Commit graph

5611 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
MiniaczQ
fc93e13c36
Populated (query) system param (#15488)
# Objective

Add a `Populated` system parameter that acts like `Query`, but prevents
system from running if there are no matching entities.

Fixes: #15302

## Solution

Implement the system param which newtypes the `Query`.
The only change is new validation, which fails if query is empty.

The new system param is used in `fallible_params` example.

## Testing

Ran `fallible_params` example.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2024-09-30 18:05:00 +00:00
Gino Valente
397f20e835
bevy_reflect: Generic parameter info (#15475)
# Objective

Currently, reflecting a generic type provides no information about the
generic parameters. This means that you can't get access to the type of
`T` in `Foo<T>` without creating custom type data (we do this for
[`ReflectHandle`](https://docs.rs/bevy/0.14.2/bevy/asset/struct.ReflectHandle.html#method.asset_type_id)).

## Solution

This PR makes it so that generic type parameters and generic const
parameters are tracked in a `Generics` struct stored on the `TypeInfo`
for a type.

For example, `struct Foo<T, const N: usize>` will store `T` and `N` as a
`TypeParamInfo` and `ConstParamInfo`, respectively.

The stored information includes:

- The name of the generic parameter (i.e. `T`, `N`, etc.)
- The type of the generic parameter (remember that we're dealing with
monomorphized types, so this will actually be a concrete type)
- The default type/value, if any (e.g. `f32` in `T = f32` or `10` in
`const N: usize = 10`)

### Caveats

The only requirement for this to work is that the user does not opt-out
of the automatic `TypePath` derive with `#[reflect(type_path = false)]`.

Doing so prevents the macro code from 100% knowing that the generic type
implements `TypePath`. This in turn means the generated `Typed` impl
can't add generics to the type.

There are two solutions for this—both of which I think we should explore
in a future PR:

1. We could just not use `TypePath`. This would mean that we can't store
the `Type` of the generic, but we can at least store the `TypeId`.
2. We could provide a way to opt out of the automatic `Typed` derive
with a `#[reflect(typed = false)]` attribute. This would allow users to
manually implement `Typed` to add whatever generic information they need
(e.g. skipping a parameter that can't implement `TypePath` while the
rest can).

I originally thought about making `Generics` an enum with `Generic`,
`NonGeneric`, and `Unavailable` variants to signify whether there are
generics, no generics, or generics that cannot be added due to opting
out of `TypePath`. I ultimately decided against this as I think it adds
a bit too much complexity for such an uncommon problem.

Additionally, user's don't necessarily _have_ to know the generics of a
type, so just skipping them should generally be fine for now.

## Testing

You can test locally by running:

```
cargo test --package bevy_reflect
```

---

## Showcase

You can now access generic parameters via `TypeInfo`!

```rust
#[derive(Reflect)]
struct MyStruct<T, const N: usize>([T; N]);

let generics = MyStruct::<f32, 10>::type_info().generics();

// Get by index:
let t = generics.get(0).unwrap();
assert_eq!(t.name(), "T");
assert!(t.ty().is::<f32>());
assert!(!t.is_const());

// Or by name:
let n = generics.get_named("N").unwrap();
assert_eq!(n.name(), "N");
assert!(n.ty().is::<usize>());
assert!(n.is_const());
```

You can even access parameter defaults:

```rust
#[derive(Reflect)]
struct MyStruct<T = String, const N: usize = 10>([T; N]);

let generics = MyStruct::<f32, 5>::type_info().generics();

let GenericInfo::Type(info) = generics.get_named("T").unwrap() else {
    panic!("expected a type parameter");
};

let default = info.default().unwrap();

assert!(default.is::<String>());

let GenericInfo::Const(info) = generics.get_named("N").unwrap() else {
    panic!("expected a const parameter");
};

let default = info.default().unwrap();

assert_eq!(default.downcast_ref::<usize>().unwrap(), &10);
```
2024-09-30 17:58:37 +00:00
Matty
8bcda3d2e8
Basic integration of cubic spline curves with the Curve API (#15469)
# Objective

We introduced the fancy Curve API earlier in this version. The goal of
this PR is to provide a level of integration between that API and the
existing spline constructions in `bevy_math`.

Note that this PR only covers the integration of position-sampling via
the `Curve` API. Other (substantially more complex) planned work will
introduce general facilities for handling derivatives.

## Solution

`CubicSegment`, `CubicCurve`, `RationalSegment`, and `RationalCurve` all
now implement `Curve`, using their `position` function to sample the
output.

Additionally, some documentation has been updated/corrected, and
`Serialize`/`Deserialize` derives have been added for all the curve
structs. (Note that there are some barriers to automatic registration of
`ReflectSerialize`/`ReflectSerialize` involving generics that have not
been resolved in this PR.)

---

## Migration Guide

The `RationalCurve::domain` method has been renamed to
`RationalCurve::length`. Calling `.domain()` on a `RationalCurve` now
returns its entire domain as an `Interval`.
2024-09-30 17:52:07 +00:00
Erik Živković
72aaa41603
Remove render_resource_wrapper (#15441)
# Objective

* Remove all uses of render_resource_wrapper.
* Make it easier to share a `wgpu::Device` between Bevy and application
code.

## Solution

Removed the `render_resource_wrapper` macro.

To improve the `RenderCreation:: Manual ` API, `ErasedRenderDevice` was
replaced by `Arc`. Unfortunately I had to introduce one more usage of
`WgpuWrapper` which seems like an unwanted constraint on the caller.

## Testing

- Did you test these changes? If so, how?
    - Ran `cargo test`.
    - Ran a few examples.
    - Used `RenderCreation::Manual` in my own project
    - Exercised `RenderCreation::Automatic` through examples

- Are there any parts that need more testing?
    - No

- How can other people (reviewers) test your changes? Is there anything
specific they need to know?
    - Run examples
    - Use `RenderCreation::Manual` in their own project
2024-09-30 17:37:07 +00:00
Josh Robson Chase
f97eba2082
Add VisitEntities for generic and reflectable Entity iteration (#15425)
# Objective

- Provide a generic and _reflectable_ way to iterate over contained
entities

## Solution

Adds two new traits:

* `VisitEntities`: Reflectable iteration, accepts a closure rather than
producing an iterator. Implemented by default for `IntoIterator`
implementing types. A proc macro is also provided.
* A `Mut` variant of the above. Its derive macro uses the same field
attribute to avoid repetition.

## Testing

Added a test for `VisitEntities` that also transitively tests its derive
macro as well as the default `MapEntities` impl.
2024-09-30 17:32:03 +00:00
charlotte
40c26f80aa
Gpu readback (#15419)
# Objective

Adds a new `Readback` component to request for readback of a
`Handle<Image>` or `Handle<ShaderStorageBuffer>` to the CPU in a future
frame.

## Solution

We track the `Readback` component and allocate a target buffer to write
the gpu resource into and map it back asynchronously, which then fires a
trigger on the entity in the main world. This proccess is asynchronous,
and generally takes a few frames.

## Showcase

```rust
let mut buffer = ShaderStorageBuffer::from(vec![0u32; 16]);
buffer.buffer_description.usage |= BufferUsages::COPY_SRC;
let buffer = buffers.add(buffer);

commands
    .spawn(Readback::buffer(buffer.clone()))
    .observe(|trigger: Trigger<ReadbackComplete>| {
        info!("Buffer data from previous frame {:?}", trigger.event());
    });
```

---------

Co-authored-by: Kristoffer Søholm <k.soeholm@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: IceSentry <IceSentry@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-30 17:28:55 +00:00
TheBigCheese
dd92a7705d
Small addition to World::flush_commands explaining how spawn will cause it to panic. (#15411)
# Objective
`World::flush_commands` will cause a panic with `error[B0003]: Could not
insert a bundle [...] for entity [...] because it doesn't exist in this
World` if there was a `spawn` command in the queue and you should
instead use `flush` for this but this isn't mentioned in the docs

## Solution
Add a note to the docs suggesting to use `World::flush` in this context.
This error doesn't appear to happen with `spawn_batch` so I didn't add
that to the note although you can cause it with
`commands.spawn_empty().insert(...)` but I wasn't sure that was worth
the documentation complexity as it is pretty unlikely (and equivalent to
`commands.spawn(...)`.
2024-09-30 17:23:52 +00:00
andriyDev
04d5685889
Make drain take a mutable borrow instead of Box<Self> for reflected Map, List, and Set. (#15406)
# Objective

Fixes #15185.

# Solution

Change `drain` to take a `&mut self` for most reflected types.

Some notable exceptions to this change are `Array` and `Tuple`. These
types don't make sense with `drain` taking a mutable borrow since they
can't get "smaller". Also `BTreeMap` doesn't have a `drain` function, so
we have to pop elements off one at a time.

## Testing

- The existing tests are sufficient.

---

## Migration Guide

- `reflect::Map`, `reflect::List`, and `reflect::Set` all now take a
`&mut self` instead of a `Box<Self>`. Callers of these traits should add
`&mut` before their boxes, and implementers of these traits should
update to match.
2024-09-30 17:19:13 +00:00
Clar Fon
af9b073b0f
Split TextureAtlasSources out of TextureAtlasLayout and make TextureAtlasLayout serializable (#15344)
# Objective

Mostly covers the first point in
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/13713#issuecomment-2364786694

The idea here is that a lot of people want to load their own texture
atlases, and many of them do this by deserializing some custom version
of `TextureAtlasLayout`. This makes that a little easier by providing
`serde` impls for them.

## Solution

In order to make `TextureAtlasLayout` serializable, the custom texture
mappings that are added by `TextureAtlasBuilder` were separated into
their own type, `TextureAtlasSources`. The inner fields are made public
so people can create their own version of this type, although because it
embeds asset IDs, it's not as easily serializable. In particular,
atlases that are loaded directly (e.g. sprite sheets) will not have a
copy of this map, and so, don't need to construct it at all.

As an aside, since this is the very first thing in `bevy_sprite` with
`serde` impls, I've added a `serialize` feature to the crate and made
sure it gets activated when the `serialize` feature is enabled on the
parent `bevy` crate.

## Testing

I was kind of shocked that there isn't anywhere in the code besides a
single example that actually used this functionality, so, it was
relatively straightforward to do.

In #13713, among other places, folks have mentioned adding custom
serialization into their pipelines. It would be nice to hear from people
whether this change matches what they're doing in their code, and if
it's relatively seamless to adapt to. I suspect that the answer is yes,
but, that's mainly the only other kind of testing that can be added.

## Migration Guide

`TextureAtlasBuilder` no longer stores a mapping back to the original
images in `TextureAtlasLayout`; that functionality has been added to a
new struct, `TextureAtlasSources`, instead. This also means that the
signature for `TextureAtlasBuilder::finish` has changed, meaning that
calls of the form:

```rust
let (atlas_layout, image) = builder.build()?;
```

Will now change to the form:

```rust
let (atlas_layout, atlas_sources, image) = builder.build()?;
```

And instead of performing a reverse-lookup from the layout, like so:

```rust
let atlas_layout_handle = texture_atlases.add(atlas_layout.clone());
let index = atlas_layout.get_texture_index(&my_handle);
let handle = TextureAtlas {
    layout: atlas_layout_handle,
    index,
};
```

You can perform the lookup from the sources instead:

```rust
let atlas_layout = texture_atlases.add(atlas_layout);
let index = atlas_sources.get_texture_index(&my_handle);
let handle = TextureAtlas {
    layout: atlas_layout,
    index,
};
```

Additionally, `TextureAtlasSources` also has a convenience method,
`handle`, which directly combines the index and an existing
`TextureAtlasLayout` handle into a new `TextureAtlas`:

```rust
let atlas_layout = texture_atlases.add(atlas_layout);
let handle = atlas_sources.handle(atlas_layout, &my_handle);
```

## Extra notes

In the future, it might make sense to combine the three types returned
by `TextureAtlasBuilder` into their own struct, just so that people
don't need to assign variable names to all three parts. In particular,
when creating a version that can be loaded directly (like #11873), we
could probably use this new type.
2024-09-30 17:11:56 +00:00
s-puig
4a1645bb8a
Fix bevy_picking sprite backend panic in out of bounds atlas index (#15202)
# Objective

- Fix panic when atlas index is out of bounds
- Took the chance to clean it up a bit

## Solution

- Use texture dimensions like rendering pipeline. Dropped atlas layouts
and indexes out of bounds are shown as a sprite.

## Testing

Used sprite_picking example, drop layout and/or use indexes out of
bounds.
2024-09-30 17:03:31 +00:00
Giacomo Stevanato
0d751e8809
Use HashTable in DynamicMap and fix bug in remove (#15158)
# Objective

- `DynamicMap` currently uses an `HashMap` from a `u64` hash to the
entry index in a `Vec`. This is incorrect in the presence of hash
collisions, so let's fix it;
- `DynamicMap::remove` was also buggy, as it didn't fix up the indexes
of the other elements after removal. Fix that up as well and add a
regression test.

## Solution

- Use `HashTable` in `DynamicMap` to distinguish entries that have the
same hash by using `reflect_partial_eq`, bringing it more in line with
what `DynamicSet` does;
- Reimplement `DynamicMap::remove` to properly fix up the index of moved
elements after the removal.

## Testing

- A regression test was added for the `DynamicMap::remove` issue.

---

Some kinda related considerations: the use of a separate `Vec` for
storing the entries adds some complications that I'm not sure are worth.
This is mainly used to implement an efficient `get_at`, which is relied
upon by `MapIter`. However both `HashMap` and `BTreeMap` implement
`get_at` inefficiently (and cannot do so efficiently), leading to a
`O(N^2)` complexity for iterating them. This could be removed in favor
of a `Box<dyn Iterator>` like it's done in `DynamicSet`.
2024-09-30 17:02:10 +00:00
Chris Russell
86e5a5ad9c
Reorganize SystemParamBuilder docs and examples. (#15102)
# Objective

Improve the documentation of `SystemParamBuilder`. Not all builder types
have documentation, and the documentation is spread around and not
linked together well.

## Solution

Reorganize `SystemParamBuilder` docs and examples. All builder types now
have their own examples, and the list of builder types is linked from
the `SystemParamBuilder` trait. Add some examples to `FilteredEntityRef`
and `FilteredEntityMut` so that `QueryParamBuilder` can reference them.
2024-09-30 16:59:52 +00:00
akimakinai
2ec164d279
Clear view attachments before resizing window surfaces (#15087)
# Objective

- Fixes #15077

## Solution

- Clears `ViewTargetAttachments` resource every frame before
`create_surfaces` system instead, which was previously done after
`extract_windows`.

## Testing

- Confirmed that examples no longer panic on window resizing with DX12
backend.
- `screenshot` example keeps working after this change.
2024-09-30 16:58:04 +00:00
Robert Walter
ff308488fe
add more Curve adaptors (#14794)
# Objective

This implements another item on the way to complete the `Curves`
implementation initiative

Citing @mweatherley 

> Curve adaptors for making a curve repeat or ping-pong would be useful.

This adds three widely applicable adaptors:

- `ReverseCurve` "plays" the curve backwards
- `RepeatCurve` to repeat the curve for `n` times where `n` in `[0,inf)`
- `ForeverCurve` which extends the curves domain to `EVERYWHERE`
- `PingPongCurve` (name wip (?)) to chain the curve with it's reverse.
This would be achievable with `ReverseCurve` and `ChainCurve`, but it
would require the use of `by_ref` which can be restrictive in some
scenarios where you'd rather just consume the curve. Users can still
create the same effect by combination of the former two, but since this
will be most likely a very typical adaptor we should also provide it on
the library level. (Why it's typical: you can create a single period of
common waves with it pretty easily, think square wave (= pingpong +
step), triangle wave ( = pingpong + linear), etc.)
- `ContinuationCurve` which chains two curves but also makes sure that
the samples of the second curve are translated so that
`sample(first.end) == sample(second.start)`

## Solution

Implement the adaptors above. (More suggestions are welcome!)

