to only change the top state.

Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
2021-03-25 03:28:40 +00:00
Alexander Sepity
d3e020a1e7 System sets and run criteria v2 (#1675)
I'm opening this prematurely; consider this an RFC that predates RFCs and therefore not super-RFC-like.

This PR does two "big" things: decouple run criteria from system sets, reimagine system sets as weapons of mass system description.

### What it lets us do:

* Reuse run criteria within a stage.
* Pipe output of one run criteria as input to another.
* Assign labels, dependencies, run criteria, and ambiguity sets to many systems at the same time.

### Things already done:
* Decoupled run criteria from system sets.
* Mass system description superpowers to `SystemSet`.
* Implemented `RunCriteriaDescriptor`.
* Removed `VirtualSystemSet`.
* Centralized all run criteria of `SystemStage`.
* Extended system descriptors with per-system run criteria.
* `.before()` and `.after()` for run criteria.
* Explicit order between state driver and related run criteria. Fixes #1672.
* Opt-in run criteria deduplication; default behavior is to panic.
* Labels (not exposed) for state run criteria; state run criteria are deduplicated.

### API issues that need discussion:

* [`FixedTimestep::step(1.0).label("my label")`](eaccf857cd/crates/bevy_ecs/src/schedule/run_criteria.rs (L120-L122)) and [`FixedTimestep::step(1.0).with_label("my label")`](eaccf857cd/crates/bevy_core/src/time/fixed_timestep.rs (L86-L89)) are both valid but do very different things.

---

I will try to maintain this post up-to-date as things change. Do check the diffs in "edited" thingy from time to time.

Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
2021-03-24 20:11:55 +00:00
Alice Cecile
6121e5f933 Reliable change detection (#1471)
# Problem Definition

The current change tracking (via flags for both components and resources) fails to detect changes made by systems that are scheduled to run earlier in the frame than they are.

This issue is discussed at length in [#68](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/68) and [#54](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/54).

This is very much a draft PR, and contributions are welcome and needed.

# Criteria
1. Each change is detected at least once, no matter the ordering.
2. Each change is detected at most once, no matter the ordering.
3. Changes should be detected the same frame that they are made.
4. Competitive ergonomics. Ideally does not require opting-in.
5. Low CPU overhead of computation.
6. Memory efficient. This must not increase over time, except where the number of entities / resources does.
7. Changes should not be lost for systems that don't run.
8. A frame needs to act as a pure function. Given the same set of entities / components it needs to produce the same end state without side-effects.

**Exact** change-tracking proposals satisfy criteria 1 and 2.
**Conservative** change-tracking proposals satisfy criteria 1 but not 2.
**Flaky** change tracking proposals satisfy criteria 2 but not 1.

# Code Base Navigation

There are three types of flags: 
- `Added`: A piece of data was added to an entity / `Resources`.
- `Mutated`: A piece of data was able to be modified, because its `DerefMut` was accessed
- `Changed`: The bitwise OR of `Added` and `Changed`

The special behavior of `ChangedRes`, with respect to the scheduler is being removed in [#1313](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/1313) and does not need to be reproduced.

`ChangedRes` and friends can be found in "bevy_ecs/core/resources/resource_query.rs".

The `Flags` trait for Components can be found in "bevy_ecs/core/query.rs".

`ComponentFlags` are stored in "bevy_ecs/core/archetypes.rs", defined on line 446.

# Proposals

**Proposal 5 was selected for implementation.**

## Proposal 0: No Change Detection

The baseline, where computations are performed on everything regardless of whether it changed.

**Type:** Conservative

**Pros:**
- already implemented
- will never miss events
- no overhead

**Cons:**
- tons of repeated work
- doesn't allow users to avoid repeating work (or monitoring for other changes)

## Proposal 1: Earlier-This-Tick Change Detection

The current approach as of Bevy 0.4. Flags are set, and then flushed at the end of each frame.

**Type:** Flaky

**Pros:**
- already implemented
- simple to understand
- low memory overhead (2 bits per component)
- low time overhead (clear every flag once per frame)

**Cons:**
- misses systems based on ordering
- systems that don't run every frame miss changes
- duplicates detection when looping
- can lead to unresolvable circular dependencies

## Proposal 2: Two-Tick Change Detection

Flags persist for two frames, using a double-buffer system identical to that used in events.

A change is observed if it is found in either the current frame's list of changes or the previous frame's.

**Type:** Conservative

**Pros:**
- easy to understand
- easy to implement
- low memory overhead (4 bits per component)
- low time overhead (bit mask and shift every flag once per frame)

**Cons:**
- can result in a great deal of duplicated work
- systems that don't run every frame miss changes
- duplicates detection when looping

## Proposal 3: Last-Tick Change Detection

Flags persist for two frames, using a double-buffer system identical to that used in events.

A change is observed if it is found in the previous frame's list of changes.

**Type:** Exact

**Pros:**
- exact
- easy to understand
- easy to implement
- low memory overhead (4 bits per component)
- low time overhead (bit mask and shift every flag once per frame)

**Cons:**
- change detection is always delayed, possibly causing painful chained delays
- systems that don't run every frame miss changes
- duplicates detection when looping

## Proposal 4: Flag-Doubling Change Detection

Combine Proposal 2 and Proposal 3. Differentiate between `JustChanged` (current behavior) and `Changed` (Proposal 3).

Pack this data into the flags according to [this implementation proposal](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/68#issuecomment-769174804).

**Type:** Flaky + Exact

**Pros:**
- allows users to acc
- easy to implement
- low memory overhead (4 bits per component)
- low time overhead (bit mask and shift every flag once per frame)

**Cons:**
- users must specify the type of change detection required
- still quite fragile to system ordering effects when using the flaky `JustChanged` form
- cannot get immediate + exact results
- systems that don't run every frame miss changes
- duplicates detection when looping

## [SELECTED] Proposal 5: Generation-Counter Change Detection

A global counter is increased after each system is run. Each component saves the time of last mutation, and each system saves the time of last execution. Mutation is detected when the component's counter is greater than the system's counter. Discussed [here](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/68#issuecomment-769174804). How to handle addition detection is unsolved; the current proposal is to use the highest bit of the counter as in proposal 1.