## Testing

- [x] add simple tests. One per adaptor

---------

Co-authored-by: eckz <567737+eckz@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Matty <2975848+mweatherley@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: IQuick 143 <IQuick143cz@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Matty <weatherleymatthew@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2024-09-30 16:55:32 +00:00
Sou1gh0st
78a3aae81b
feat(gltf): add name component to gltf mesh primitive (#13912)
# Objective

- fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/13473

## Solution

- When a single mesh is assigned multiple materials, it is divided into
several primitive nodes, with each primitive assigned a unique material.
Presently, these primitives are named using the format Mesh.index, which
complicates querying. To improve this, we can assign a specific name to
each primitive based on the material’s name, since each primitive
corresponds to one material exclusively.

## Testing

- I have included a simple example which shows how to query a material
and mesh part based on the new name component.

## Changelog
- adds `GltfMaterialName` component to the mesh entity of the gltf
primitive node.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2024-09-30 16:51:52 +00:00
MiniaczQ
5289e18e0b
System param validation for observers, system registry and run once (#15526)
# Objective

Fixes #15394

## Solution

Observers now validate params.

System registry has a new error variant for when system running fails
due to invalid parameters.

Run once now returns a `Result<Out, RunOnceError>` instead of `Out`.
This is more inline with system registry, which also returns a result.

I'll address warning messages in #15500.

## Testing

Added one test for each case.

---

## Migration Guide

- `RunSystemOnce::run_system_once` and
`RunSystemOnce::run_system_once_with` now return a `Result<Out>` instead
of just `Out`

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Zachary Harrold <zac@harrold.com.au>
2024-09-30 01:00:39 +00:00
Sou1gh0st
39d96ef0fd
Implement volumetric fog support for both point lights and spotlights (#15361)
# Objective
- Fixes: https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/14451

## Solution
- Adding volumetric fog sampling code for both point lights and
spotlights.

## Testing
- I have modified the example of volumetric_fog.rs by adding a
volumetric point light and a volumetric spotlight.


https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/3eeb77a0-f22d-40a6-a48a-2dd75d55a877
2024-09-29 21:30:53 +00:00
JMS55
9cc7e7c080
Meshlet screenspace-derived tangents (#15084)
* Save 16 bytes per vertex by calculating tangents in the shader at
runtime, rather than storing them in the vertex data.
* Based on https://jcgt.org/published/0009/03/04,
https://www.jeremyong.com/graphics/2023/12/16/surface-gradient-bump-mapping.
* Fixed visbuffer resolve to use the updated algorithm that flips ddy
correctly
* Added some more docs about meshlet material limitations, and some
TODOs about transforming UV coordinates for the future.


![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/222d8192-8c82-4d77-945d-53670a503761)

For testing add a normal map to the bunnies with StandardMaterial like
below, and then test that on both main and this PR (make sure to
download the correct bunny for each). Results should be mostly
identical.

```rust
normal_map_texture: Some(asset_server.load_with_settings(
    "textures/BlueNoise-Normal.png",
    |settings: &mut ImageLoaderSettings| settings.is_srgb = false,
)),
```
2024-09-29 18:39:25 +00:00
hshrimp
8316d89699
rename QuerySingle to Single (#15507)
# Objective

- Fixes #15504
2024-09-29 03:26:28 +00:00
Benjamin Brienen
bd20382a4a
Fix regression in bevy_gltf build (#15512)
# Objective

Fixes #15503

## Solution

Move the use

## Testing

Compiled with `cargo build --no-default-features --features bevy_gltf`
successfully.

## Showcase


![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/b5637e0e-2af9-4b8e-bf24-b378775d3f10)
2024-09-29 02:23:11 +00:00
Pablo Reinhardt
c32e0b9ec2
Allow registering of resources via ReflectResource / ReflectComponent (#15496)
# Objective

- Resolves #15453
## Solution

- Added new `World::resource_id` and `World::register_resource` methods
to support this feature
- Added new `ReflectResource::register_resource` method, and new pointer
to this new function
- Added new `ReflectComponent::register_component`

## Testing

- Tested this locally, but couldn't test the entire crate locally, just
this new feature, expect that CI will do the rest of the work.

---

## Showcase


```rs
#[derive(Component, Reflect)]
#[reflect(Component)]
struct MyComp;

let mut world = World::new();
let mut registry = TypeRegistration::of::<MyComp>();
registry.insert::<ReflectComponent>(FromType::<MyComp>::from_type());
let data = registry.data::<ReflectComponent>().unwrap();

// Its now possible to register the Component in the world this way
let component_id = data.register_component(&mut world);

// They will be the same
assert_eq!(component_id, world.component_id::<MyComp>().unwrap());
```

```rs
#[derive(Resource, Reflect)]
#[reflect(Resource)]
struct MyResource;

let mut world = World::new();
let mut registry = TypeRegistration::of::<MyResource>();
registry.insert::<ReflectResource>(FromType::<MyResource>::from_type());
let data = registry.data::<ReflectResource>().unwrap();

// Same with resources
let component_id = data.register_resource(&mut world);

// They match
assert_eq!(component_id, world.resource_id::<MyResource>().unwrap());
```
2024-09-28 20:49:53 +00:00
MiniaczQ
c1486654d7
QuerySingle family of system params (#15476)
# Objective

Add the following system params:
- `QuerySingle<D, F>` - Valid if only one matching entity exists,
- `Option<QuerySingle<D, F>>` - Valid if zero or one matching entity
exists.

As @chescock pointed out, we don't need `Mut` variants.

Fixes: #15264

## Solution

Implement the type and both variants of system params.
Also implement `ReadOnlySystemParam` for readonly queries.

Added a new ECS example `fallible_params` which showcases `SingleQuery`
usage.
In the future we might want to add `NonEmptyQuery`,
`NonEmptyEventReader` and `Res` to it (or maybe just stop at mentioning
it).

## Testing

Tested with the example.
There is a lot of warning spam so we might want to implement #15391.
2024-09-28 19:35:27 +00:00
François Mockers
89925ee351
bump async-channel to 2.3.0 (#15497)
# Objective

- We use a feature introduced in async-channel 2.3.0, `force_send`
- Existing project fail to compile as they have a lock file on the 2.2.X

## Solution

- Bump async-channel
2024-09-28 19:21:59 +00:00
Dokkae
29edad4690
Improve unclear docs about spawn(_batch) and ParallelCommands (#15491)
> [!NOTE]
> This is my first PR, so if something is incorrect
> or missing, please let me know :3

# Objective

- Clarifies `spawn`, `spawn_batch` and `ParallelCommands` docs about
performance and use cases
- Fixes #15472

## Solution

Add comments to `spawn`, `spawn_batch` and `ParallelCommands` to clarify
the
intended use case and link to other/better ways of doing spawning things
for
certain use cases.
2024-09-28 19:13:27 +00:00
hshrimp
7ee5143d45
Remove Return::Unit variant (#15484)
# Objective

- Fixes #15447 

## Solution

- Remove the `Return::Unit` variant and use a `Return::Owned` variant
holding a unit `()` type.

## Migration Guide

- Removed the `Return::Unit` variant; use `Return::unit()` instead.

---------

Co-authored-by: Gino Valente <49806985+MrGVSV@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-28 16:26:55 +00:00
JohnTheCoolingFan
1175cf7920
Fix ReflectKind description wording (#15498)
# Objective

The "zero-sized" description was outdated and misleading.

## Solution

Changed the description to just say that it's an enumeration (an enum)
2024-09-28 16:26:00 +00:00
Antony
05d20139aa
Simplify AnimatableProperty::Property trait bounds (#15495)
# Objective

- Fixes #15392.

## Solution

- Use `Reflectable` in place of `GetTypeRegistration + Reflect +
TypePath + Typed`.
2024-09-28 15:04:00 +00:00
akimakinai
4a013b687a
Use try_insert in on_remove_cursor_icon (#15492)
# Objective

- Fixes #15490 introduced in #15094.

## Solution

- Use non-panicking `try_insert`

## Testing

- Closing window with `CursorIcon` no longer crashes after this change
(confirmed with `window_settings` example)
2024-09-28 12:30:01 +00:00
charlotte
df23b937cc
Make CosmicFontSystem and SwashCache pub resources. (#15479)
# Objective

In nannou, we'd like to be able to access the [outline
commands](https://docs.rs/cosmic-text/latest/cosmic_text/struct.SwashCache.html#method.get_outline_commands)
from swash, while still benefit from Bevy's management of font assets.

## Solution

Make `CosmicFontSystem` and  `SwashCache` pub resources.

## Testing

Ran some examples.
2024-09-28 00:00:27 +00:00
Zachary Harrold
6963b58eba
Modify derive_label to support no_std environments (#15465)
# Objective

- Contributes to #15460

## Solution

- Wrap `derive_label` `quote!` in an anonymous constant which contains
an `extern crate alloc` statement, allowing use of the `alloc` namespace
even when a user has not brought in the crate themselves.

## Testing

- CI passed locally.

## Notes

We can't generate code that uses `::std::boxed::Box` in `no_std`
environments, but we also can't rely on `::alloc::boxed::Box` either,
since the user might not have declared `extern crate alloc`. To resolve
this, the generated code is wrapped in an anonymous constant which
contains the `extern crate alloc` invocation.

This does mean the macro is no longer hygienic against cases where the
user provides an alternate `alloc` crate, however I believe this is an
acceptable compromise.

Additionally, this crate itself doesn't need to be `no_std`, it just
needs to _generate_ `no_std` compatible code.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2024-09-27 20:23:26 +00:00
Liam Gallagher
60cf7ca025
Refactor BRP to allow for 3rd-party transports (#15438)
## Objective

Closes #15408 (somewhat)

## Solution

- Moved the existing HTTP transport to its own module with its own
plugin (`RemoteHttpPlugin`) (disabled on WASM)
- Swapped out the `smol` crate for the smaller crates it re-exports to
make it easier to keep out non-wasm code (HTTP transport needs
`async-io` which can't build on WASM)
- Added a new public `BrpSender` resource holding the matching sender
for the `BrpReceiver`' (formally `BrpMailbox`). This allows other crates
to send `BrpMessage`'s to the "mailbox".

## Testing

TODO

---------

Co-authored-by: Matty <weatherleymatthew@gmail.com>
2024-09-27 20:09:46 +00:00
s-puig
e788e3bc83
Implement gamepads as entities (#12770)
# Objective

- Significantly improve the ergonomics of gamepads and allow new
features

Gamepads are a bit unergonomic to work with, they use resources but
unlike other inputs, they are not limited to a single gamepad, to get
around this it uses an identifier (Gamepad) to interact with anything
causing all sorts of issues.

1. There are too many: Gamepads, GamepadSettings, GamepadInfo,
ButtonInput<T>, 2 Axis<T>.
2. ButtonInput/Axis generic methods become really inconvenient to use
e.g. any_pressed()
3. GamepadButton/Axis structs are unnecessary boilerplate:

```rust
for gamepad in gamepads.iter() {
        if button_inputs.just_pressed(GamepadButton::new(gamepad, GamepadButtonType::South)) {
            info!("{:?} just pressed South", gamepad);
        } else if button_inputs.just_released(GamepadButton::new(gamepad, GamepadButtonType::South))
        {
            info!("{:?} just released South", gamepad);
        }
}
```
4. Projects often need to create resources to store the selected gamepad
and have to manually check if their gamepad is still valid anyways.

- Previously attempted by #3419 and #12674


## Solution

- Implement gamepads as entities.

Using entities solves all the problems above and opens new
possibilities.

1. Reduce boilerplate and allows iteration

```rust
let is_pressed = gamepads_buttons.iter().any(|buttons| buttons.pressed(GamepadButtonType::South))
```
2. ButtonInput/Axis generic methods become ergonomic again 
```rust
gamepad_buttons.any_just_pressed([GamepadButtonType::Start, GamepadButtonType::Select])
```
3. Reduces the number of public components significantly (Gamepad,
GamepadSettings, GamepadButtons, GamepadAxes)
4. Components are highly convenient. Gamepad optional features could now
be expressed naturally (`Option<Rumble> or Option<Gyro>`), allows devs
to attach their own components and filter them, so code like this
becomes possible:
```rust
fn move_player<const T: usize>(
    player: Query<&Transform, With<Player<T>>>,
    gamepads_buttons: Query<&GamepadButtons, With<Player<T>>>,
) {
    if let Ok(gamepad_buttons) = gamepads_buttons.get_single() {
        if gamepad_buttons.pressed(GamepadButtonType::South) {
            // move player
        }
    }
}
```
---

## Follow-up

- [ ] Run conditions?
- [ ] Rumble component

# Changelog

## Added

TODO

## Changed

TODO

## Removed

TODO


## Migration Guide

TODO

---------

Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
2024-09-27 20:07:20 +00:00
Joona Aalto
39d6a745d2
Migrate visibility to required components (#15474)
# Objective

The next step in the migration to required components: Deprecate
`VisibilityBundle` and make `Visibility` require `InheritedVisibility`
and `ViewVisibility`, as per the [chosen
proposal](https://hackmd.io/@bevy/required_components/%2FcO7JPSAQR5G0J_j5wNwtOQ).

## Solution

Deprecate `VisibilityBundle` and make `Visibility` require
`InheritedVisibility` and `ViewVisibility`.

I chose not to deprecate `SpatialBundle` yet, as doing so would mean
that we need to manually add `Visibility` to a bunch of places. It will
be nicer once meshes, sprites, lights, fog, and cameras have been
migrated, since they will require `Transform` and `Visibility` and
therefore not need manually added defaults for them.

---

## Migration Guide

Replace all insertions of `VisibilityBundle` with the `Visibility`
component. The other components required by it will now be inserted
automatically.
2024-09-27 19:06:16 +00:00
Chris Russell
2486343e87
Include AnimationTarget directly in the animation query rather than reading it through the EntityMut (#15413)
# Objective

Improve the performance of animation.  

`animate_targets` only does work for entities with a `AnimationTarget`
component, but the query it uses has no filters and matches all
archetypes, resulting in extra work checking and ignoring every other
entity in the world.

In addition, it uses `EntityMutExcept::get`, which has to look up the
`ComponentId` for `AnimationTarget` each time it's used.

Fixes #15412

## Solution

Instead of `entity_mut.get::<AnimationTarget>()`, add `&AnimationTarget`
to the query and read it directly. This requires adding
`AnimationTarget` to the list of exceptions in the `EntityMutExcept`.
Since the resulting type is getting long, add an alias for it.

This does mean that `AnimationTarget` is no longer available through
`entity`, which means it's not possible to animate the `AnimationTarget`
component itself.

## Testing

I ran performance traces of many_foxes comparing this branch to main.
Red is main, yellow is these changes:


![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/93ef7d70-5103-4952-86b9-312aafc53e5f)
2024-09-27 18:18:03 +00:00
Emerson Coskey
b04947d44f
Migrate bevy_transform to required components (#14964)
The first step in the migration to required components! This PR removes
`GlobalTransform` from all user-facing code, since it's now added
automatically wherever `Transform` is used.

## Testing

- None of the examples I tested were broken, and I assume breaking
transforms in any way would be visible *everywhere*

---

## Changelog

- Make `Transform` require `GlobalTransform`
~~- Remove `GlobalTransform` from all engine bundles~~
- Remove in-engine insertions of GlobalTransform and TransformBundle
- Deprecate `TransformBundle`
- update docs to reflect changes

## Migration Guide

Replace all insertions of `GlobalTransform` and/or `TransformBundle`
with `Transform` alone.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Tim <JustTheCoolDude@gmail.com>
2024-09-27 17:06:48 +00:00
Christian Hughes
a0c722ff4c
Reduce memory usage in component fetches and change detection filters (#15283)
## Objective

- Adopted #6396

## Solution

Same as #6396, we use a compile-time checked `StorageSwitch` union type
to select the fetch data based on the component's storage type, saving
>= 8 bytes per component fetch in a given query.

Note: We forego the Query iteration change as it exists in a slightly
different form now on main.

## Testing

- All current tests pass locally.

---------

Co-authored-by: james7132 <contact@jamessliu.com>
Co-authored-by: Chris Russell <8494645+chescock@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-27 14:06:40 +00:00
Zachary Harrold
d70595b667
Add core and alloc over std Lints (#15281)
# Objective

- Fixes #6370
- Closes #6581

## Solution

- Added the following lints to the workspace:
  - `std_instead_of_core`
  - `std_instead_of_alloc`
  - `alloc_instead_of_core`
- Used `cargo +nightly fmt` with [item level use
formatting](https://rust-lang.github.io/rustfmt/?version=v1.6.0&search=#Item%5C%3A)
to split all `use` statements into single items.
- Used `cargo clippy --workspace --all-targets --all-features --fix
--allow-dirty` to _attempt_ to resolve the new linting issues, and
intervened where the lint was unable to resolve the issue automatically
(usually due to needing an `extern crate alloc;` statement in a crate
root).
- Manually removed certain uses of `std` where negative feature gating
prevented `--all-features` from finding the offending uses.
- Used `cargo +nightly fmt` with [crate level use
formatting](https://rust-lang.github.io/rustfmt/?version=v1.6.0&search=#Crate%5C%3A)
to re-merge all `use` statements matching Bevy's previous styling.
- Manually fixed cases where the `fmt` tool could not re-merge `use`
statements due to conditional compilation attributes.

## Testing

- Ran CI locally

## Migration Guide

The MSRV is now 1.81. Please update to this version or higher.

## Notes

- This is a _massive_ change to try and push through, which is why I've
outlined the semi-automatic steps I used to create this PR, in case this
fails and someone else tries again in the future.
- Making this change has no impact on user code, but does mean Bevy
contributors will be warned to use `core` and `alloc` instead of `std`
where possible.
- This lint is a critical first step towards investigating `no_std`
options for Bevy.

---------

Co-authored-by: François Mockers <francois.mockers@vleue.com>
2024-09-27 00:59:59 +00:00
Mohamed Osama
4e7801388c
Rename UiPickingBackend to UiPickingBackendPlugin (#15462)
solves #15450
2024-09-27 00:50:06 +00:00
ickshonpe
0fe33c3bba
use precomputed border values (#15163)
# Objective

Fixes #15142

## Solution

* Moved all the UI border geometry calculations that were scattered
through the UI extraction functions into `ui_layout_system`.
* Added a `border: BorderRect` field to `Node` to store the border size
computed by `ui_layout_system`.
* Use the border values returned from Taffy rather than calculate them
ourselves during extraction.
* Removed the `logical_rect` and `physical_rect` methods from `Node` the
descriptions and namings are deceptive, it's better to create the rects
manually instead.
* Added a method `outline_radius` to `Node` that calculates the border
radius of outlines.
* For border values `ExtractedUiNode` takes `BorderRect` and
`ResolvedBorderRadius` now instead of raw `[f32; 4]` values and converts
them in `prepare_uinodes`.
* Removed some unnecessary scaling and clamping of border values
(#15142).
* Added a `BorderRect::ZERO` constant.
* Added an `outlined_node_size` method to `Node`.

## Testing

Added some non-uniform borders to the border example. Everything seems
to be in order:

<img width="626" alt="nub"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/258ed8b5-1a9e-4ac5-99c2-6bf25c0ef31c">

## Migration Guide

The `logical_rect` and `physical_rect` methods have been removed from
`Node`. Use `Rect::from_center_size` with the translation and node size
instead.

The types of the fields border and border_radius of `ExtractedUiNode`
have been changed to `BorderRect` and `ResolvedBorderRadius`
respectively.

---------

Co-authored-by: UkoeHB <37489173+UkoeHB@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: akimakinai <105044389+akimakinai@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-26 23:10:35 +00:00
hshrimp
35d10866b8
Rename init_component & friends (#15454)
# Objective

- Fixes #15451 

## Migration Guide

- `World::init_component` has been renamed to `register_component`.
- `World::init_component_with_descriptor` has been renamed to
`register_component_with_descriptor`.
- `World::init_bundle` has been renamed to `register_bundle`.
- `Components::init_component` has been renamed to `register_component`.
- `Components::init_component_with_descriptor` has been renamed to
`register_component_with_descriptor`.
- `Components::init_resource` has been renamed to `register_resource`.
- `Components::init_non_send` had been renamed to `register_non_send`.
2024-09-26 22:47:28 +00:00
poopy
5fcbdc137a
feature gate use bevy_animation in bevy_gltf (#15424)
# Objective

`bevy_gltf` have an instance where `use bevy_animation` is not behind
`#[cfg(feature = "bevy_animation")]`.

This resulted in a compile error when the feature is not enabled:
`failed to resolve: use of undeclared crate or module 'bevy_animation'`.

## Solution

move this instance of `use bevy_animation` behind the `cfg` attribute.

## Testing

I no longer get the error when compiling without the feature.
2024-09-26 13:40:24 +00:00
SpecificProtagonist
5e6b141c13
List components for QueryEntityError::QueryDoesNotMatch (#15435)
# Objective

Make it easier to debug why an entity doesn't match a query.

## Solution

List the entities components in `QueryEntityError::QueryDoesNotMatch`'s
message, e.g. `The query does not match the entity 0v1, which has
components foo::Bar, foo::Baz`.
This covers most cases as expected components are typically known and
filtering for change detection is rare when assessing a query by entity
id.

## Testing

Added a test confirming the new message matches the entity's components.

## Migration Guide

- `QueryEntityError` now has a lifetime. Convert it to a custom error if
you need to store it.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: poopy <gonesbird@gmail.com>
2024-09-26 13:31:11 +00:00
fernanlukban
eb92ba8815
fix observer docs (#15415)
# Objective

- #15331

## Solution

-Just changed it to Trigger since the function signature shows it's just
a wrapper trait

## Testing

Will let tests pass

---------

Co-authored-by: Fernan Lukban <fernanlukban@gmail.co>
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Antony <antony.m.3012@gmail.com>
2024-09-25 00:05:33 +00:00
Josh Robson Chase
fcddb54ce5
Fix for SceneEntityMapper + hooks panic (#15405)
# Objective

- Add a test case for #14300 

Fixes #14300

## Solution

`SceneEntityMapper` relies on operations on `Entities` that require
flushing in advance, such as `alloc` and `free`. Previously, it wasn't
calling `world.flush_entities()` itself and relied on its caller having
flushed beforehand. This wasn't an issue before observers and hooks were
released, since entity reservation was happening at expected times. Now
that hooks and observers are a thing, they can introduce a need to
flush.

We have a few options:
* Flush after each observer/hook run
* Flush between each paired observer/hook and operation that requires a
flush
* Flush before operations requiring it

The first option for this case seemed trickier to reason about than I
wanted, since it involved the `BundleInserter` and its
`UnsafeWorldCell`, and the second is generally harder to track down. The
third seemed the most straightforward and conventional, since we can see
a flush occurring at the start of a number of `World` methods.
Therefore, we're letting `SceneEntityMapper` be in charge of upholding
its own invariants and calling `flush_entities` when it's created.

## Testing

Added a new test case modeled after #14300
2024-09-24 17:37:23 +00:00
Giacomo Stevanato
fb9aaa1527
Follow up to cached run_system (#15410)
# Objective

- Fixes #15373
- Fixes
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/14920#issuecomment-2370428013

## Solution

- Make `IntoSystem::pipe` and `IntoSystem::map` return two new
(possibly-ZST) types that implement `IntoSystem` and whose `into_system`
method return the systems that were previously being returned by
`IntoSystem::pipe` and `IntoSystem::map`
- Don't eagerly call `IntoSystem::into_system` on the argument given to
`RunSystemCachedWith::new` to avoid losing its ZST-ness

## Testing

- Added a regression test for each issue

## Migration Guide

- `IntoSystem::pipe` and `IntoSystem::map` now return `IntoPipeSystem`
and `IntoAdapterSystem` instead of `PipeSystem` and `AdapterSystem`.
Most notably these types don't implement `System` but rather only
`IntoSystem`.
2024-09-24 17:35:44 +00:00
Clar Fon
efda7f3f9c
Simpler lint fixes: makes ci lints work but disables a lint for now (#15376)
Takes the first two commits from #15375 and adds suggestions from this
comment:
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/15375#issuecomment-2366968300

See #15375 for more reasoning/motivation.

## Rebasing (rerunning)

```rust
git switch simpler-lint-fixes
git reset --hard main
cargo fmt --all -- --unstable-features --config normalize_comments=true,imports_granularity=Crate
cargo fmt --all
git add --update
git commit --message "rustfmt"
cargo clippy --workspace --all-targets --all-features --fix
cargo fmt --all -- --unstable-features --config normalize_comments=true,imports_granularity=Crate
cargo fmt --all
git add --update
git commit --message "clippy"
git cherry-pick e6c0b94f6795222310fb812fa5c4512661fc7887
```
2024-09-24 11:42:59 +00:00
Patrick Walton
b5eebb3e36
Fix untyped asset loads after #14808. (#15399)
The logic in PR #14808 broke `bevy_asset_loader`, because calling
`AssetServer::load_untyped()` initiates a load of an asset of type
`LoadedUntypedAsset`, which doesn't match any asset loaders and
therefore fails. I reverted the lines that were causing the problem. The
resulting code seems to work, but I'm not sure if this was the correct
fix.
2024-09-24 11:31:36 +00:00
Josh Robson Chase
3d0f2409d5
bevy_ecs: flush entities after running observers and hooks in despawn (#15398)
# Objective

Fixes #14467

Observers and component lifecycle hooks are allowed to perform
operations that subsequently require `Entities` to be flushed, such as
reserving a new entity. If this occurs during an `on_remove` hook or an
`OnRemove` event trigger during an `EntityWorldMut::despawn`, a panic
will occur.

## Solution

Call `world.flush_entities()` after running `on_remove` hooks/observers
during `despawn`

## Testing

Added a new test that fails before the fix and succeeds afterward.
2024-09-24 01:08:10 +00:00
Gino Valente
1a41c736b3
bevy_reflect: Update EulerRot to match glam 0.29 (#15402)
# Objective

#15349 added an `impl_reflect!` for `glam::EulerRot`. This was done by
copying and pasting the enum definition from `glam` into `bevy_reflect`
so that the macro could interpret the variants.

However, as mentioned in the description for that PR, this would need to
be updated for `glam` 0.29, as it had not been updated yet.

#15249 came and updated `glam` to 0.29, but did not change these impls.
This is understandable as failing to do so doesn't cause any compile
errors.

This PR updates the definition and aims to make this silent breakage a
little less silent.

## Solution

Firstly, I updated the definition for `EulerRot` to match the one from
`glam`.

Secondly, I added the `assert_type_match` crate, which I created
specifically to solve this problem. By using this crate, we'll get a
compile time error if `glam` ever decides to change `EulerRot` again.

In the future we can consider using it for other types with this
problem, including in other crates (I'm pretty sure `bevy_window` and/or
`bevy_winit` also copy+paste some types). I made sure to use as few
dependencies as possible so everything should already be in-tree (it's
just `quote`, `proc-macro2`, and `syn` with default features).

## Testing

No tests added. CI should pass.

---

## Migration Guide

The reflection implementation for `EulerRot` has been updated to align
with `glam` 0.29. Please update any reflection-based usages accordingly.
2024-09-23 22:50:12 +00:00
Jonathan Nilsson
0ebd7fcdf4
Visibility range takes the model aabb into acount (#15164)
# Objective

I'm building a game where i generate a set of meshes where the transform
is identity, and in each mesh the vertices are offset to where the model
is. When adding visibility ranges to the models i noticed that they only
switched when the distance to the origin changed over the threshold and
all at the same time.

## Solution

I believe that each mesh gets a Aabb generated for use with visibility
testing. So we can use that aabb to calculate a more representative
distance to the mesh.

The code to transform the aabb is taken from the visibility sysyem.

## Testing
I tested the changes locally in my project.

Would you like me to write an example or a test somewhere?
Is there any other code that uses the visibility range, that i should
also update?
2024-09-23 20:38:26 +00:00
MiniaczQ
740d1cc9ff
Fix system param warnings on systems that cannot run anyways (#15397)
# Objective

Fix "system skipped" warnings when validation fails on systems that
wouldn't run because of run conditions.

## Solution

> I think the error is from a system defined as:
> 
> ```rust
> no_gpu_preprocessing::batch_and_prepare_sorted_render_phase::<SPI,
GFBD>
> .run_if(resource_exists::<BatchedInstanceBuffer<GFBD::BufferData>>),
> ```
> 
> So the `run_if` was preventing the panics. Maybe we need to skip
validation if `!system_conditions_met`, or at least silence the warning
in that case.

*By @chescock in
https://discord.com/channels/691052431525675048/692572690833473578/1287865365312831562*

Validation of system is skipped if the system was already skipped by run
conditions.

## Testing

Ran alien addict example, no more warnings.
2024-09-23 20:25:49 +00:00
targrub
de3c70a8d3
Update `glam to 0.29, encase` to 0.10. (#15249)
# Objective

Updating ``glam`` to 0.29, ``encase`` to 0.10.

## Solution

Update the necessary ``Cargo.toml`` files.

## Testing

Ran ``cargo run -p ci`` on Windows; no issues came up.

---------

Co-authored-by: aecsocket <aecsocket@tutanota.com>
2024-09-23 19:44:02 +00:00
Matty
89e98b208f
Initial implementation of the Bevy Remote Protocol (Adopted) (#14880)
# Objective

Adopted from #13563.

The goal is to implement the Bevy Remote Protocol over HTTP/JSON,
allowing the ECS to be interacted with remotely.

## Solution

At a high level, there are really two separate things that have been
undertaken here:
1. First, `RemotePlugin` has been created, which has the effect of
embedding a [JSON-RPC](https://www.jsonrpc.org/specification) endpoint
into a Bevy application.
2. Second, the [Bevy Remote Protocol
verbs](https://gist.github.com/coreh/1baf6f255d7e86e4be29874d00137d1d#file-bevy-remote-protocol-md)
(excluding `POLL`) have been implemented as remote methods for that
JSON-RPC endpoint under a Bevy-exclusive namespace (e.g. `bevy/get`,
`bevy/list`, etc.).