**Type:** Exact (for mutations), flaky (for additions)

**Pros:**
- low time overhead (set component counter on access, set system counter after execution)
- robust to systems that don't run every frame
- robust to systems that loop

**Cons:**
- moderately complex implementation
- must be modified as systems are inserted dynamically
- medium memory overhead (4 bytes per component + system)
- unsolved addition detection

## Proposal 6: System-Data Change Detection

For each system, track which system's changes it has seen. This approach is only worth fully designing and implementing if Proposal 5 fails in some way.  

**Type:** Exact

**Pros:**
- exact
- conceptually simple

**Cons:**
- requires storing data on each system
- implementation is complex
- must be modified as systems are inserted dynamically

## Proposal 7: Total-Order Change Detection

Discussed [here](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/68#issuecomment-754326523). This proposal is somewhat complicated by the new scheduler, but I believe it should still be conceptually feasible. This approach is only worth fully designing and implementing if Proposal 5 fails in some way.  

**Type:** Exact

**Pros:**
- exact
- efficient data storage relative to other exact proposals

**Cons:**
- requires access to the scheduler
- complex implementation and difficulty grokking
- must be modified as systems are inserted dynamically

# Tests

- We will need to verify properties 1, 2, 3, 7 and 8. Priority: 1 > 2 = 3 > 8 > 7
- Ideally we can use identical user-facing syntax for all proposals, allowing us to re-use the same syntax for each.
- When writing tests, we need to carefully specify order using explicit dependencies.
- These tests will need to be duplicated for both components and resources.
- We need to be sure to handle cases where ambiguous system orders exist.

`changing_system` is always the system that makes the changes, and `detecting_system` always detects the changes.

The component / resource changed will be simple boolean wrapper structs.

## Basic Added / Mutated / Changed

2 x 3 design:
- Resources vs. Components
- Added vs. Changed vs. Mutated
- `changing_system` runs before `detecting_system`
- verify at the end of tick 2

## At Least Once

2 x 3 design:
- Resources vs. Components
- Added vs. Changed vs. Mutated
- `changing_system` runs after `detecting_system`
- verify at the end of tick 2

## At Most Once

2 x 3 design:
- Resources vs. Components
- Added vs. Changed vs. Mutated
- `changing_system` runs once before `detecting_system`
- increment a counter based on the number of changes detected
- verify at the end of tick 2

## Fast Detection
2 x 3 design:
- Resources vs. Components
- Added vs. Changed vs. Mutated
- `changing_system` runs before `detecting_system`
- verify at the end of tick 1

## Ambiguous System Ordering Robustness
2 x 3 x 2 design:
- Resources vs. Components
- Added vs. Changed vs. Mutated
- `changing_system` runs [before/after] `detecting_system` in tick 1
- `changing_system` runs [after/before] `detecting_system` in tick 2

## System Pausing
2 x 3 design:
- Resources vs. Components
- Added vs. Changed vs. Mutated
- `changing_system` runs in tick 1, then is disabled by run criteria
- `detecting_system` is disabled by run criteria until it is run once during tick 3
- verify at the end of tick 3

## Addition Causes Mutation

2 design:
- Resources vs. Components
- `adding_system_1` adds a component / resource
- `adding system_2` adds the same component / resource
- verify the `Mutated` flag at the end of the tick
- verify the `Added` flag at the end of the tick

First check tests for: https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/333
Second check tests for: https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/1443

## Changes Made By Commands

- `adding_system` runs in Update in tick 1, and sends a command to add a component 
- `detecting_system` runs in Update in tick 1 and 2, after `adding_system`
- We can't detect the changes in tick 1, since they haven't been processed yet
- If we were to track these changes as being emitted by `adding_system`, we can't detect the changes in tick 2 either, since `detecting_system` has already run once after `adding_system` :( 

# Benchmarks

See: [general advice](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/blob/master/docs/profiling.md), [Criterion crate](https://github.com/bheisler/criterion.rs)

There are several critical parameters to vary: 
1. entity count (1 to 10^9)
2. fraction of entities that are changed (0% to 100%)
3. cost to perform work on changed entities, i.e. workload (1 ns to 1s)

1 and 2 should be varied between benchmark runs. 3 can be added on computationally.

We want to measure:
- memory cost
- run time

We should collect these measurements across several frames (100?) to reduce bootup effects and accurately measure the mean, variance and drift.

Entity-component change detection is much more important to benchmark than resource change detection, due to the orders of magnitude higher number of pieces of data.

No change detection at all should be included in benchmarks as a second control for cases where missing changes is unacceptable.

## Graphs
1. y: performance, x: log_10(entity count), color: proposal, facet: performance metric. Set cost to perform work to 0. 
2. y: run time, x: cost to perform work, color: proposal, facet: fraction changed. Set number of entities to 10^6
3. y: memory, x: frames, color: proposal

# Conclusions
1. Is the theoretical categorization of the proposals correct according to our tests?
2. How does the performance of the proposals compare without any load?
3. How does the performance of the proposals compare with realistic loads?
4. At what workload does more exact change tracking become worth the (presumably) higher overhead?
5. When does adding change-detection to save on work become worthwhile?
6. Is there enough divergence in performance between the best solutions in each class to ship more than one change-tracking solution?

# Implementation Plan

1. Write a test suite.
2. Verify that tests fail for existing approach.
3. Write a benchmark suite.
4. Get performance numbers for existing approach.
5. Implement, test and benchmark various solutions using a Git branch per proposal.
6. Create a draft PR with all solutions and present results to team.
7. Select a solution and replace existing change detection.

Co-authored-by: Brice DAVIER <bricedavier@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
2021-03-19 17:53:26 +00:00
Alec Deason
cd4c684ad5 Fix tiny typo in ambiguity checker message (#1682)
Add one missing word
2021-03-18 01:28:21 +00:00
Alice Cecile
ab0165d20d Improved documentation for Events (#1669)
Explains subtle behavior more explicitly, documents `add_event`, mentions `EventWriter`.

Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
2021-03-17 23:42:19 +00:00
TheRawMeatball
284889c64b Redo State architecture (#1424)
An alternative to StateStages that uses SystemSets. Also includes pop and push operations since this was originally developed for my personal project which needed them.
2021-03-15 22:12:04 +00:00
Jakob Hellermann
48ee167531 expose stages and system containers (#1647)
This allows third-party plugins to analyze the schedule, e.g. `bevy_mod_picking` can [display a schedule graph](https://github.com/jakobhellermann/bevy_mod_debugdump/tree/schedule-graph#schedule-graph):

![schedule graph](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/jakobhellermann/bevy_mod_debugdump/schedule-graph/docs/schedule_graph.svg)
2021-03-14 20:44:51 +00:00
Carter Anderson
b17f8a4bce format comments (#1612)
Uses the new unstable comment formatting features added to rustfmt.toml.
2021-03-11 00:27:30 +00:00
Carter Anderson
be1c317d4e Resolve (most) internal system ambiguities (#1606)
* Adds labels and orderings to systems that need them (uses the new many-to-many labels for InputSystem)
* Removes the Event, PreEvent, Scene, and Ui stages in favor of First, PreUpdate, and PostUpdate (there is more collapsing potential, such as the Asset stages and _maybe_ removing First, but those have more nuance so they should be handled separately)
* Ambiguity detection now prints component conflicts
* Removed broken change filters from flex calculation (which implicitly relied on the z-update system always modifying translation.z). This will require more work to make it behave as expected so i just removed it (and it was already doing this work every frame).
2021-03-10 22:37:02 +00:00
Alexander Sepity
d51130d4ab Many-to-many system labels (#1576)
* Systems can now have more than one label attached to them.
* System labels no longer have to be unique in the stage.

Code like this is now possible:
```rust
SystemStage::parallel()
    .with_system(system_0.system().label("group one").label("first"))
    .with_system(system_1.system().label("group one").after("first"))
    .with_system(system_2.system().after("group one"))
```

I've opted to use only the system name in ambiguity reporting, which previously was only a fallback; this, obviously, is because labels aren't one-to-one with systems anymore. We could allow users to name systems to improve this; we'll then have to think about whether or not we want to allow using the name as a label (this would, effectively, introduce implicit labelling, not all implications of which are clear to me yet wrt many-to-many labels).

Dependency cycle errors are reported using the system names and only the labels that form the cycle, with each system-system "edge" in the cycle represented as one or several labels.

Slightly unrelated: `.before()` and `.after()` with a label not attached to any system no longer crashes, and logs a warning instead. This is necessary to, for example, allow plugins to specify execution order with systems of potentially missing other plugins.
2021-03-09 23:08:34 +00:00
François
dabf419095 update archetypes if needed before running system in SingleThreadedExecutor (#1586)
fixes #1585 

I copied most of the logic from the `ParallelSystemExecutor` impl, simplifying it a little as systems can't run in parallel
2021-03-07 19:32:19 +00:00
Carter Anderson
3a2a68852c Bevy ECS V2 (#1525)
# Bevy ECS V2

This is a rewrite of Bevy ECS (basically everything but the new executor/schedule, which are already awesome). The overall goal was to improve the performance and versatility of Bevy ECS. Here is a quick bulleted list of changes before we dive into the details:

* Complete World rewrite
* Multiple component storage types:
    * Tables: fast cache friendly iteration, slower add/removes (previously called Archetypes)
    * Sparse Sets: fast add/remove, slower iteration
* Stateful Queries (caches query results for faster iteration. fragmented iteration is _fast_ now)
* Stateful System Params (caches expensive operations. inspired by @DJMcNab's work in #1364)
* Configurable System Params (users can set configuration when they construct their systems. once again inspired by @DJMcNab's work)
* Archetypes are now "just metadata", component storage is separate
* Archetype Graph (for faster archetype changes)
* Component Metadata
    * Configure component storage type
    * Retrieve information about component size/type/name/layout/send-ness/etc
    * Components are uniquely identified by a densely packed ComponentId
    * TypeIds are now totally optional (which should make implementing scripting easier)
* Super fast "for_each" query iterators
* Merged Resources into World. Resources are now just a special type of component
* EntityRef/EntityMut builder apis (more efficient and more ergonomic)
* Fast bitset-backed `Access<T>` replaces old hashmap-based approach everywhere
* Query conflicts are determined by component access instead of archetype component access (to avoid random failures at runtime)
    * With/Without are still taken into account for conflicts, so this should still be comfy to use
* Much simpler `IntoSystem` impl
* Significantly reduced the amount of hashing throughout the ecs in favor of Sparse Sets (indexed by densely packed ArchetypeId, ComponentId, BundleId, and TableId)
* Safety Improvements
    * Entity reservation uses a normal world reference instead of unsafe transmute
    * QuerySets no longer transmute lifetimes
    * Made traits "unsafe" where relevant
    * More thorough safety docs
* WorldCell
    * Exposes safe mutable access to multiple resources at a time in a World 
* Replaced "catch all" `System::update_archetypes(world: &World)` with `System::new_archetype(archetype: &Archetype)`
* Simpler Bundle implementation
* Replaced slow "remove_bundle_one_by_one" used as fallback for Commands::remove_bundle with fast "remove_bundle_intersection"
* Removed `Mut<T>` query impl. it is better to only support one way: `&mut T` 
* Removed with() from `Flags<T>` in favor of `Option<Flags<T>>`, which allows querying for flags to be "filtered" by default 
* Components now have is_send property (currently only resources support non-send)
* More granular module organization
* New `RemovedComponents<T>` SystemParam that replaces `query.removed::<T>()`
* `world.resource_scope()` for mutable access to resources and world at the same time
* WorldQuery and QueryFilter traits unified. FilterFetch trait added to enable "short circuit" filtering. Auto impled for cases that don't need it
* Significantly slimmed down SystemState in favor of individual SystemParam state
* System Commands changed from `commands: &mut Commands` back to `mut commands: Commands` (to allow Commands to have a World reference)

Fixes #1320

## `World` Rewrite

This is a from-scratch rewrite of `World` that fills the niche that `hecs` used to. Yes, this means Bevy ECS is no longer a "fork" of hecs. We're going out our own!