To avoid some repetition, here is the crate-level documentation, which
explains the request/response structure, built-in-methods, and custom
method configuration:
<details>
  <summary>Click to view crate-level docs</summary>

```rust
//! An implementation of the Bevy Remote Protocol over HTTP and JSON, to allow
//! for remote control of a Bevy app.
//!
//! Adding the [`RemotePlugin`] to your [`App`] causes Bevy to accept
//! connections over HTTP (by default, on port 15702) while your app is running.
//! These *remote clients* can inspect and alter the state of the
//! entity-component system. Clients are expected to `POST` JSON requests to the
//! root URL; see the `client` example for a trivial example of use.
//!
//! The Bevy Remote Protocol is based on the JSON-RPC 2.0 protocol.
//!
//! ## Request objects
//!
//! A typical client request might look like this:
//!
//! ```json
//! {
//!     "method": "bevy/get",
//!     "id": 0,
//!     "params": {
//!         "entity": 4294967298,
//!         "components": [
//!             "bevy_transform::components::transform::Transform"
//!         ]
//!     }
//! }
//! ```
//!
//! The `id` and `method` fields are required. The `param` field may be omitted
//! for certain methods:
//!
//! * `id` is arbitrary JSON data. The server completely ignores its contents,
//!   and the client may use it for any purpose. It will be copied via
//!   serialization and deserialization (so object property order, etc. can't be
//!   relied upon to be identical) and sent back to the client as part of the
//!   response.
//!
//! * `method` is a string that specifies one of the possible [`BrpRequest`]
//!   variants: `bevy/query`, `bevy/get`, `bevy/insert`, etc. It's case-sensitive.
//!
//! * `params` is parameter data specific to the request.
//!
//! For more information, see the documentation for [`BrpRequest`].
//! [`BrpRequest`] is serialized to JSON via `serde`, so [the `serde`
//! documentation] may be useful to clarify the correspondence between the Rust
//! structure and the JSON format.
//!
//! ## Response objects
//!
//! A response from the server to the client might look like this:
//!
//! ```json
//! {
//!     "jsonrpc": "2.0",
//!     "id": 0,
//!     "result": {
//!         "bevy_transform::components::transform::Transform": {
//!             "rotation": { "x": 0.0, "y": 0.0, "z": 0.0, "w": 1.0 },
//!             "scale": { "x": 1.0, "y": 1.0, "z": 1.0 },
//!             "translation": { "x": 0.0, "y": 0.5, "z": 0.0 }
//!         }
//!     }
//! }
//! ```
//!
//! The `id` field will always be present. The `result` field will be present if the
//! request was successful. Otherwise, an `error` field will replace it.
//!
//! * `id` is the arbitrary JSON data that was sent as part of the request. It
//!   will be identical to the `id` data sent during the request, modulo
//!   serialization and deserialization. If there's an error reading the `id` field,
//!   it will be `null`.
//!
//! * `result` will be present if the request succeeded and will contain the response
//!   specific to the request.
//!
//! * `error` will be present if the request failed and will contain an error object
//!   with more information about the cause of failure.
//!
//! ## Error objects
//!
//! An error object might look like this:
//!
//! ```json
//! {
//!     "code": -32602,
//!     "message": "Missing \"entity\" field"
//! }
//! ```
//!
//! The `code` and `message` fields will always be present. There may also be a `data` field.
//!
//! * `code` is an integer representing the kind of an error that happened. Error codes documented
//!   in the [`error_codes`] module.
//!
//! * `message` is a short, one-sentence human-readable description of the error.
//!
//! * `data` is an optional field of arbitrary type containing additional information about the error.
//!
//! ## Built-in methods
//!
//! The Bevy Remote Protocol includes a number of built-in methods for accessing and modifying data
//! in the ECS. Each of these methods uses the `bevy/` prefix, which is a namespace reserved for
//! BRP built-in methods.
//!
//! ### bevy/get
//!
//! Retrieve the values of one or more components from an entity.
//!
//! `params`:
//! - `entity`: The ID of the entity whose components will be fetched.
//! - `components`: An array of fully-qualified type names of components to fetch.
//!
//! `result`: A map associating each type name to its value on the requested entity.
//!
//! ### bevy/query
//!
//! Perform a query over components in the ECS, returning all matching entities and their associated
//! component values.
//!
//! All of the arrays that comprise this request are optional, and when they are not provided, they
//! will be treated as if they were empty.
//!
//! `params`:
//! `params`:
//! - `data`:
//!   - `components` (optional): An array of fully-qualified type names of components to fetch.
//!   - `option` (optional): An array of fully-qualified type names of components to fetch optionally.
//!   - `has` (optional): An array of fully-qualified type names of components whose presence will be
//!      reported as boolean values.
//! - `filter` (optional):
//!   - `with` (optional): An array of fully-qualified type names of components that must be present
//!     on entities in order for them to be included in results.
//!   - `without` (optional): An array of fully-qualified type names of components that must *not* be
//!     present on entities in order for them to be included in results.
//!
//! `result`: An array, each of which is an object containing:
//! - `entity`: The ID of a query-matching entity.
//! - `components`: A map associating each type name from `components`/`option` to its value on the matching
//!   entity if the component is present.
//! - `has`: A map associating each type name from `has` to a boolean value indicating whether or not the
//!   entity has that component. If `has` was empty or omitted, this key will be omitted in the response.
//!
//! ### bevy/spawn
//!
//! Create a new entity with the provided components and return the resulting entity ID.
//!
//! `params`:
//! - `components`: A map associating each component's fully-qualified type name with its value.
//!
//! `result`:
//! - `entity`: The ID of the newly spawned entity.
//!
//! ### bevy/destroy
//!
//! Despawn the entity with the given ID.
//!
//! `params`:
//! - `entity`: The ID of the entity to be despawned.
//!
//! `result`: null.
//!
//! ### bevy/remove
//!
//! Delete one or more components from an entity.
//!
//! `params`:
//! - `entity`: The ID of the entity whose components should be removed.
//! - `components`: An array of fully-qualified type names of components to be removed.
//!
//! `result`: null.
//!
//! ### bevy/insert
//!
//! Insert one or more components into an entity.
//!
//! `params`:
//! - `entity`: The ID of the entity to insert components into.
//! - `components`: A map associating each component's fully-qualified type name with its value.
//!
//! `result`: null.
//!
//! ### bevy/reparent
//!
//! Assign a new parent to one or more entities.
//!
//! `params`:
//! - `entities`: An array of entity IDs of entities that will be made children of the `parent`.
//! - `parent` (optional): The entity ID of the parent to which the child entities will be assigned.
//!   If excluded, the given entities will be removed from their parents.
//!
//! `result`: null.
//!
//! ### bevy/list
//!
//! List all registered components or all components present on an entity.
//!
//! When `params` is not provided, this lists all registered components. If `params` is provided,
//! this lists only those components present on the provided entity.
//!
//! `params` (optional):
//! - `entity`: The ID of the entity whose components will be listed.
//!
//! `result`: An array of fully-qualified type names of components.
//!
//! ## Custom methods
//!
//! In addition to the provided methods, the Bevy Remote Protocol can be extended to include custom
//! methods. This is primarily done during the initialization of [`RemotePlugin`], although the
//! methods may also be extended at runtime using the [`RemoteMethods`] resource.
//!
//! ### Example
//! ```ignore
//! fn main() {
//!     App::new()
//!         .add_plugins(DefaultPlugins)
//!         .add_plugins(
//!             // `default` adds all of the built-in methods, while `with_method` extends them
//!             RemotePlugin::default()
//!                 .with_method("super_user/cool_method".to_owned(), path::to::my:🆒:handler)
//!                 // ... more methods can be added by chaining `with_method`
//!         )
//!         .add_systems(
//!             // ... standard application setup
//!         )
//!         .run();
//! }
//! ```
//!
//! The handler is expected to be a system-convertible function which takes optional JSON parameters
//! as input and returns a [`BrpResult`]. This means that it should have a type signature which looks
//! something like this:
//! ```
//! # use serde_json::Value;
//! # use bevy_ecs::prelude::{In, World};
//! # use bevy_remote::BrpResult;
//! fn handler(In(params): In<Option<Value>>, world: &mut World) -> BrpResult {
//!     todo!()
//! }
//! ```
//!
//! Arbitrary system parameters can be used in conjunction with the optional `Value` input. The
//! handler system will always run with exclusive `World` access.
//!
//! [the `serde` documentation]: https://serde.rs/
```

</details>

### Message lifecycle

At a high level, the lifecycle of client-server interactions is
something like this:
1. The client sends one or more `BrpRequest`s. The deserialized version
of that is just the Rust representation of a JSON-RPC request, and it
looks like this:
```rust
pub struct BrpRequest {
    /// The action to be performed. Parsing is deferred for the sake of error reporting.
    pub method: Option<Value>,

    /// Arbitrary data that will be returned verbatim to the client as part of
    /// the response.
    pub id: Option<Value>,

    /// The parameters, specific to each method.
    ///
    /// These are passed as the first argument to the method handler.
    /// Sometimes params can be omitted.
    pub params: Option<Value>,
}
```
2. These requests are accumulated in a mailbox resource (small lie but
close enough).
3. Each update, the mailbox is drained by a system
`process_remote_requests`, where each request is processed according to
its `method`, which has an associated handler. Each handler is a Bevy
system that runs with exclusive world access and returns a result; e.g.:
```rust
pub fn process_remote_get_request(In(params): In<Option<Value>>, world: &World) -> BrpResult { // ... }
```
4. The result (or an error) is reported back to the client.

## Testing

This can be tested by using the `server` and `client` examples. The
`client` example is not particularly exhaustive at the moment (it only
creates barebones `bevy/query` requests) but is still informative. Other
queries can be made using `curl` with the `server` example running.

For example, to make a `bevy/list` request and list all registered
components:
```bash
curl -X POST -d '{ "jsonrpc": "2.0", "id": 1, "method": "bevy/list" }' 127.0.0.1:15702 | jq .
```

---

## Future direction

There were a couple comments on BRP versioning while this was in draft.
I agree that BRP versioning is a good idea, but I think that it requires
some consensus on a couple fronts:
- First of all, what does the version actually mean? Is it a version for
the protocol itself or for the `bevy/*` methods implemented using it?
Both?
- Where does the version actually live? The most natural place is just
where we have `"jsonrpc"` right now (at least if it's versioning the
protocol itself), but this means we're not actually conforming to
JSON-RPC any more (so, for example, any client library used to construct
JSON-RPC requests would stop working). I'm not really against that, but
it's at least a real decision.
- What do we actually do when we encounter mismatched versions? Adding
handling for this would be actual scope creep instead of just a little
add-on in my opinion.

Another thing that would be nice is making the internal structure of the
implementation less JSON-specific. Right now, for example, component
values that will appear in server responses are quite eagerly converted
to JSON `Value`s, which prevents disentangling the handler logic from
the communication medium, but it can probably be done in principle and I
imagine it would enable more code reuse (e.g. for custom method
handlers) in addition to making the internals more readily usable for
other formats.

---------

Co-authored-by: Patrick Walton <pcwalton@mimiga.net>
Co-authored-by: DragonGamesStudios <margos.michal@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Christopher Biscardi <chris@christopherbiscardi.com>
Co-authored-by: Gino Valente <49806985+MrGVSV@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-23 18:36:16 +00:00
Benjamin Brienen
27bea6abf7
Bubbling observers traversal should use query data (#15385)
# Objective

Fixes #14331

## Solution

- Make `Traversal` a subtrait of `ReadOnlyQueryData`
- Update implementations and usages

## Testing

- Updated unit tests

## Migration Guide

Update implementations of `Traversal`.

---------

Co-authored-by: Christian Hughes <9044780+ItsDoot@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-23 18:08:36 +00:00
Gino Valente
83356b12c9
bevy_reflect: Replace "value" terminology with "opaque" (#15240)
# Objective

Currently, the term "value" in the context of reflection is a bit
overloaded.

For one, it can be used synonymously with "data" or "variable". An
example sentence would be "this function takes a reflected value".

However, it is also used to refer to reflected types which are
`ReflectKind::Value`. These types are usually either primitives, opaque
types, or types that don't fall into any other `ReflectKind` (or perhaps
could, but don't due to some limitation/difficulty). An example sentence
would be "this function takes a reflected value type".

This makes it difficult to write good documentation or other learning
material without causing some amount of confusion to readers. Ideally,
we'd be able to move away from the `ReflectKind::Value` usage and come
up with a better term.

## Solution

This PR replaces the terminology of "value" with "opaque" across
`bevy_reflect`. This includes in documentation, type names, variant
names, and macros.

The term "opaque" was chosen because that's essentially how the type is
treated within the reflection API. In other words, its internal
structure is hidden. All we can do is work with the type itself.

### Primitives

While primitives are not technically opaque types, I think it's still
clearer to refer to them as "opaque" rather than keep the confusing
"value" terminology.

We could consider adding another concept for primitives (e.g.
`ReflectKind::Primitive`), but I'm not sure that provides a lot of
benefit right now. In most circumstances, they'll be treated just like
an opaque type. They would also likely use the same macro (or two copies
of the same macro but with different names).

## Testing

You can test locally by running:

```
cargo test --package bevy_reflect --all-features
```

---

## Migration Guide

The reflection concept of "value type" has been replaced with a clearer
"opaque type". The following renames have been made to account for this:

- `ReflectKind::Value` → `ReflectKind::Opaque`
- `ReflectRef::Value` → `ReflectRef::Opaque`
- `ReflectMut::Value` → `ReflectMut::Opaque`
- `ReflectOwned::Value` → `ReflectOwned::Opaque`
- `TypeInfo::Value` → `TypeInfo::Opaque`
- `ValueInfo` → `OpaqueInfo`
- `impl_reflect_value!` → `impl_reflect_opaque!`
- `impl_from_reflect_value!` → `impl_from_reflect_opaque!`

Additionally, declaring your own opaque types no longer uses
`#[reflect_value]`. This attribute has been replaced by
`#[reflect(opaque)]`:

```rust
// BEFORE
#[derive(Reflect)]
#[reflect_value(Default)]
struct MyOpaqueType(u32);

// AFTER
#[derive(Reflect)]
#[reflect(opaque)]
#[reflect(Default)]
struct MyOpaqueType(u32);
```

Note that the order in which `#[reflect(opaque)]` appears does not
matter.
2024-09-23 18:04:57 +00:00
Christian Hughes
c7ec456e50
Support systems that take references as input (#15184)
# Objective

- Fixes #14924
- Closes #9584

## Solution

- We introduce a new trait, `SystemInput`, that serves as a type
function from the `'static` form of the input, to its lifetime'd
version, similarly to `SystemParam` or `WorldQuery`.
- System functions now take the lifetime'd wrapped version,
`SystemInput::Param<'_>`, which prevents the issue presented in #14924
(i.e. `InRef<T>`).
- Functions for running systems now take the lifetime'd unwrapped
version, `SystemInput::Inner<'_>` (i.e. `&T`).
- Due to the above change, system piping had to be re-implemented as a
standalone type, rather than `CombinatorSystem` as it was previously.
- Removes the `Trigger<'static, E, B>` transmute in observer runner
code.

## Testing

- All current tests pass.
- Added additional tests and doc-tests.

---

## Showcase

```rust
let mut world = World::new();

let mut value = 2;

// Currently possible:
fn square(In(input): In<usize>) -> usize {
    input * input
}
value = world.run_system_once_with(value, square);

// Now possible:
fn square_mut(InMut(input): InMut<usize>) {
    *input *= *input;
}
world.run_system_once_with(&mut value, square_mut);

// Or:
fn square_ref(InRef(input): InRef<usize>) -> usize {
    *input * *input
}
value = world.run_system_once_with(&value, square_ref);
```

## Migration Guide

- All current explicit usages of the following types must be changed in
the way specified:
    - `SystemId<I, O>` to `SystemId<In<I>, O>`
    - `System<In = T>` to `System<In = In<T>>`
    - `IntoSystem<I, O, M>` to `IntoSystem<In<I>, O, M>`
    - `Condition<M, T>` to `Condition<M, In<T>>`
- `In<Trigger<E, B>>` is no longer a valid input parameter type. Use
`Trigger<E, B>` directly, instead.

---------

Co-authored-by: Giacomo Stevanato <giaco.stevanato@gmail.com>
2024-09-23 17:37:29 +00:00
Benjamin Brienen
4c087daa20
Log monitor and window information at startup in bevy_winit (#15377)
# Objective

Fixes #13979

## Solution

Adds some logging in the create_window function

## Testing

- Trivial
2024-09-23 17:36:16 +00:00
Benjamin Brienen
8a6d0b063c
Use crate: disqualified (#15372)
# Objective

Fixes #15351 

## Solution

- Created new external crate and ported over the code

## Testing

- CI

## Migration guide

Replace references to `bevy_utils::ShortName` with
`disqualified::ShortName`.
2024-09-23 17:34:17 +00:00
UkoeHB
21da0b72ae
Zero fontsize panic workaround (#15371)
# Objective

- Fix https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/15366. `cosmic-text`
buffers refuse to function if the `Metrics` font size is zero.

## Solution

- Trick `cosmic-text` into clearing its internal buffer when the largest
font size of segments is zero by sending it no spans and a tiny
`Metrics::font_size` and `Metrics::line_height`.

## Testing

- [x] Fixes @brandon-reinhart 's bug.
2024-09-23 17:31:50 +00:00
Marco Buono
8e3db957c5
Add the ability to control font smoothing (#15368)
# Objective

- Fixes #10720
- Adds the ability to control font smoothing of rendered text

## Solution

- Introduce the `FontSmoothing` enum, with two possible variants
(`FontSmoothing::None` and `FontSmoothing::AntiAliased`):
- This is based on `-webkit-font-smoothing`, in line with our practice
of adopting CSS-like properties/names for UI;
- I could have gone instead for the [`font-smooth`
property](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/font-smooth)
that's also supported by browsers, but didn't since it's also
non-standard, has an uglier name, and doesn't allow controlling the type
of antialias applied.
- Having an enum instead of e.g. a boolean, leaves the path open for
adding `FontSmoothing::SubpixelAntiAliased` in the future, without a
breaking change;
- Add all the necessary plumbing to get the `FontSmoothing` information
to where we rasterize the glyphs and store them in the atlas;
- Change the font atlas key to also take into account the smoothing
setting, not only font and font size;
- Since COSMIC Text [doesn't support controlling font
smoothing](https://github.com/pop-os/cosmic-text/issues/279), we roll
out our own threshold-based “implementation”:
- This has the downside of **looking ugly for “regular” vector fonts**
⚠️, since it doesn't properly take the hinting information into account
like a proper implementation on the rasterizer side would.
- However, **for fonts that have been specifically authored to be pixel
fonts, (a common use case in games!) this is not as big of a problem**,
since all lines are vertical/horizontal, and close to the final pixel
boundaries (as long as the font is used at a multiple of the size
originally intended by the author)
- Once COSMIC exposes this functionality, we can switch to using it
directly, and get better results;
- Use a nearest neighbor sampler for atlases with font smoothing
disabled, so that you can scale the text via transform and still get the
pixelated look;
- Add a convenience method to `Text` for setting the font smoothing;
- Add a demonstration of using the `FontSmoothing` property to the
`text2d` example.

## Testing

- Did you test these changes? If so, how?
  - Yes. Via the `text2d`example, and also in my game.
- Are there any parts that need more testing?
- I'd like help from someone for testing this on devices/OSs with
fractional scaling (Android/Windows)
- How can other people (reviewers) test your changes? Is there anything
specific they need to know?
- Both via the `text2d` example and also by using it directly on your
projects.
- If relevant, what platforms did you test these changes on, and are
there any important ones you can't test?
  - macOS

---

## Showcase

```rust
commands.spawn(Text2dBundle {
    text: Text::from_section("Hello, World!", default())
        .with_font_smoothing(FontSmoothing::None),
    ..default()
});
```
![Screenshot 2024-09-22 at 12 33
39](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/93e19672-b8c0-4cba-a8a3-4525fe2ae1cb)

<img width="740" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/b881b02c-4e43-410b-902f-6985c25140fc">

## Migration Guide

- `Text` now contains a `font_smoothing: FontSmoothing` property, make
sure to include it or add `..default()` when using the struct directly;
- `FontSizeKey` has been renamed to `FontAtlasKey`, and now also
contains the `FontSmoothing` setting;
- The following methods now take an extra `font_smoothing:
FontSmoothing` argument:
  - `FontAtlas::new()`
  - `FontAtlasSet::add_glyph_to_atlas()`
  - `FontAtlasSet::get_glyph_atlas_info()`
  - `FontAtlasSet::get_outlined_glyph_texture()`
2024-09-23 17:28:25 +00:00
Clar Fon
2c5be2ef4c
Reflect for TextureFormat (#15355)
# Objective

In order to derive `Reflect`, all of a struct's fields must implement
`FromReflect`. [As part of looking into some of the work mentioned
here](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/13713#issuecomment-2364786694),
I noticed that `TextureFormat` doesn't implement `Reflect`, and decided
to split that into a separate PR.

## Solution

I decided that `TextureFormat` should be a `reflect_value` since,
although one variant has fields, most users will treat this as an opaque
value set explicitly. It also substantially reduces the complexity of
the implementation.

For now, this implementation isn't actually used by any crates, so, I
decided to not preemptively enable the feature on anything. But it's
technically an option, now, and more `wgpu` types can be added in the
future.

## Testing

Everything compiles okay, and I can't really see how this could be done
incorrectly given the above constraints.
2024-09-23 17:26:12 +00:00
aecsocket
fb324f0e89
impl_reflect! for EulerRot instead of treating it as an opaque value (#15349)
# Objective

Currently, Bevy implements reflection for `glam::EulerRot` using:
```rs
impl_reflect_value!(::glam::EulerRot(Debug, Default, Deserialize, Serialize));
```

Treating it as an opaque type. However, it's useful to expose the
EulerRot enum variants directly, which I make use of from a drop down
selection box in `bevy_egui`. This PR changes this to use
`impl_reflect!`.

**Importantly**, Bevy currently uses glam 0.28.0, in which `EulerRot`
has just 6 variants. In glam 0.29.0, this is exanded to 24 variants, see
bb2ab05613.
When Bevy updates to 0.29.0, this reflect impl must also be updated to
include the new variants.

## Solution

Replaces the `impl_reflect_value!` with `impl_reflect!` and a
handwritten version of `EulerRot` with the same variants.

## Testing

Added a `tests` module to `glam.rs` to ensure that de/serialization
works. However, my main concern is making sure that the number of enum
variants matches glam's, which I'm not sure how to do using `Enum`.
2024-09-23 17:24:28 +00:00
Gino Valente
51accd34ed
bevy_reflect: Add dynamic type data access and iteration to TypeRegistration (#15347)
# Objective

There's currently no way to iterate through all the type data in a
`TypeRegistration`. While these are all type-erased, it can still be
useful to see what types (by `TypeId`) are registered for a given type.

Additionally, it might be good to have ways of dynamically working with
`TypeRegistration`.

## Solution

Added a way to iterate through all type data on a given
`TypeRegistration`. This PR also adds methods for working with type data
dynamically as well as methods for conveniently checking if a given type
data exists on the registration.

I also took this opportunity to reorganize the methods on
`TypeRegistration` as it has always bothered me haha (i.e. the
constructor not being at the top, etc.).

## Testing

You can test locally by running:

```
cargo test --package bevy_reflect
```

---

## Showcase

The type-erased type data on a `TypeRegistration` can now be iterated!

```rust
#[derive(Reflect)]
struct Foo;

#[derive(Clone)]
struct DataA(i32);

#[derive(Clone)]
struct DataB(i32);

let mut registration = TypeRegistration::of::<Foo>();
registration.insert(DataA(123));
registration.insert(DataB(456));

let mut iter = registration.iter();

let (id, data) = iter.next().unwrap();
assert_eq!(id, TypeId::of::<DataA>());
assert_eq!(data.downcast_ref::<DataA>().unwrap().0, 123);

let (id, data) = iter.next().unwrap();
assert_eq!(id, TypeId::of::<DataB>());
assert_eq!(data.downcast_ref::<DataB>().unwrap().0, 456);

assert!(iter.next().is_none());
```
2024-09-23 17:21:22 +00:00
Piefayth
55dddaf72e
UI Scrolling (#15291)
# Objective

- Fixes #8074 
- Adopts / Supersedes #8104

## Solution

Adapted from #8104 and affords the same benefits.

**Additions**
- [x] Update scrolling on relayout (height of node or contents may have
changed)
- [x] Make ScrollPosition component optional for ui nodes to avoid
checking every node on scroll
- [x] Nested scrollviews

**Omissions**
- Removed input handling for scrolling from `bevy_ui`. Users should
update `ScrollPosition` directly.

### Implementation

Adds a new `ScrollPosition` component. Updating this component on a
`Node` with an overflow axis set to `OverflowAxis::Scroll` will
reposition its children by that amount when calculating node transforms.
As before, no impact on the underlying Taffy layout.

Calculating this correctly is trickier than it was in #8104 due to
`"Update scrolling on relayout"`.

**Background**

When `ScrollPosition` is updated directly by the user, it can be
trivially handled in-engine by adding the parent's scroll position to
the final location of each child node. However, _other layout actions_
may result in a situation where `ScrollPosition` needs to be updated.
Consider a 1000 pixel tall vertically scrolling list of 100 elements,
each 100 pixels tall. Scrolled to the bottom, the
`ScrollPosition.offset_y` is 9000, just enough to display the last
element in the list. When removing an element from that list, the new
desired `ScrollPosition.offset_y` is 8900, but, critically, that is not
known until after the sizes and positions of the children of the
scrollable node are resolved.

All user scrolling code today handles this by delaying the resolution by
one frame. One notable disadvantage of this is the inability to support
`WinitSettings::desktop_app()`, since there would need to be an input
AFTER the layout change that caused the scroll position to update for
the results of the scroll position update to render visually.

I propose the alternative in this PR, which allows for same-frame
resolution of scrolling layout.

**Resolution**

_Edit: Below resolution is outdated, and replaced with the simpler usage
of taffy's `Layout::content_size`._

When recursively iterating the children of a node, each child now
returns a `Vec2` representing the location of their own bottom right
corner. Then, `[[0,0, [x,y]]` represents a bounding box containing the
scrollable area filled by that child. Scrollable parents aggregate those
areas into the bounding box of _all_ children, then consider that result
against `ScrollPosition` to ensure its validity.

In the event that resolution of the layout of the children invalidates
the `ScrollPosition` (e.g. scrolled further than there were children to
scroll to), _all_ children of that node must be recursively
repositioned. The position of each child must change as a result of the
change in scroll position.

Therefore, this implementation takes care to only spend the cost of the
"second layout pass" when a specific node actually had a
`ScrollPosition` forcibly updated by the layout of its children.


## Testing

Examples in `ui/scroll.rs`. There may be more complex node/style
interactions that were unconsidered.

---

## Showcase



![scroll](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/1331138f-93aa-4a8f-959c-6be18a04ff03)

## Alternatives

- `bevy_ui` doesn't support scrolling.
- `bevy_ui` implements scrolling with a one-frame delay on reactions to
layout changes.
2024-09-23 17:17:58 +00:00
Patrick Walton
8154164f1b
Allow animation clips to animate arbitrary properties. (#15282)
Currently, Bevy restricts animation clips to animating
`Transform::translation`, `Transform::rotation`, `Transform::scale`, or
`MorphWeights`, which correspond to the properties that glTF can
animate. This is insufficient for many use cases such as animating UI,
as the UI layout systems expect to have exclusive control over UI
elements' `Transform`s and therefore the `Style` properties must be
animated instead.

This commit fixes this, allowing for `AnimationClip`s to animate
arbitrary properties. The `Keyframes` structure has been turned into a
low-level trait that can be implemented to achieve arbitrary animation
behavior. Along with `Keyframes`, this patch adds a higher-level trait,
`AnimatableProperty`, that simplifies the task of animating single
interpolable properties. Built-in `Keyframes` implementations exist for
translation, rotation, scale, and morph weights. For the most part, you
can migrate by simply changing your code from
`Keyframes::Translation(...)` to `TranslationKeyframes(...)`, and
likewise for rotation, scale, and morph weights.

An example `AnimatableProperty` implementation for the font size of a
text section follows:

     #[derive(Reflect)]
     struct FontSizeProperty;

     impl AnimatableProperty for FontSizeProperty {
         type Component = Text;
         type Property = f32;
fn get_mut(component: &mut Self::Component) -> Option<&mut
Self::Property> {
             Some(&mut component.sections.get_mut(0)?.style.font_size)
         }
     }

In order to keep this patch relatively small, this patch doesn't include
an implementation of `AnimatableProperty` on top of the reflection
system. That can be a follow-up.

This patch builds on top of the new `EntityMutExcept<>` type in order to
widen the `AnimationTarget` query to include write access to all
components. Because `EntityMutExcept<>` has some performance overhead
over an explicit query, we continue to explicitly query `Transform` in
order to avoid regressing the performance of skeletal animation, such as
the `many_foxes` benchmark. I've measured the performance of that
benchmark and have found no significant regressions.

A new example, `animated_ui`, has been added. This example shows how to
use Bevy's built-in animation infrastructure to animate font size and
color, which wasn't possible before this patch.

## Showcase


https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/1fa73492-a9ce-405a-a8f2-4aacd7f6dc97

## Migration Guide

* Animation keyframes are now an extensible trait, not an enum. Replace
`Keyframes::Translation(...)`, `Keyframes::Scale(...)`,
`Keyframes::Rotation(...)`, and `Keyframes::Weights(...)` with
`Box::new(TranslationKeyframes(...))`, `Box::new(ScaleKeyframes(...))`,
`Box::new(RotationKeyframes(...))`, and
`Box::new(MorphWeightsKeyframes(...))` respectively.
2024-09-23 17:14:12 +00:00
Gino Valente
6e95f297ea
bevy_reflect: Automatic arg count validation (#15145)
# Objective

Functions created into `DynamicFunction[Mut]` do not currently validate
the number of arguments they are given before calling the function.

I originally did this because I felt users would want to validate this
themselves in the function rather than have it be done
behind-the-scenes. I'm now realizing, however, that we could remove this
boilerplate and if users wanted to check again then they would still be
free to do so (it'd be more of a sanity check at that point).

## Solution

Automatically validate the number of arguments passed to
`DynamicFunction::call` and `DynamicFunctionMut::call[_once]`.

This is a pretty trivial change since we just need to compare the length
of the `ArgList` to the length of the `[ArgInfo]` in the function's
`FunctionInfo`.

I also ran the benchmarks just in case and saw no regression by doing
this.

## Testing

You can test locally by running:

```
cargo test --package bevy_reflect --all-features
```
2024-09-23 17:03:14 +00:00
MiniaczQ
e312da8c52
Reduce runtime panics through SystemParam validation (#15276)
# Objective

The goal of this PR is to introduce `SystemParam` validation in order to
reduce runtime panics.

Fixes #15265

## Solution

`SystemParam` now has a new method `validate_param(...) -> bool`, which
takes immutable variants of `get_param` arguments. The returned value
indicates whether the parameter can be acquired from the world. If
parameters cannot be acquired for a system, it won't be executed,
similarly to run conditions. This reduces panics when using params like
`Res`, `ResMut`, etc. as well as allows for new, ergonomic params like
#15264 or #15302.

Param validation happens at the level of executors. All validation
happens directly before executing a system, in case of normal systems
they are skipped, in case of conditions they return false.

Warning about system skipping is primitive and subject to change in
subsequent PRs.

## Testing

Two executor tests check that all executors:
- skip systems which have invalid parameters:
  - piped systems get skipped together,
  - dependent systems still run correctly,
- skip systems with invalid run conditions:
  - system conditions have invalid parameters,
  - system set conditions have invalid parameters.
2024-09-23 16:54:21 +00:00
Gino Valente
4d0961cc8a
bevy_reflect: Add ReflectRef/ReflectMut/ReflectOwned convenience casting methods (#15235)
# Objective

#13320 added convenience methods for casting a `TypeInfo` into its
respective variant:

```rust
let info: &TypeInfo = <Vec<i32> as Typed>::type_info();

// We know `info` contains a `ListInfo`, so we can simply cast it:
let list_info: &ListInfo = info.as_list().unwrap();
```

This is especially helpful when you have already verified a type is a
certain kind via `ReflectRef`, `ReflectMut`, `ReflectOwned`, or
`ReflectKind`.

As mentioned in that PR, though, it would be useful to add similar
convenience methods to those types as well.

## Solution

Added convenience casting methods to `ReflectRef`, `ReflectMut`, and
`ReflectOwned`.

With these methods, I was able to reduce our nesting in certain places
throughout the crate.

Additionally, I took this opportunity to move these types (and
`ReflectKind`) to their own module to help clean up the `reflect`
module.

## Testing

You can test locally by running:

```
cargo test --package bevy_reflect --all-features
```

---

## Showcase

Convenience methods for casting `ReflectRef`, `ReflectMut`, and
`ReflectOwned` into their respective variants has been added! This
allows you to write cleaner code if you already know the kind of your
reflected data:

```rust
// BEFORE
let ReflectRef::List(list) = list.reflect_ref() else {
    panic!("expected list");
};

// AFTER
let list = list.reflect_ref().as_list().unwrap();
```

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Pablo Reinhardt <126117294+pablo-lua@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-23 16:50:46 +00:00
Ben Frankel
f78856b3bd
Add cached run_system API (#14920)
# Objective

Working with `World` is painful due to lifetime issues and a lack of
ergonomics, so you may want to delegate to the system API. Your current
options are:

- `world.run_system_once`, which initializes the system each time it's
called (performance cost) and doesn't support `Local`. The docs
recommend users not use this method outside of diagnostic use cases like
unit tests.
- `world.run_system`, which requires you to register the system and
store the `SystemId` somewhere (made easier by implementing `FromWorld`
for a newtyped `Local`, unless you're in e.g. a custom `Command` impl).

These options work, but you're choosing between a performance cost and
an ergonomic challenge.

## Solution

Provide a cached `run_system` API that accepts an `S: IntoSystem` and
checks for a `CachedSystemId<S::System>(SystemId)` resource. If it
doesn't exist, it will register the system and save its `SystemId` in
that resource.

In other words, it hides the "save the `SystemId` in a `Local` or
`Resource`" pattern as an implementation detail.

Prior work: https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/10469.

## Testing

This approach worked in a proof-of-concept:
b34ee29531/src/util/patch/run_system_cached.rs (L35).

A new unit test was added and it passes in CI.
2024-09-23 16:35:29 +00:00
Christian Hughes
4682f33e0c
Add World::trigger_ref and World::trigger_targets_ref (#14894)
# Objective

Closes #14888.