(the only shared code between the projects is the entity id allocator, which is already basically ideal)

A huge shout out to @SanderMertens (author of [flecs](https://github.com/SanderMertens/flecs)) for sharing some great ideas with me (specifically hybrid ecs storage and archetype graphs). He also helped advise on a number of implementation details.

## Component Storage (The Problem)

Two ECS storage paradigms have gained a lot of traction over the years:

* **Archetypal ECS**: 
    * Stores components in "tables" with static schemas. Each "column" stores components of a given type. Each "row" is an entity.
    * Each "archetype" has its own table. Adding/removing an entity's component changes the archetype.
    * Enables super-fast Query iteration due to its cache-friendly data layout
    * Comes at the cost of more expensive add/remove operations for an Entity's components, because all components need to be copied to the new archetype's "table"
* **Sparse Set ECS**:
    * Stores components of the same type in densely packed arrays, which are sparsely indexed by densely packed unsigned integers (Entity ids)
    * Query iteration is slower than Archetypal ECS because each entity's component could be at any position in the sparse set. This "random access" pattern isn't cache friendly. Additionally, there is an extra layer of indirection because you must first map the entity id to an index in the component array.
    * Adding/removing components is a cheap, constant time operation 

Bevy ECS V1, hecs, legion, flec, and Unity DOTS are all "archetypal ecs-es". I personally think "archetypal" storage is a good default for game engines. An entity's archetype doesn't need to change frequently in general, and it creates "fast by default" query iteration (which is a much more common operation). It is also "self optimizing". Users don't need to think about optimizing component layouts for iteration performance. It "just works" without any extra boilerplate.

Shipyard and EnTT are "sparse set ecs-es". They employ "packing" as a way to work around the "suboptimal by default" iteration performance for specific sets of components. This helps, but I didn't think this was a good choice for a general purpose engine like Bevy because:

1. "packs" conflict with each other. If bevy decides to internally pack the Transform and GlobalTransform components, users are then blocked if they want to pack some custom component with Transform.
2. users need to take manual action to optimize

Developers selecting an ECS framework are stuck with a hard choice. Select an "archetypal" framework with "fast iteration everywhere" but without the ability to cheaply add/remove components, or select a "sparse set" framework to cheaply add/remove components but with slower iteration performance.

## Hybrid Component Storage (The Solution)

In Bevy ECS V2, we get to have our cake and eat it too. It now has _both_ of the component storage types above (and more can be added later if needed):

* **Tables** (aka "archetypal" storage)
    * The default storage. If you don't configure anything, this is what you get
    * Fast iteration by default
    * Slower add/remove operations
* **Sparse Sets**
    * Opt-in
    * Slower iteration
    * Faster add/remove operations

These storage types complement each other perfectly. By default Query iteration is fast. If developers know that they want to add/remove a component at high frequencies, they can set the storage to "sparse set":

```rust
world.register_component(
    ComponentDescriptor:🆕:<MyComponent>(StorageType::SparseSet)
).unwrap();
```

## Archetypes

Archetypes are now "just metadata" ... they no longer store components directly. They do store:

* The `ComponentId`s of each of the Archetype's components (and that component's storage type)
    * Archetypes are uniquely defined by their component layouts
    * For example: entities with "table" components `[A, B, C]` _and_ "sparse set" components `[D, E]` will always be in the same archetype.
* The `TableId` associated with the archetype
    * For now each archetype has exactly one table (which can have no components),
    * There is a 1->Many relationship from Tables->Archetypes. A given table could have any number of archetype components stored in it:
        * Ex: an entity with "table storage" components `[A, B, C]` and "sparse set" components `[D, E]` will share the same `[A, B, C]` table as an entity with `[A, B, C]` table component and `[F]` sparse set components.
        * This 1->Many relationship is how we preserve fast "cache friendly" iteration performance when possible (more on this later)
* A list of entities that are in the archetype and the row id of the table they are in
* ArchetypeComponentIds
    * unique densely packed identifiers for (ArchetypeId, ComponentId) pairs
    * used by the schedule executor for cheap system access control
* "Archetype Graph Edges" (see the next section)  

## The "Archetype Graph"

Archetype changes in Bevy (and a number of other archetypal ecs-es) have historically been expensive to compute. First, you need to allocate a new vector of the entity's current component ids, add or remove components based on the operation performed, sort it (to ensure it is order-independent), then hash it to find the archetype (if it exists). And thats all before we get to the _already_ expensive full copy of all components to the new table storage.

The solution is to build a "graph" of archetypes to cache these results. @SanderMertens first exposed me to the idea (and he got it from @gjroelofs, who came up with it). They propose adding directed edges between archetypes for add/remove component operations. If `ComponentId`s are densely packed, you can use sparse sets to cheaply jump between archetypes.

Bevy takes this one step further by using add/remove `Bundle` edges instead of `Component` edges. Bevy encourages the use of `Bundles` to group add/remove operations. This is largely for "clearer game logic" reasons, but it also helps cut down on the number of archetype changes required. `Bundles` now also have densely-packed `BundleId`s. This allows us to use a _single_ edge for each bundle operation (rather than needing to traverse N edges ... one for each component). Single component operations are also bundles, so this is strictly an improvement over a "component only" graph.

As a result, an operation that used to be _heavy_ (both for allocations and compute) is now two dirt-cheap array lookups and zero allocations.

## Stateful Queries

World queries are now stateful. This allows us to:

1. Cache archetype (and table) matches
    * This resolves another issue with (naive) archetypal ECS: query performance getting worse as the number of archetypes goes up (and fragmentation occurs).
2. Cache Fetch and Filter state
    * The expensive parts of fetch/filter operations (such as hashing the TypeId to find the ComponentId) now only happen once when the Query is first constructed
3. Incrementally build up state
    * When new archetypes are added, we only process the new archetypes (no need to rebuild state for old archetypes)

As a result, the direct `World` query api now looks like this:

```rust
let mut query = world.query::<(&A, &mut B)>();
for (a, mut b) in query.iter_mut(&mut world) {
}
```

Requiring `World` to generate stateful queries (rather than letting the `QueryState` type be constructed separately) allows us to ensure that _all_ queries are properly initialized (and the relevant world state, such as ComponentIds). This enables QueryState to remove branches from its operations that check for initialization status (and also enables query.iter() to take an immutable world reference because it doesn't need to initialize anything in world).

However in systems, this is a non-breaking change. State management is done internally by the relevant SystemParam.

## Stateful SystemParams

Like Queries, `SystemParams` now also cache state. For example, `Query` system params store the "stateful query" state mentioned above. Commands store their internal `CommandQueue`. This means you can now safely use as many separate `Commands` parameters in your system as you want. `Local<T>` system params store their `T` value in their state (instead of in Resources). 

SystemParam state also enabled a significant slim-down of SystemState. It is much nicer to look at now.

Per-SystemParam state naturally insulates us from an "aliased mut" class of errors we have hit in the past (ex: using multiple `Commands` system params).

(credit goes to @DJMcNab for the initial idea and draft pr here #1364)

## Configurable SystemParams

@DJMcNab also had the great idea to make SystemParams configurable. This allows users to provide some initial configuration / values for system parameters (when possible). Most SystemParams have no config (the config type is `()`), but the `Local<T>` param now supports user-provided parameters:

```rust

fn foo(value: Local<usize>) {    
}

app.add_system(foo.system().config(|c| c.0 = Some(10)));
```

## Uber Fast "for_each" Query Iterators

Developers now have the choice to use a fast "for_each" iterator, which yields ~1.5-3x iteration speed improvements for "fragmented iteration", and minor ~1.2x iteration speed improvements for unfragmented iteration. 

```rust
fn system(query: Query<(&A, &mut B)>) {
    // you now have the option to do this for a speed boost
    query.for_each_mut(|(a, mut b)| {
    });

    // however normal iterators are still available
    for (a, mut b) in query.iter_mut() {
    }
}
```

I think in most cases we should continue to encourage "normal" iterators as they are more flexible and more "rust idiomatic". But when that extra "oomf" is needed, it makes sense to use `for_each`.

We should also consider using `for_each` for internal bevy systems to give our users a nice speed boost (but that should be a separate pr).

## Component Metadata

`World` now has a `Components` collection, which is accessible via `world.components()`. This stores mappings from `ComponentId` to `ComponentInfo`, as well as `TypeId` to `ComponentId` mappings (where relevant). `ComponentInfo` stores information about the component, such as ComponentId, TypeId, memory layout, send-ness (currently limited to resources), and storage type.

## Significantly Cheaper `Access<T>`

We used to use `TypeAccess<TypeId>` to manage read/write component/archetype-component access. This was expensive because TypeIds must be hashed and compared individually. The parallel executor got around this by "condensing" type ids into bitset-backed access types. This worked, but it had to be re-generated from the `TypeAccess<TypeId>`sources every time archetypes changed.

This pr removes TypeAccess in favor of faster bitset access everywhere. We can do this thanks to the move to densely packed `ComponentId`s and `ArchetypeComponentId`s.

## Merged Resources into World

Resources had a lot of redundant functionality with Components. They stored typed data, they had access control, they had unique ids, they were queryable via SystemParams, etc. In fact the _only_ major difference between them was that they were unique (and didn't correlate to an entity).

Separate resources also had the downside of requiring a separate set of access controls, which meant the parallel executor needed to compare more bitsets per system and manage more state.

I initially got the "separate resources" idea from `legion`. I think that design was motivated by the fact that it made the direct world query/resource lifetime interactions more manageable. It certainly made our lives easier when using Resources alongside hecs/bevy_ecs. However we already have a construct for safely and ergonomically managing in-world lifetimes: systems (which use `Access<T>` internally).

This pr merges Resources into World:

```rust
world.insert_resource(1);
world.insert_resource(2.0);
let a = world.get_resource::<i32>().unwrap();
let mut b = world.get_resource_mut::<f64>().unwrap();
*b = 3.0;
```

Resources are now just a special kind of component. They have their own ComponentIds (and their own resource TypeId->ComponentId scope, so they don't conflict wit components of the same type). They are stored in a special "resource archetype", which stores components inside the archetype using a new `unique_components` sparse set (note that this sparse set could later be used to implement Tags). This allows us to keep the code size small by reusing existing datastructures (namely Column, Archetype, ComponentFlags, and ComponentInfo). This allows us the executor to use a single `Access<ArchetypeComponentId>` per system. It should also make scripting language integration easier.

_But_ this merge did create problems for people directly interacting with `World`. What if you need mutable access to multiple resources at the same time? `world.get_resource_mut()` borrows World mutably!

## WorldCell

WorldCell applies the `Access<ArchetypeComponentId>` concept to direct world access:

```rust
let world_cell = world.cell();
let a = world_cell.get_resource_mut::<i32>().unwrap();
let b = world_cell.get_resource_mut::<f64>().unwrap();
```

This adds cheap runtime checks (a sparse set lookup of `ArchetypeComponentId` and a counter) to ensure that world accesses do not conflict with each other. Each operation returns a `WorldBorrow<'w, T>` or `WorldBorrowMut<'w, T>` wrapper type, which will release the relevant ArchetypeComponentId resources when dropped.

World caches the access sparse set (and only one cell can exist at a time), so `world.cell()` is a cheap operation. 

WorldCell does _not_ use atomic operations. It is non-send, does a mutable borrow of world to prevent other accesses, and uses a simple `Rc<RefCell<ArchetypeComponentAccess>>` wrapper in each WorldBorrow pointer. 