## Solution

Add non-consuming trigger functions:

```rust
impl World {
    pub fn trigger_ref(&mut self, event: &mut impl Event);
    pub fn trigger_targets_ref(&mut self, event: &mut impl Event, targets: impl TriggerTargets);
}
```

## Testing

- Added two new tests, `observer_trigger_ref` and
`observer_trigger_targets_ref`.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2024-09-23 16:31:44 +00:00
Benjamin Brienen
9386bd0114
feature gate picking backends (#15369)
# Objective

Fixes #15306

## Solution

- Add feature gate on the module and the place where each one is used
- Declare the features and make them default

## Testing

- CI
2024-09-22 19:35:15 +00:00
Rich Churcher
58f6fa94a2
Spirv passthrough main (adopted, part deux) (#15352)
**Note:** This is an adoption of @Shfty 's adoption (#8131) of #3996!
All I've done is updated the branch and run the docs CI.

> **Note:** This is an adoption of #3996, originally authored by
@molikto
> 
> # Objective
> Allow use of `wgpu::Features::SPIRV_SHADER_PASSTHROUGH` and the
corresponding `wgpu::Device::create_shader_module_spirv` for SPIR-V
shader assets.
> 
> This enables use-cases where naga is not sufficient to load a given
(valid) SPIR-V module, i.e. cases where naga lacks support for a given
SPIR-V feature employed by a third-party codegen backend like
`rust-gpu`.
> 
> ## Solution
> * Reimplemented the changes from [Spirv shader
bypass #3996](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/3996), on account
of the original branch having been deleted.
> * Documented the new `spirv_shader_passthrough` feature flag with the
appropriate platform support context from [wgpu's
documentation](https://docs.rs/wgpu/latest/wgpu/struct.Features.html#associatedconstant.SPIRV_SHADER_PASSTHROUGH).
> 
> ## Changelog
> * Adds a `spirv_shader_passthrough` feature flag to the following
crates:
>   
>   * `bevy`
>   * `bevy_internal`
>   * `bevy_render`
> * Extends `RenderDevice::create_shader_module` with a conditional call
to `wgpu::Device::create_shader_module_spirv` if
`spirv_shader_passthrough` is enabled and
`wgpu::Features::SPIRV_SHADER_PASSTHROUGH` is present for the current
platform.
> * Documents the relevant `wgpu` platform support in
`docs/cargo_features.md`

---------

Co-authored-by: Josh Palmer <1253239+Shfty@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2024-09-22 14:51:14 +00:00
Benjamin Brienen
67615c5051
split bevy_reflect::derive::utilities into proper modules (#15354)
# Objective

- A utilities module is considered to be a bad practice and poor
organization of code, so this fixes it.

## Solution

- Split each struct into its own module
- Move related lose functions into their own module
- Move the last few bits into good places

## Testing

- CI

---------

Co-authored-by: Gino Valente <49806985+MrGVSV@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-22 14:24:14 +00:00
Gino Valente
59c0521690
bevy_reflect: Add Function trait (#15205)
# Objective

While #13152 added function reflection, it didn't really make functions
reflectable. Instead, it made it so that they can be called with
reflected arguments and return reflected data. But functions themselves
cannot be reflected.

In other words, we can't go from `DynamicFunction` to `dyn
PartialReflect`.

## Solution

Allow `DynamicFunction` to actually be reflected.

This PR adds the `Function` reflection subtrait (and corresponding
`ReflectRef`, `ReflectKind`, etc.). With this new trait, we're able to
implement `PartialReflect` on `DynamicFunction`.

### Implementors

`Function` is currently only implemented for `DynamicFunction<'static>`.
This is because we can't implement it generically over all
functions—even those that implement `IntoFunction`.

What about `DynamicFunctionMut`? Well, this PR does **not** implement
`Function` for `DynamicFunctionMut`.

The reasons for this are a little complicated, but it boils down to
mutability. `DynamicFunctionMut` requires `&mut self` to be invoked
since it wraps a `FnMut`. However, we can't really model this well with
`Function`. And if we make `DynamicFunctionMut` wrap its internal
`FnMut` in a `Mutex` to allow for `&self` invocations, then we run into
either concurrency issues or recursion issues (or, in the worst case,
both).

So for the time-being, we won't implement `Function` for
`DynamicFunctionMut`. It will be better to evaluate it on its own. And
we may even consider the possibility of removing it altogether if it
adds too much complexity to the crate.

### Dynamic vs Concrete

One of the issues with `DynamicFunction` is the fact that it's both a
dynamic representation (like `DynamicStruct` or `DynamicList`) and the
only way to represent a function.

Because of this, it's in a weird middle ground where we can't easily
implement full-on `Reflect`. That would require `Typed`, but what static
`TypeInfo` could it provide? Just that it's a `DynamicFunction`? None of
the other dynamic types implement `Typed`.

However, by not implementing `Reflect`, we lose the ability to downcast
back to our `DynamicStruct`. Our only option is to call
`Function::clone_dynamic`, which clones the data rather than by simply
downcasting. This works in favor of the `PartialReflect::try_apply`
implementation since it would have to clone anyways, but is definitely
not ideal. This is also the reason I had to add `Debug` as a supertrait
on `Function`.

For now, this PR chooses not to implement `Reflect` for
`DynamicFunction`. We may want to explore this in a followup PR (or even
this one if people feel strongly that it's strictly required).

The same is true for `FromReflect`. We may decide to add an
implementation there as well, but it's likely out-of-scope of this PR.

## Testing

You can test locally by running:

```
cargo test --package bevy_reflect --all-features
```

---

## Showcase

You can now pass around a `DynamicFunction` as a `dyn PartialReflect`!
This also means you can use it as a field on a reflected type without
having to ignore it (though you do need to opt out of `FromReflect`).

```rust
#[derive(Reflect)]
#[reflect(from_reflect = false)]
struct ClickEvent {
    callback: DynamicFunction<'static>,
}

let event: Box<dyn Struct> = Box::new(ClickEvent {
    callback: (|| println!("Clicked!")).into_function(),
});

// We can access our `DynamicFunction` as a `dyn PartialReflect`
let callback: &dyn PartialReflect = event.field("callback").unwrap();

// And access function-related methods via the new `Function` trait
let ReflectRef::Function(callback) = callback.reflect_ref() else {
    unreachable!()
};

// Including calling the function
callback.reflect_call(ArgList::new()).unwrap(); // Prints: Clicked!
```
2024-09-22 14:19:12 +00:00
Benjamin Brienen
02a9ed4b0b
move ShortName to bevy_reflect (#15340)
# Objective

- Goal is to minimize bevy_utils #11478

## Solution

- Move the file short_name wholesale into bevy_reflect

## Testing

- Unit tests
- CI

## Migration Guide

- References to `bevy_utils::ShortName` should instead now be
`bevy_reflect::ShortName`.

---------

Co-authored-by: François Mockers <francois.mockers@vleue.com>
2024-09-21 20:52:46 +00:00
poopy
66a474a9d9
change return type of World::resource_ref to Ref (#15263)
# Objective

Closes #11825

## Solution

Change return type of `get_resource_ref` and `resource_ref` from `Res`
to `Ref` and implement `From Res<T> for Ref<T>`.
2024-09-21 19:11:13 +00:00
Shadowcat650
417e6ccaf1
Fix doc link import style to avoid unused_imports (#15337)
# Objective

- Fixes:  #15323
2024-09-21 00:04:32 +00:00
ickshonpe
48f2bd410b
RenderUiSystem::ExtractTextureSlice (#15332)
# Objective

Fixes #15330

## Solution
1. Add an `ExtractTextureSlice` variant to `RenderUiSystem`.
2. Add `RenderUiSystem::ExtractTextureSlice` to the `ExtractSchedule`
between `ExtractImages` and `ExtractBorders`.
3. Add `extract_ui_texture_slices` to the new `ExtractTextureSlice`
system set.

Which results in texture slice nodes being extracted before borders. No
more z-fighting, borders will always be drawn on top of texture-sliced
images.
2024-09-20 23:55:11 +00:00
VitalyR
661ab1ab41
Fix warnings triggered by elided_named_lifetimes lint (#15328)
# Objective

Eliminate some warnings introduced by the new rust lint
[elided_named_lifetimes](https://doc.rust-lang.org/nightly/nightly-rustc/rustc_lint/builtin/static.ELIDED_NAMED_LIFETIMES.html),
fix #15326.

## Solution

- Add or remove lifetime markers to not trigger the lint.

## Testing

- When the lint comes to stable, the CI will fail and this PR could fix
that.
2024-09-20 19:17:33 +00:00
Rich Churcher
fd329c0426
Allow to expect (adopted) (#15301)
# Objective

> Rust 1.81 released the #[expect(...)] attribute, which works like
#[allow(...)] but throws a warning if the lint isn't raised. This is
preferred to #[allow(...)] because it tells us when it can be removed.

- Adopts the parts of #15118 that are complete, and updates the branch
so it can be merged.
- There were a few conflicts, let me know if I misjudged any of 'em.

Alice's
[recommendation](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/15059#issuecomment-2349263900)
seems well-taken, let's do this crate by crate now that @BD103 has done
the lion's share of this!

(Relates to, but doesn't yet completely finish #15059.)

Crates this _doesn't_ cover:

- bevy_input
- bevy_gilrs
- bevy_window
- bevy_winit
- bevy_state
- bevy_render
- bevy_picking
- bevy_core_pipeline
- bevy_sprite
- bevy_text
- bevy_pbr
- bevy_ui
- bevy_gltf
- bevy_gizmos
- bevy_dev_tools
- bevy_internal
- bevy_dylib

---------

Co-authored-by: BD103 <59022059+BD103@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Ben Frankel <ben.frankel7@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Antony <antony.m.3012@gmail.com>
2024-09-20 19:16:42 +00:00
Gino Valente
ebb57c5511
bevy_reflect: Add FunctionRegistry::call (#15148)
# Objective

There may be times where a function in the `FunctionRegistry` doesn't
need to be fully retrieved. A user may just need to call it with a set
of arguments.

We should provide a shortcut for doing this.

## Solution

Add the `FunctionRegistry::call` method to directly call a function in
the registry with the given name and arguments.

## Testing

You can test locally by running:

```
cargo test --package bevy_reflect --all-features
```
2024-09-20 19:14:57 +00:00
Robert Walter
5484d2d6f8
Choose more descriptive field names for ReserveEntitiesIterator (#15168)
No hard feelings if you don't want to make this change. This is just
something I stumbled over in my very first read of the `bevy_ecs` crate.

# Objective

- the general goal here is to improve DX slightly
- make the code easier to read in general. The previous names make the
code harder to read, especially since they are so similar.

## Solution

- choose more specific names for the fields
- `index_iter` -> `freelist_indices` : "freelist" is a well established
term in the rest of the docs in this module, so we might want to reuse
it
- `index_range` -> `new_indices` : Nothing besides the doc comment
stated that these indices were actually new/fresh

## Testing

Note that the fields are private so that this is no breaking change.
They are also only used in this one module.
2024-09-20 19:13:35 +00:00
Miles Silberling-Cook
d7ea5b6aa9
Various picking bugfixes (#15293)
# Objective

- Intended to resolve https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/15290.
- Fix four duplicate `DragEnd` firing when drag finished.
- Fix redundant `DragStart` firing when dragging across pick-able
entities.
- Fix `Click` coming after `Drop` and obliterating finished drag
interactions.

Big thanks to B. Reinhart for testing picking in their codebase and
identifying these issues early.

## Solution

- Fix press & drag state being cleared after the first entity is read
from the hover map on pointer release, rather than after all entities
are read. This caused only the first hovered entity to receive `Up` and
`Click` events.
- Fixes `Down` being determined using the `previous_hover_map` rather
than `hover_map`, a regression compared to `bevy_mod_picking`. I think
this is what was messing up drag events.
- Fixes and issue where `PointerEnd` would fire multiple times and
`PointerStart` would fire when dragging onto a new entity.
- Re-orders events to make them easier to handle. `Out` now fired before
`DragLeave` and `Click/Up` now fire before `DragDrop`.
- Generally refactors the picking event code to be more clean and sane. 

## Testing

These changes are currently sporadically tested.
2024-09-20 00:55:41 +00:00
Giacomo Stevanato
40b05b2116
Remove int2ptr cast in bevy_ptr::dangling_with_align and remove -Zmiri-permissive-provenance in CI (#15311)
# Objective

- Remove an int2ptr cast in `bevy_ptr::dangling_with_align`
- This is flagged by MIRI unless `-Zmiri-permissive-provenance` is used
(like in CI)
- Remove `-Zmiri-permissive-provenance` in CI

## Solution

- Create the raw pointer like
[`std::ptr::without_provenance`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/std/ptr/fn.without_provenance_mut.html)
does, i.e. by starting from a null pointer.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: François Mockers <francois.mockers@vleue.com>
2024-09-19 21:41:19 +00:00
Benjamin Brienen
1b8c1c1242
simplify std::mem references (#15315)
# Objective
- Fixes #15314

## Solution

- Remove unnecessary usings and simplify references to those functions.

## Testing

CI
2024-09-19 21:28:16 +00:00
Cole Varner
612897becd
AssetServer LoadState API consistency (#15237)
# Objective

- implements consistently named AssertServer methods for asset,
dependency, and recursive dependency load states
- returns relevant LoadState when required, including error information
for failed loads
- resolves #15098

## Solution

- implement consistently named LoadState accessor methods:
- load_state, dependency_load_state, recursive_dependency_load_state
(return unwrapped load states)
- get_load_state, get_dependency_load_state,
get_recursive_dependency_load_state (return Option)
- is_loaded, is_loaded_with_dependencies,
is_loaded_with_recursive_dependencies (return bool)
- adds AssetLoadError to DependencyLoadState::Failed and
RecursiveDependencyLoadState::Failed

## Testing

- Added coverage to existing unit tests
2024-09-19 19:18:31 +00:00
Giacomo Stevanato
106db47f69
Fix subtle/weird UB in the multi threaded executor (#15309)
# Objective

- The multithreaded executor has some weird UB related to stacked
borrows and async blocks
- See my explanation on discord
https://discord.com/channels/691052431525675048/749335865876021248/1286359267921887232
- Closes #15296 (can this be used to close PRs?)

## Solution

- Don't create a `&mut World` reference outside `async` blocks and then
capture it, but instead directly create it inside the `async` blocks.
This avoids it being captured, which has some weird requirement on its
validity.

## Testing

- Added a regression test
2024-09-19 18:15:58 +00:00
Wybe Westra
55c84cc722
Added HeadlessPlugins (#15203) (#15260)
Added a `HeadlessPlugins` plugin group, that adds more default
functionality (like logging) than the `MinimumPlugins`. Fixes #15203
Changed the headless example to use the new plugin group.

I am not entirely sure if the list of plugins is correct. Are there ones
that should be added / removed?

----
The `TerminalCtrlCHandlerPlugin` has interesting effects in the headless
example: Installing it a second time it will give a log message about
skipping installation, because it is already installed. Ctrl+C will
terminate the application in that case. However, _not_ installing it the
second time (so only on the app that runs once) has the effect that the
app that runs continuously cannot be stopped using Ctrl+C.
This implies that, even though the second app did not install the Ctrl+C
handler, it did _something_ because it was keeping the one from the
first app alive.
Not sure if this is a problem or issue, or can be labeled a wierd quirk
of having multiple Apps in one executable.
2024-09-19 16:44:43 +00:00
Mike
7ad27f4759
Fix memory leak in world's command queue (#15295)
# Objective

- I was running miri locally to check the UB in #15276 and it detected
an unrelated memory leak, due to the `RawCommandQueue` changes. (I
probably should have turned the leak detection off because we do
purposely leak interned string labels and I assume that's why CI didn't
detect it.)

## Solution

- The memory allocated to `RawCommandQueue` needs to be manually
dropped. This was being done for `bytes` and `cursor`, but was missed
for `panic_recovery`.

## Testing

- Ran miri locally and the related memory leaks errors when away.
2024-09-19 16:44:15 +00:00
s-puig
28597e4082
Cleanup legacy code from bevy_sprite (#15304)
# Objective

- Remove legacy stuff
2024-09-19 16:06:09 +00:00
Zachary Harrold
fcfa60844a
Remove allocation in get_short_name (#15294)
`ShortName` is lazily evaluated and does not allocate, instead providing
`Display` and `Debug` implementations which write directly to a
formatter using the original algorithm. When using `ShortName` in format
strings (`panic`, `dbg`, `format`, etc.) you can directly use the
`ShortName` type. If you require a `String`, simply call
`ShortName(...).to_string()`.