The api is currently limited to resource access, but it can and should be extended to queries / entity component access.

## Resource Scopes

WorldCell does not yet support component queries, and even when it does there are sometimes legitimate reasons to want a mutable world ref _and_ a mutable resource ref (ex: bevy_render and bevy_scene both need this). In these cases we could always drop down to the unsafe `world.get_resource_unchecked_mut()`, but that is not ideal!

Instead developers can use a "resource scope"

```rust
world.resource_scope(|world: &mut World, a: &mut A| {
})
```

This temporarily removes the `A` resource from `World`, provides mutable pointers to both, and re-adds A to World when finished. Thanks to the move to ComponentIds/sparse sets, this is a cheap operation.

If multiple resources are required, scopes can be nested. We could also consider adding a "resource tuple" to the api if this pattern becomes common and the boilerplate gets nasty.

## Query Conflicts Use ComponentId Instead of ArchetypeComponentId

For safety reasons, systems cannot contain queries that conflict with each other without wrapping them in a QuerySet. On bevy `main`, we use ArchetypeComponentIds to determine conflicts. This is nice because it can take into account filters:

```rust
// these queries will never conflict due to their filters
fn filter_system(a: Query<&mut A, With<B>>, b: Query<&mut B, Without<B>>) {
}
```

But it also has a significant downside:
```rust
// these queries will not conflict _until_ an entity with A, B, and C is spawned
fn maybe_conflicts_system(a: Query<(&mut A, &C)>, b: Query<(&mut A, &B)>) {
}
```

The system above will panic at runtime if an entity with A, B, and C is spawned. This makes it hard to trust that your game logic will run without crashing.

In this pr, I switched to using `ComponentId` instead. This _is_ more constraining. `maybe_conflicts_system` will now always fail, but it will do it consistently at startup. Naively, it would also _disallow_ `filter_system`, which would be a significant downgrade in usability. Bevy has a number of internal systems that rely on disjoint queries and I expect it to be a common pattern in userspace.

To resolve this, I added a new `FilteredAccess<T>` type, which wraps `Access<T>` and adds with/without filters. If two `FilteredAccess` have with/without values that prove they are disjoint, they will no longer conflict.

## EntityRef / EntityMut

World entity operations on `main` require that the user passes in an `entity` id to each operation:

```rust
let entity = world.spawn((A, )); // create a new entity with A
world.get::<A>(entity);
world.insert(entity, (B, C));
world.insert_one(entity, D);
```

This means that each operation needs to look up the entity location / verify its validity. The initial spawn operation also requires a Bundle as input. This can be awkward when no components are required (or one component is required).

These operations have been replaced by `EntityRef` and `EntityMut`, which are "builder-style" wrappers around world that provide read and read/write operations on a single, pre-validated entity:

```rust
// spawn now takes no inputs and returns an EntityMut
let entity = world.spawn()
    .insert(A) // insert a single component into the entity
    .insert_bundle((B, C)) // insert a bundle of components into the entity
    .id() // id returns the Entity id

// Returns EntityMut (or panics if the entity does not exist)
world.entity_mut(entity)
    .insert(D)
    .insert_bundle(SomeBundle::default());
{
    // returns EntityRef (or panics if the entity does not exist)
    let d = world.entity(entity)
        .get::<D>() // gets the D component
        .unwrap();
    // world.get still exists for ergonomics
    let d = world.get::<D>(entity).unwrap();
}

// These variants return Options if you want to check existence instead of panicing 
world.get_entity_mut(entity)
    .unwrap()
    .insert(E);

if let Some(entity_ref) = world.get_entity(entity) {
    let d = entity_ref.get::<D>().unwrap();
}
```

This _does not_ affect the current Commands api or terminology. I think that should be a separate conversation as that is a much larger breaking change.

## Safety Improvements

* Entity reservation in Commands uses a normal world borrow instead of an unsafe transmute
* QuerySets no longer transmutes lifetimes
* Made traits "unsafe" when implementing a trait incorrectly could cause unsafety
* More thorough safety docs

## RemovedComponents SystemParam

The old approach to querying removed components: `query.removed:<T>()` was confusing because it had no connection to the query itself. I replaced it with the following, which is both clearer and allows us to cache the ComponentId mapping in the SystemParamState:

```rust
fn system(removed: RemovedComponents<T>) {
    for entity in removed.iter() {
    }
} 
```

## Simpler Bundle implementation

Bundles are no longer responsible for sorting (or deduping) TypeInfo. They are just a simple ordered list of component types / data. This makes the implementation smaller and opens the door to an easy "nested bundle" implementation in the future (which i might even add in this pr). Duplicate detection is now done once per bundle type by World the first time a bundle is used.

## Unified WorldQuery and QueryFilter types

(don't worry they are still separate type _parameters_ in Queries .. this is a non-breaking change)

WorldQuery and QueryFilter were already basically identical apis. With the addition of `FetchState` and more storage-specific fetch methods, the overlap was even clearer (and the redundancy more painful).

QueryFilters are now just `F: WorldQuery where F::Fetch: FilterFetch`. FilterFetch requires `Fetch<Item = bool>` and adds new "short circuit" variants of fetch methods. This enables a filter tuple like `(With<A>, Without<B>, Changed<C>)` to stop evaluating the filter after the first mismatch is encountered. FilterFetch is automatically implemented for `Fetch` implementations that return bool.

This forces fetch implementations that return things like `(bool, bool, bool)` (such as the filter above) to manually implement FilterFetch and decide whether or not to short-circuit.

## More Granular Modules

World no longer globs all of the internal modules together. It now exports `core`, `system`, and `schedule` separately. I'm also considering exporting `core` submodules directly as that is still pretty "glob-ey" and unorganized (feedback welcome here).

## Remaining Draft Work (to be done in this pr)

* ~~panic on conflicting WorldQuery fetches (&A, &mut A)~~
    * ~~bevy `main` and hecs both currently allow this, but we should protect against it if possible~~
* ~~batch_iter / par_iter (currently stubbed out)~~
* ~~ChangedRes~~
    * ~~I skipped this while we sort out #1313. This pr should be adapted to account for whatever we land on there~~.
* ~~The `Archetypes` and `Tables` collections use hashes of sorted lists of component ids to uniquely identify each archetype/table. This hash is then used as the key in a HashMap to look up the relevant ArchetypeId or TableId. (which doesn't handle hash collisions properly)~~
* ~~It is currently unsafe to generate a Query from "World A", then use it on "World B" (despite the api claiming it is safe). We should probably close this gap. This could be done by adding a randomly generated WorldId to each world, then storing that id in each Query. They could then be compared to each other on each `query.do_thing(&world)` operation. This _does_ add an extra branch to each query operation, so I'm open to other suggestions if people have them.~~
* ~~Nested Bundles (if i find time)~~

## Potential Future Work

* Expand WorldCell to support queries.
* Consider not allocating in the empty archetype on `world.spawn()`
    * ex: return something like EntityMutUninit, which turns into EntityMut after an `insert` or `insert_bundle` op
    * this actually regressed performance last time i tried it, but in theory it should be faster
* Optimize SparseSet::insert (see `PERF` comment on insert)
* Replace SparseArray `Option<T>` with T::MAX to cut down on branching
    * would enable cheaper get_unchecked() operations
* upstream fixedbitset optimizations
    * fixedbitset could be allocation free for small block counts (store blocks in a SmallVec)
    * fixedbitset could have a const constructor 
* Consider implementing Tags (archetype-specific by-value data that affects archetype identity) 
    * ex: ArchetypeA could have `[A, B, C]` table components and `[D(1)]` "tag" component. ArchetypeB could have `[A, B, C]` table components and a `[D(2)]` tag component. The archetypes are different, despite both having D tags because the value inside D is different.
    * this could potentially build on top of the `archetype.unique_components` added in this pr for resource storage.
* Consider reverting `all_tuples` proc macro in favor of the old `macro_rules` implementation
    * all_tuples is more flexible and produces cleaner documentation (the macro_rules version produces weird type parameter orders due to parser constraints)
    * but unfortunately all_tuples also appears to make Rust Analyzer sad/slow when working inside of `bevy_ecs` (does not affect user code)
* Consider "resource queries" and/or "mixed resource and entity component queries" as an alternative to WorldCell
    * this is basically just "systems" so maybe it's not worth it
* Add more world ops
    * `world.clear()`
    * `world.reserve<T: Bundle>(count: usize)`
 * Try using the old archetype allocation strategy (allocate new memory on resize and copy everything over). I expect this to improve batch insertion performance at the cost of unbatched performance. But thats just a guess. I'm not an allocation perf pro :)
 * Adapt Commands apis for consistency with new World apis 

## Benchmarks

key:

* `bevy_old`: bevy `main` branch
* `bevy`: this branch
* `_foreach`: uses an optimized for_each iterator
* ` _sparse`: uses sparse set storage (if unspecified assume table storage)
* `_system`: runs inside a system (if unspecified assume test happens via direct world ops)

### Simple Insert (from ecs_bench_suite)

![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2694663/109245573-9c3ce100-7795-11eb-9003-bfd41cd5c51f.png)

### Simpler Iter (from ecs_bench_suite)

![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2694663/109245795-ffc70e80-7795-11eb-92fb-3ffad09aabf7.png)

### Fragment Iter (from ecs_bench_suite)

![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2694663/109245849-0fdeee00-7796-11eb-8d25-eb6b7a682c48.png)

### Sparse Fragmented Iter

Iterate a query that matches 5 entities from a single matching archetype, but there are 100 unmatching archetypes

![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2694663/109245916-2b49f900-7796-11eb-9a8f-ed89c203f940.png)
 
### Schedule (from ecs_bench_suite)

![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2694663/109246428-1fab0200-7797-11eb-8841-1b2161e90fa4.png)

### Add Remove Component (from ecs_bench_suite)

![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2694663/109246492-39e4e000-7797-11eb-8985-2706bd0495ab.png)


### Add Remove Component Big

Same as the test above, but each entity has 5 "large" matrix components and 1 "large" matrix component is added and removed

![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2694663/109246517-449f7500-7797-11eb-835e-28b6790daeaa.png)