# Objective

- Remove the requirement for allocation when using `get_short_name`

## Solution

- Added new type `ShortName` which wraps a name and provides its own
`Debug` and `Display` implementations, using the original
`get_short_name` algorithm without the need for allocating.
- Removed `get_short_name`, as `ShortName(...)` is more performant and
ergonomic.
- Added `ShortName::of::<T>` method to streamline the common use-case
for name shortening.

## Testing

- CI

## Migration Guide

### For `format!`, `dbg!`, `panic!`, etc.

```rust
// Before
panic!("{} is too short!", get_short_name(name));

// After
panic!("{} is too short!", ShortName(name));
```

### Need a `String` Value

```rust
// Before
let short: String = get_short_name(name);

// After
let short: String = ShortName(name).to_string();
```

## Notes

`ShortName` lazily evaluates, and directly writes to a formatter via
`Debug` and `Display`, which removes the need to allocate a `String`
when printing a shortened type name. Because the implementation has been
moved into the `fmt` method, repeated printing of the `ShortName` type
may be less performant than converting it into a `String`. However, no
instances of this are present in Bevy, and the user can get the original
behaviour by calling `.to_string()` at no extra cost.

---------

Co-authored-by: Gino Valente <49806985+MrGVSV@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-19 15:34:03 +00:00
poopy
3a66d88c83
command based entry api with EntityCommands::entry (#15274)
# Objective

It's convenient to be able to modify a component if it exist, and insert
a default value if it doesn't. You can already do most of this with
`EntityCommands::insert_if_new`, and all of this using a custom command.
However, that does not spark joy in my opinion.

Closes #10669

## Solution

Introduce a new commands type `EntityEntryCommands`, along with a method
to access it, `EntityCommands::entry`.

`EntityEntryCommands` exposes a subset of the entry API (`and_modify`,
`or_insert`, etc), however it's not an enum so it doesn't allow pattern
matching. Also, `or_insert` won't return the component because it's all
based on commands.

## Testing

Added a new test `entity_commands_entry`.

---

## Showcase

```rust
commands
    .entity(player)
    .entry::<Level>()
    .and_modify(|mut lvl| lvl.0 += 1)
    .or_default();
```

---------

Co-authored-by: Jan Hohenheim <jan@hohenheim.ch>
2024-09-19 15:20:13 +00:00
Patrick Walton
2ae5a21009
Implement percentage-closer soft shadows (PCSS). (#13497)
[*Percentage-closer soft shadows*] are a technique from 2004 that allow
shadows to become blurrier farther from the objects that cast them. It
works by introducing a *blocker search* step that runs before the normal
shadow map sampling. The blocker search step detects the difference
between the depth of the fragment being rasterized and the depth of the
nearby samples in the depth buffer. Larger depth differences result in a
larger penumbra and therefore a blurrier shadow.

To enable PCSS, fill in the `soft_shadow_size` value in
`DirectionalLight`, `PointLight`, or `SpotLight`, as appropriate. This
shadow size value represents the size of the light and should be tuned
as appropriate for your scene. Higher values result in a wider penumbra
(i.e. blurrier shadows).

When using PCSS, temporal shadow maps
(`ShadowFilteringMethod::Temporal`) are recommended. If you don't use
`ShadowFilteringMethod::Temporal` and instead use
`ShadowFilteringMethod::Gaussian`, Bevy will use the same technique as
`Temporal`, but the result won't vary over time. This produces a rather
noisy result. Doing better would likely require downsampling the shadow
map, which would be complex and slower (and would require PR #13003 to
land first).

In addition to PCSS, this commit makes the near Z plane for the shadow
map configurable on a per-light basis. Previously, it had been hardcoded
to 0.1 meters. This change was necessary to make the point light shadow
map in the example look reasonable, as otherwise the shadows appeared
far too aliased.

A new example, `pcss`, has been added. It demonstrates the
percentage-closer soft shadow technique with directional lights, point
lights, spot lights, non-temporal operation, and temporal operation. The
assets are my original work.

Both temporal and non-temporal shadows are rather noisy in the example,
and, as mentioned before, this is unavoidable without downsampling the
depth buffer, which we can't do yet. Note also that the shadows don't
look particularly great for point lights; the example simply isn't an
ideal scene for them. Nevertheless, I felt that the benefits of the
ability to do a side-by-side comparison of directional and point lights
outweighed the unsightliness of the point light shadows in that example,
so I kept the point light feature in.

Fixes #3631.

[*Percentage-closer soft shadows*]:
https://developer.download.nvidia.com/shaderlibrary/docs/shadow_PCSS.pdf

## Changelog

### Added

* Percentage-closer soft shadows (PCSS) are now supported, allowing
shadows to become blurrier as they stretch away from objects. To use
them, set the `soft_shadow_size` field in `DirectionalLight`,
`PointLight`, or `SpotLight`, as applicable.

* The near Z value for shadow maps is now customizable via the
`shadow_map_near_z` field in `DirectionalLight`, `PointLight`, and
`SpotLight`.

## Screenshots

PCSS off:
![Screenshot 2024-05-24
120012](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/157897/0d35fe98-245b-44fb-8a43-8d0272a73b86)

PCSS on:
![Screenshot 2024-05-24
115959](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/157897/83397ef8-1317-49dd-bfb3-f8286d7610cd)

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Torstein Grindvik <52322338+torsteingrindvik@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-18 18:07:17 +00:00
Zachary Harrold
bd489068c6
Allow bevy_utils in no_std Contexts (#15279)
# Objective

- Adjust `bevy_utils` to make it `no_std` compatible
- Partially replaces #6581
- Contributes to #8161
- Contributes to #6370

## Solution

Added `alloc` and `std` features to `bevy_utils` (`std` is enabled by
default), allowing the crate's use in `no_std` contexts.

## Testing

- CI passed locally.
- Used `bevy_utils` in a `no_std` crate as an experiment and compiled
successfully.

## Migration Guide

If you were importing `bevy_utils` and setting `default_features` to
`false`, but relying on elements which are now gated behind the `std` or
`alloc` features, include the relevant feature in your `Cargo.toml`.

## Notes

- Bevy already includes a single `no_std` crate, `bevy_ptr`, so there is
precedent for this change.
- As `bevy_utils` is widely used across the rest of Bevy, further work
to make Bevy `no_std` compatible would be blocked on this crate, if such
work was to be undertaken.
- Most of the changes in this PR are just the removal of an unnecessary
call to `to_string()` within unit tests.
2024-09-18 16:00:03 +00:00
TheBigCheese
b1273d48cb
Enable clippy::check-private-items so that missing_safety_doc will apply to private functions as well (#15161)
Enabled `check-private-items` in `clippy.toml` and then fixed the
resulting errors. Most of these were simply misformatted and of the
remaining:
- ~Added `#[allow(clippy::missing_safety_doc)]` to~ Removed unsafe from
a pair of functions in `bevy_utils/futures` which are only unsafe so
that they can be passed to a function which requires `unsafe fn`
- Removed `unsafe` from `UnsafeWorldCell::observers` as from what I can
tell it is always safe like `components`, `bundles` etc. (this should be
checked)
- Added safety docs to:
- `Bundles::get_storage_unchecked`: Based on the function that writes to
`dynamic_component_storages`
- `Bundles::get_storages_unchecked`: Based on the function that writes
to `dynamic_bundle_storages`
   - `QueryIterationCursor::init_empty`: Duplicated from `init`
- `QueryIterationCursor::peek_last`: Thanks Giooschi (also added
internal unsafe blocks)
   - `tests::drop_ptr`: Moved safety comment out to the doc string
 
This lint would also apply to `missing_errors_doc`, `missing_panics_doc`
and `unnecessary_safety_doc` if we chose to enable any of those at some
point, although there is an open
[issue](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/issues/13074) to
separate these options.
2024-09-18 15:28:41 +00:00
Isaac Corbrey
fbb9b36441
Throw real error messages on all failed attempts to get StateTransition schedule (#15284)
# Objective

Make it clear to the user why their program is failing rather than
having an unhelpful `called Option::unwrap() on a None value` message.

## Solution

Change the `unwrap()` calls to `expect()` calls, mirroring previously
implemented error messages.

## Testing

I have not tested these changes, but they are fairly trivial so I do not
necessarily feel they need it.
2024-09-18 13:43:06 +00:00
Gino Valente
69541462c5
bevy_reflect: Add Reflectable trait (#5772)
# Objective

When deriving `Reflect`, users will notice that their generic arguments
also need to implement `Reflect`:

```rust
#[derive(Reflect)]
struct Foo<T: Reflect> {
  value: T
}
```

This works well for now. However, as we want to do more with `Reflect`,
these bounds might need to change. For example, to get #4154 working, we
likely need to enforce the `GetTypeRegistration` trait. So now we have:

```rust
#[derive(Reflect)]
struct Foo<T: Reflect + GetTypeRegistration> {
  value: T
}
```

Not great, but not horrible. However, we might then want to do something
as suggested in
[this](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/5745#issuecomment-1221389131)
comment and add a `ReflectTypeName` trait for stable type name support.
Well now we have:

```rust
#[derive(Reflect)]
struct Foo<T: Reflect + GetTypeRegistration + ReflectTypeName> {
  value: T
}
```

Now imagine that for even two or three generic types. Yikes!

As the API changes it would be nice if users didn't need to manually
migrate their generic type bounds like this.

A lot of these traits are (or will/might be) core to the entire
reflection API. And although `Reflect` can't add them as supertraits for
object-safety reasons, they are still indirectly required for things to
function properly (manual implementors will know how easy it is to
forget to implement `GetTypeRegistration`). And they should all be
automatically implemented for user types anyways as long they're using
`#[derive(Reflect)]`.

## Solution

Add a "catch-all" trait called `Reflectable` whose supertraits are a
select handful of core reflection traits.

This allows us to consolidate all the examples above into this:

```rust
#[derive(Reflect)]
struct Foo<T: Reflectable> {
  value: T
}
```

And as we experiment with the API, users can rest easy knowing they
don't need to migrate dozens upon dozens of types. It should all be
automatic!

## Discussion

1. Thoughts on the name `Reflectable`? Is it too easily confused with
`Reflect`? Or does it at least accurately describe that this contains
the core traits? If not, maybe `BaseReflect`?

---

## Changelog

- Added the `Reflectable` trait

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2024-09-18 00:36:41 +00:00
JoshValjosh
8d78c37ce9
Use FloatOrd for sprite Z comparison and ignore sprites with NaN (#15267)
# Objective

Fixes #15258

## Solution

If my understanding is correct, sprites with NaN anywhere in their
transform won't even get onto the screen, so should not generate pick
events. This PR filters sprites with NaN in their transforms before
sorting by depth, then uses `FloatOrd` to simplify the comparison. Since
we're guaranteed to not have NaN values, it's technically unnecessary,
and we could instead sort with `a.partial_cmp(&b).unwrap()`, or even
`unwrap_unchecked()`.

## Testing

I ran the picking example to ensure Z sorting was working as intended.
2024-09-17 23:27:53 +00:00
Alice Cecile
e0d38a4a3b
Add basic docs explaining what asset processing is and where to look (#15058)
# Objective

Asset processing (added as part of #8624) is a powerful, high-impact
feature, but has been widely underused (and underdeveloped) due to poor
developer understanding.

## Solution

In this PR, I've documented what asset processing is, why it's useful,
and pointed users to the two primary entry points.

While I would like substantially more involved practical examples for
how to perform common asset-processing tasks, I've split them out from
this PR for ease of review (and actually submitting this for review
before the weekend).

We should add bread crumbs from the module docs to these docs, but
whether we add that here or in #15056 depends on which gets merged
first.

---------

Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
2024-09-17 22:59:12 +00:00
Alice Cecile
23aca13609
Add module and supporting documentation to bevy_assets (#15056)
# Objective

Bevy's asset system is powerful and generally well-designed but very
opaque.

Beginners struggle to discover how to do simple tasks and grok the
fundamental data models, while more advanced users trip over the
assorted traits and their relation to each other.

Reverts #15054 ;)

## Solution

This PR adds module documentation to `bevy_assets`, tweaking the
associated documentation on the items as needed to provide further
details and bread crumbs.

If you have ideas for other important, hard-to-discover patterns or
functionality in this crate, please let me know.

That said, I've left out a section on asset preprocessing which *should*
eventually go here. That is substantially more uncertain, and requires
both more time to investigate and more expertise to review.

---------

Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: TrialDragon <31419708+TrialDragon@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: NotAFile <notafile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Zachary Harrold <zac@harrold.com.au>
Co-authored-by: JMS55 <47158642+JMS55@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Jan Hohenheim <jan@hohenheim.ch>
2024-09-17 22:07:37 +00:00
Wybe Westra
612731edfb
Add DynamicTyped link to TypeInfo docs (#15188) (#15259)
Also added a bit to the paragraph to explain when to use the new
function.
Fixes #15188.
2024-09-17 19:27:26 +00:00
Christian Hughes
378dcacf82
Group IntoSystemConfigs impls together (#15254)
# Objective

Two of the `IntoSystemConfigs` `impl`s are out of place near the top of
the file.

## Solution

Put them below the `IntoSystemConfigs` trait definition, alongside the
other `impl`.
2024-09-17 17:57:22 +00:00
no-materials
b884f96598
Implement enabled flag for fps overlay (#15246)
# Objective

Fixes #15223 

## Solution

Adds an `enabled` flag to the `FpsOverlayConfig` resource with a system
that detects it's change, and adjusts the visibility of the overlay text
entity.

## Testing

I extended the `fps_overlay` example with the option to toggle the
overlay. Run with:
```
cargo run --features="bevy_dev_tools" --example fps_overlay
```
2024-09-17 15:16:28 +00:00
Patrick Walton
3c41586154
Add EntityRefExcept and EntityMutExcept world queries, in preparation for generalized animation. (#15207)
This commit adds two new `WorldQuery` types: `EntityRefExcept` and
`EntityMutExcept`. These types work just like `EntityRef` and
`EntityMut`, but they prevent access to a statically-specified list of
components. For example, `EntityMutExcept<(AnimationPlayer,
Handle<AnimationGraph>)>` provides mutable access to all components
except for `AnimationPlayer` and `Handle<AnimationGraph>`. These types
are useful when you need to be able to process arbitrary queries while
iterating over the results of another `EntityMut` query.

The motivating use case is *generalized animation*, which is an upcoming
feature that allows animation of any component property, not just
rotation, translation, scaling, or morph weights. To implement this, we
must change the current `AnyOf<(&mut Transform, &mut MorphWeights)>` to
instead be `EntityMutExcept<(AnimationPlayer, Handle<AnimationGraph>)>`.
It's possible to use `FilteredEntityMut` in conjunction with a
dynamically-generated system instead, but `FilteredEntityMut` isn't
optimized for the use case of a large number of allowed components
coupled with a small set of disallowed components. No amount of
optimization of `FilteredEntityMut` produced acceptable performance on
the `many_foxes` benchmark. `Query<EntityMut, Without<AnimationPlayer>>`
will not suffice either, as it's legal and idiomatic for an
`AnimationTarget` and an `AnimationPlayer` to coexist on the same
entity.

An alternate proposal was to implement a somewhat-more-general
`Except<Q, CL>` feature, where Q is a `WorldQuery` and CL is a
`ComponentList`. I wasn't able to implement that proposal in a
reasonable way, because of the fact that methods like
`EntityMut::get_mut` and `EntityRef::get` are inherent methods instead
of methods on `WorldQuery`, and therefore there was no way to delegate
methods like `get` and `get_mut` to the inner query in a generic way.
Refactoring those methods into a trait would probably be possible.
However, I didn't see a use case for a hypothetical `Except` with
arbitrary queries: `Query<Except<(&Transform, &Visibility),
Visibility>>` would just be a complicated equivalent to
`Query<&Transform>`, for instance. So, out of a desire for simplicity, I
omitted a generic `Except` mechanism.

I've tested the performance of generalized animation on `many_foxes` and
found that, with this patch, `animate_targets` has a 7.4% slowdown over
`main`. With `FilteredEntityMut` optimized to use `Arc<Access>`, the
slowdown is 75.6%, due to contention on the reference count. Without
`Arc<Access>`, the slowdown is even worse, over 2x.