### Get Component

Looks up a single component value a large number of times

![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2694663/109246129-87ad1880-7796-11eb-9fcb-c38012aa7c70.png)
2021-03-05 07:54:35 +00:00
TheRawMeatball
fa73036f9d
Extend AppBuilder api with add_system_set and similar methods (#1453)
Extend AppBuilder api with `add_system_set` and similar methods
2021-02-19 11:36:34 -08:00
Alexander Sepity
c2a427f1a3
Non-string labels (#1423 continued) (#1473)
Non-string labels
2021-02-18 13:20:37 -08:00
Alexander Sepity
82d0e84a5c
Explicit execution order ambiguities API (#1469)
Explicit execution order ambiguities API.
2021-02-18 11:30:13 -08:00
Alice Cecile
a895256925
Better documentation for explicit dependencies (#1428)
* More in-depth ambiguity checker docs
* Updated ecs_guide example with explicit dependencies
2021-02-16 11:18:08 -08:00
Alexander Sepity
d5a7330431
System sets and parallel executor v2 (#1144)
System sets and parallel executor v2
2021-02-09 12:14:10 -08:00
Telzhaak
61c9a40fde
[Bugfix] add_stage now checks Stage existence (#1346)
add_stage now checks stage existence
2021-01-30 12:10:14 -08:00
Tomasz Sterna
f2b73eaa8a
Fix documentation comment for State::overwrite_next (#1291) 2021-01-23 13:18:28 -08:00
Daniel McNab
6bd5ec8404
Change to using add_run_criteria (#1282) 2021-01-22 14:09:14 -08:00
TheRawMeatball
c69aa98a60
Refactor Box<dyn System> to BoxedSystem (#1191)
Added BoxedSystem
2021-01-03 12:39:30 -08:00
Adam Bates
8f426b71c9
Minor grammar fix in code-comment for fn in state (#1173) 2020-12-31 18:37:02 -06:00
Carter Anderson
caf3d8b3ef
add with_enter_stage (and other variants) (#1091) 2020-12-19 12:31:47 -06:00
Carter Anderson
841755aaf2
Adopt a Fetch pattern for SystemParams (#1074) 2020-12-15 21:57:16 -08:00
Carter Anderson
b12e3bf3bb
Improve usability of StateStage and cut down on "magic" (#1059)
Improve usability of StateStage and cut down on "magic"
2020-12-14 17:13:22 -08:00
Alec Deason
e511cdbda7
More informative error message on missing stage (#1048)
More informative error message on missing state
2020-12-13 12:12:09 -08:00
sapir
002e22fca0
Fix hang on missing state update handler (#1051) 2020-12-13 11:55:32 -08:00
Carter Anderson
509b138e8f
Schedule v2 (#1021)
Schedule V2
2020-12-12 18:04:42 -08:00
Joshua J. Bouw
9f4c8b1b9a
Fix errors and panics to typical Rust conventions (#968)
Fix errors and panics to typical Rust conventions
2020-12-02 11:31:16 -08:00
Carter Anderson
3a6f6de277
System Inputs, Outputs, Chaining, and Registration Ergo (#876)
System Inputs, Outputs, Chaining, and Registration Ergo
2020-11-16 18:18:00 -08:00
Carter Anderson
7628f4a64e
combine bevy_ecs and bevy_hecs crates. rename XComponents to XBundle (#863)
combine bevy_ecs and bevy_hecs crates. rename XComponents to XBundle
2020-11-15 20:32:23 -08:00
Carter Anderson
e03f17ba7f
Log Plugin (#836)
add bevy_log plugin
2020-11-12 17:23:57 -08:00
Robert Swain
a266578992
Add tracing spans to schedules, stages, systems (#789)
Add tracing spans to schedules, stages, systems
2020-11-10 18:49:49 -08:00
Carter Anderson
ebcdc9fb8c
Flexible ECS System Params (#798)
system params can be in any order, faster compiles, remove foreach
2020-11-08 12:34:05 -08:00
Carter Anderson
ad940fbf6e
Rename query.entity() to query.get() and query.get() to query.get_component() (#752) 2020-10-30 18:04:33 -07:00
Carter Anderson
1d4a95db62
ecs: ergonomic query.iter(), remove locks, add QuerySets (#741) 2020-10-29 23:39:55 -07:00
Grayson Burton
354d71cc1f
The Great Debuggening (#632)
The Great Debuggening
2020-10-08 11:43:01 -07:00
Carter Anderson
028a22b129
asset: use bevy_tasks in AssetServer (#550) 2020-09-21 20:23:09 -07:00
Carter Anderson
70ad6671db
ecs: use generational entity ids and other optimizations (#504)
ecs: use generational entity ids and other optimizations
2020-09-17 17:16:38 -07:00
Jonas Matser
3b3b0195bc
Adds profiler_start/stop to parallel_executor (#474) 2020-09-11 12:14:36 -07:00
BimDav
4ef18e2608
Resource change tracking (#388)
* Add mutated tracker on resources and ChangedRes query for added or mutated resources.

* ResMut:::new() now takes a reference to a 'mutated' flag in its archetype.

* Change FetchResource so that get() returns an Option. Systems using Resources will only be called if all fetched Resources are Some(). This is done to implement ChangedRes, which is Some iff the Resource has been changed.

* Add OrRes for a logical or in tuples of Resource queries.

* Separate resource query get() in is_some() and get() methods for clarity

* Remove unneeded unsafe

* Change ResMut::new()
2020-09-10 13:15:02 -07:00
Carter Anderson
ac117019e2 resolve unused variable warning in release builds 2020-09-08 13:29:55 -07:00
Philip Degarmo
9eba19c8f0
Fix for bug #449 (#450)
Fix for a bug (#449) in scheduler that could result in systems running concurrently when they shouldn't.
2020-09-06 12:07:34 -07:00
Philip Degarmo
8b3553002d
Reworked parallel executor to not block (#437)
Reworked parallel executor to not block
2020-09-05 22:05:33 -07:00
Boxy
3efbaca104
Fix archetypes_generation being incorrectly updated for systems (#294) (#383) 2020-08-29 18:38:05 -07:00
Lachlan Sneff
17e7642611
Task System for Bevy (#384)
Add bevy_tasks crate to replace rayon
2020-08-29 12:35:41 -07:00
Robbie Davenport
4aabe983ec
Switch usage of std HashMap/HashSet default hasher, to aHash algo (#258)
switch to ahash for HashMaps and HashSets via a new bevy_utils crate
2020-08-28 17:08:51 -07:00
Lachlan Sneff
1eca55e571
Replace std synchronization primitives with parking_lot (#210)
* Replace std::sync::Mutex with parking_lot::Mutex
* Replace std::sync::RwLock with parking_lot::RwLock
2020-08-21 14:55:16 -07:00
Victor "multun" Collod
c38420f1e9 enforce clippy for all target and features 2020-08-16 07:20:06 -07:00
Victor "multun" Collod
d138647818 enforce cargo fmt --check 2020-08-16 05:02:06 -07:00
Victor "multun" Collod
1ec7183494 profiling: fix build 2020-08-16 02:06:59 -07:00
Fabian Würfl
458a169ad2 Add possibility to control num_threads and stack_size of rayon::ThreadPool 2020-08-14 19:15:53 +02:00
Carter Anderson
423c5e3e0f ecs: prepare for publishing 2020-08-09 18:16:12 -07:00
Carter Anderson
3d09459813 add more doc comments and clean up some public exports 2020-08-09 16:13:04 -07:00
Carter Anderson
f85ec04a48 ecs: prepare system ranges based on stage and thread locals 2020-07-30 13:19:55 -07:00