## Testing

New tests have been added that check that `EntityRefExcept` and
`EntityMutExcept` allow and disallow access to components properly and
that the query engine can correctly reject conflicting queries involving
those types.

A Tracy profile of `many_foxes` with 10,000 foxes showing generalized
animation using `FilteredEntityMut` (red) vs. main (yellow) is as
follows:

![Screenshot 2024-09-12
225914](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/2993d74c-a513-4ba4-85bd-225672e7170a)

A Tracy profile of `many_foxes` with 10,000 foxes showing generalized
animation using this `EntityMutExcept` (yellow) vs. main (red) is as
follows:

![Screenshot 2024-09-14
205831](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/4241015e-0c5d-44ef-835b-43f78a24e604)
2024-09-17 14:53:39 +00:00
Benjamin Brienen
b45d83ebda
Rename Add to Queue for methods with deferred semantics (#15234)
# Objective

- Fixes #15106

## Solution

- Trivial refactor to rename the method. The duplicate method `push` was
removed as well. This will simpify the API and make the semantics more
clear. `Add` implies that the action happens immediately, whereas in
reality, the command is queued to be run eventually.
- `ChildBuilder::add_command` has similarly been renamed to
`queue_command`.

## Testing

Unit tests should suffice for this simple refactor.

---

## Migration Guide

- `Commands::add` and `Commands::push` have been replaced with
`Commnads::queue`.
- `ChildBuilder::add_command` has been renamed to
`ChildBuilder::queue_command`.
2024-09-17 00:17:49 +00:00
Navneet Aman
c2d54f5f04
Don't leak SEND resource, even if thread is panicking. (#15247)
# Objective
Currently the resource doesn't get dropped if thread panics. This is
presumably to prevent !SEND resource from being dropped by wrong thread.
But, this logic is not needed for SEND resources. So we don't need this
check for SEND resource.

Fixes #15144 

## Solution

We check if resource is !SEND before, validating that correct thread is
dropping the resource.

## Testing

- Did you test these changes? If so, how?
I did run cargo test on bevy.
- Are there any parts that need more testing?
No
- How can other people (reviewers) test your changes? Is there anything
specific they need to know?
Nothing special
- If relevant, what platforms did you test these changes on, and are
there any important ones you can't test?
x86_64 desktop
2024-09-16 23:36:52 +00:00
dependabot[bot]
c3465a9676
Update gilrs requirement from 0.10.1 to 0.11.0 (#15245)
Updates the requirements on
[gilrs](https://gitlab.com/gilrs-project/gilrs) to permit the latest
version.
<details>
<summary>Commits</summary>
<ul>
<li><a
href="cbcff6a4cd"><code>cbcff6a</code></a>
Speed up CI by testing only on x86_64-pc-windows-msvc from Windows’
targets</li>
<li><a
href="78582dd9df"><code>78582dd</code></a>
Update deps and prepare for gilrs 0.11.0 and gilrs-core 0.6.0</li>
<li><a
href="aad5c1072d"><code>aad5c10</code></a>
Mark error enums, Event and EventType as non_exhaustive</li>
<li><a
href="ec5d668d6b"><code>ec5d668</code></a>
Fix potential overflow in btn_value()</li>
<li><a
href="59811ff850"><code>59811ff</code></a>
Prepare for gilrs-core 0.5.15 release</li>
<li><a
href="aeaeb747d7"><code>aeaeb74</code></a>
windows: Don’t panic on Reading::update() returning error</li>
<li><a
href="d26e37f121"><code>d26e37f</code></a>
windows: Remove event handlers on drop</li>
<li><a
href="daf263d3cc"><code>daf263d</code></a>
Prevent crash in WASM backend when browser assigns gamepad unexpected
ID</li>
<li><a
href="5f7b786f83"><code>5f7b786</code></a>
Upgrade SDL_GameControllerDB.</li>
<li><a
href="3d92b2e15a"><code>3d92b2e</code></a>
gilrs-core version 0.5.13</li>
<li>Additional commits viewable in <a
href="https://gitlab.com/gilrs-project/gilrs/compare/v0.10.1...v0.11.0">compare
view</a></li>
</ul>
</details>
<br />


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2024-09-16 23:34:04 +00:00
Benjamin Brienen
29508f065f
Fix floating point math (#15239)
# Objective

- Fixes #15236

## Solution

- Use bevy_math::ops instead of std floating point operations.

## Testing

- Did you test these changes? If so, how?
Unit tests and `cargo run -p ci -- test`

- How can other people (reviewers) test your changes? Is there anything
specific they need to know?
Execute `cargo run -p ci -- test` on Windows.

- If relevant, what platforms did you test these changes on, and are
there any important ones you can't test?
Windows

## Migration Guide

- Not a breaking change
- Projects should use bevy math where applicable

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: IQuick 143 <IQuick143cz@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Joona Aalto <jondolf.dev@gmail.com>
2024-09-16 23:28:12 +00:00
Taylor Neal
23a77ca5eb
Rename push children to add children (#15196)
# Objective

- Makes naming between add_child and add_children more consistent
- Fixes #15101 

## Solution

renamed push_children to add_children

## Testing

- Did you test these changes? If so, how?
Ran tests + grep search for any instance of `push_child`

- Are there any parts that need more testing?

- How can other people (reviewers) test your changes? Is there anything
specific they need to know?

- If relevant, what platforms did you test these changes on, and are
there any important ones you can't test?
ran tests on WSL2

---

## Migration Guide

> This section is optional. If there are no breaking changes, you can
delete this section.

- If this PR is a breaking change (relative to the last release of
Bevy), describe how a user might need to migrate their code to support
these changes

rename any use of `push_children()` to the updated `add_children()`
2024-09-16 23:16:04 +00:00
patrickariel
3efef59d83
Enable/disable UI anti-aliasing (#15170)
# Objective

Currently, UI is always rendered with anti-aliasing. This makes bevy's
UI completely unsuitable for art-styles that demands hard pixelated
edges, such as retro-style games.

## Solution

Add a component for disabling anti-aliasing in UI.

## Testing

In
[`examples/ui/button.rs`](15e246eff8/examples/ui/button.rs),
add the component to the camera like this:

```rust
use bevy::{prelude::*, ui::prelude::*};

commands.spawn((Camera2dBundle::default(), UiAntiAlias::Off));
```

The rounded button will now render without anti-aliasing.

## Showcase

An example of a rounded UI node rendered without anti-aliasing, with and
without borders:


![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/ea797e40-bdaa-4ede-a0d3-c9a7eab95b6e)
2024-09-16 23:06:23 +00:00
Robert Walter
29c4c79342
Rotation api extension (#15169)
# Objective

- Another way of specifying rotations was requested in
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/11132#issuecomment-2344603178

## Solution

- Add methods on `Rot2`
  - `turn_fraction(fraction: f32) -> Self`
  - `as_turn_fraction(self) -> f32`
- Also add some documentation on range of rotation

## Testing

- extended existing tests
- added new tests

## Showcase 

```rust
let rotation1 = Rot2::degrees(90.0);
let rotation2 = Rot2::turn_fraction(0.25);

// rotations should be equal
assert_relative_eq!(rotation1, rotation2);

// The rotation should be 90 degrees
assert_relative_eq!(rotation2.as_radians(), FRAC_PI_2);
assert_relative_eq!(rotation2.as_degrees(), 90.0);

```

---------

Co-authored-by: Joona Aalto <jondolf.dev@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jan Hohenheim <jan@hohenheim.ch>
2024-09-16 23:02:08 +00:00
Cole Varner
17b1bcde95
Add missing insert API commands (#15166)
# Objective

- Adds the missing API commands `insert_if_new_and` and
`try_insert_if_new_and` (resolves #15105)
- Adds some test coverage for existing insert commands

## Testing

- Implemented additional unit tests to add coverage
2024-09-16 23:00:00 +00:00
Chris Russell
382917fbb3
Improve type inference in DynSystemParam::downcast() by making the type parameter match the return value. (#15103)
# Objective

Right now, `DynSystemParam::downcast()` always requires the type
parameter to be specified with a turbofish. Make it so that it can be
inferred from the use of the return value, like:

```rust
fn expects_res_a(mut param: DynSystemParam) {
    let res: Res<A> = param.downcast().unwrap();
}
```

## Solution

The reason this doesn't currently work is that the type parameter is a
`'static` version of the `SystemParam` so that it can be used with
`Any::downcast_mut()`. Change the method signature so that the type
parameter matches the return type, and use `T::Item<'static, 'static>`
to get the `'static` version. That means we wind up returning a
`T::Item<'static, 'static>::Item<'w, 's>`, so constrain that to be equal
to `T`. That works with every `SystemParam` implementation, since they
have `T::Item == T` up to lifetimes.
2024-09-16 22:56:57 +00:00
Eero Lehtinen
db525e660e
Fix MeshAllocator panic (#14560)
# Objective

 Fixes #14540

## Solution

- Clean slab layouts from stale `SlabId`s when freeing meshes
- Technically performance requirements of freeing now increase based on
the number of existing meshes, but maybe it doesn't matter too much in
practice
- This was the case before this PR too, but it's technically possible to
free and allocate 2^32 times and overflow with `SlabId`s and cause
incorrect behavior. It looks like new meshes would then override old
ones.

## Testing

- Tested in `loading_screen` example and tapping keyboard 1 and 2.
2024-09-16 22:54:01 +00:00
Adam
9bda913e36
Remove redundent information and optimize dynamic allocations in Table (#12929)
# Objective

- fix #12853
- Make `Table::allocate` faster

## Solution
The PR consists of multiple steps:

1) For the component data: create a new data-structure that's similar to
`BlobVec` but doesn't store `len` & `capacity` inside of it: "BlobArray"
(name suggestions welcome)
2) For the `Tick` data: create a new data-structure that's similar to
`ThinSlicePtr` but supports dynamic reallocation: "ThinArrayPtr" (name
suggestions welcome)
3) Create a new data-structure that's very similar to `Column` that
doesn't store `len` & `capacity` inside of it: "ThinColumn"
4) Adjust the `Table` implementation to use `ThinColumn` instead of
`Column`

The result is that only one set of `len` & `capacity` is stored in
`Table`, in `Table::entities`

### Notes Regarding Performance
Apart from shaving off some excess memory in `Table`, the changes have
also brought noteworthy performance improvements:
The previous implementation relied on `Vec::reserve` &
`BlobVec::reserve`, but that redundantly repeated the same if statement
(`capacity` == `len`). Now that check could be made at the `Table` level
because the capacity and length of all the columns are synchronized;
saving N branches per allocation. The result is a respectable
performance improvement per every `Table::reserve` (and subsequently
`Table::allocate`) call.

I'm hesitant to give exact numbers because I don't have a lot of
experience in profiling and benchmarking, but these are the results I
got so far:

*`add_remove_big/table` benchmark after the implementation:*


![after_add_remove_big_table](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/46227443/b667da29-1212-4020-8bb0-ec0f15bb5f8a)

*`add_remove_big/table` benchmark in main branch (measured in comparison
to the implementation):*


![main_add_remove_big_table](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/46227443/41abb92f-3112-4e01-b935-99696eb2fe58)

*`add_remove_very_big/table` benchmark after the implementation:*


![after_add_remove_very_big](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/46227443/f268a155-295b-4f55-ab02-f8a9dcc64fc2)

*`add_remove_very_big/table` benchmark in main branch (measured in
comparison to the implementation):*


![main_add_remove_very_big](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/46227443/78b4e3a6-b255-47c9-baee-1a24c25b9aea)

cc @james7132 to verify

---

## Changelog

- New data-structure that's similar to `BlobVec` but doesn't store `len`
& `capacity` inside of it: `BlobArray`
- New data-structure that's similar to `ThinSlicePtr` but supports
dynamic allocation:`ThinArrayPtr`
- New data-structure that's very similar to `Column` that doesn't store
`len` & `capacity` inside of it: `ThinColumn`
- Adjust the `Table` implementation to use `ThinColumn` instead of
`Column`
- New benchmark: `add_remove_very_big` to benchmark the performance of
spawning a lot of entities with a lot of components (15) each

## Migration Guide

`Table` now uses `ThinColumn` instead of `Column`. That means that
methods that previously returned `Column`, will now return `ThinColumn`
instead.

`ThinColumn` has a much more limited and low-level API, but you can
still achieve the same things in `ThinColumn` as you did in `Column`.
For example, instead of calling `Column::get_added_tick`, you'd call
`ThinColumn::get_added_ticks_slice` and index it to get the specific
added tick.

---------

Co-authored-by: James Liu <contact@jamessliu.com>
2024-09-16 22:52:05 +00:00
Federico Rinaldi
262b068bc3
Substitute trivial fallible conversions with infallible function calls (#10846)
Clippy for rust 1.75 will introduce the
[`unnecessary_fallible_conversions`][1] lint. This PR solves the trivial
ones.

[1]:
https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#unnecessary_fallible_conversions
2024-09-16 22:46:54 +00:00
Blazepaws
5a0c09d38f
Reflect derived traits on all components and resources: bevy_transform (#15230)
Fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/15187 for bevy_transform
2024-09-15 18:19:44 +00:00
Blazepaws
cb6ab16c97
Reflect derived traits on all components and resources: bevy_ui (#15231)
Solves https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/15187 for bevy_ui
2024-09-15 17:52:38 +00:00
Blazepaws
4d65757b3e
Reflect derived traits on all components and resources: bevy_window (#15233)
Solves https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/15187 for bevy_window.
This is the last one.
2024-09-15 17:49:00 +00:00
Blazepaws
1c2e1fc15a
Reflect derived traits on all components and resources: bevy_text (#15229)
Solves https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/15187 for bevy_text
2024-09-15 17:21:02 +00:00
Blazepaws
b38cc9e7b0
Reflect derived traits on all components and resources: bevy_state (#15228)
Solves https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/15187 for bevy_state
2024-09-15 17:16:45 +00:00
Blazepaws
07e79f3e9f
Reflect derived traits on all components and resources: bevy_sprite (#15227)
Solves https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/15187 for bevy_sprite
2024-09-15 17:10:53 +00:00
Blazepaws
274c97d415
Reflect derived traits on all components and resources: bevy_render (#15226)
Addresses https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/15187 for
bevy_render
2024-09-15 17:05:11 +00:00
Blazepaws
0c92908baf
Reflect derived traits on all components and resources: bevy_picking (#15225)
Solves https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/15187 for bevy_picking
2024-09-15 16:17:39 +00:00
Blazepaws
b6b28a621f
Reflect derived traits on all components and resources: bevy_pbr (#15224)
Solves https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/15187 for bevy_pbr
2024-09-15 16:07:30 +00:00
poopy
d878e2f8bd
add allow_all and deny_all methods to DynamicSceneBuilder (#15222)
# Objective

It would be convenient to be able to quickly deny or allow all
components and resources on a `DynamicSceneBuilder` with a single method
call.

Context: #15210 renamed `{allow/deny}_all` to
`{allow/deny}_all_components`.

## Solution

Added two new methods to `DynamicSceneBuilder`, `allow_all` and
`deny_all`, which affect both the component and resource filters.


## Showcase

### Before

```rust
let builder = DynamicSceneBuilder::from_world(world)
    .deny_all_components()
    .deny_all_resources();
```

### After

```rust
let builder = DynamicSceneBuilder::from_world(world).deny_all();
```
2024-09-15 15:30:53 +00:00
Blazepaws
228ce8170a
Use of deprecated function in example for ButtonInput (#15221)
The function `bevy_input::schedule::condition::Condition::or_else` has
been deprecated in favor of
`bevy_input::schedule::condition::Condition::or`. However the docs for
`ButtonInput` were still using the deprecated function in their example.
2024-09-15 15:22:39 +00:00
Blazepaws
62b2cdab32
Reflect derived traits on all components and resources: bevy_hierarchy (#15219)
Solves https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/15187 for
bevy_hierarchy
2024-09-15 15:09:28 +00:00
Blazepaws
e718bbd55c
Reflect derived traits on all components and resources: bevy_input (#15220)
Solves https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/15187 for bevy_input
2024-09-15 15:08:46 +00:00
Blazepaws
569f68f8a0
Reflect derived traits on all components and resources: bevy_gltf (#15218)
Solves https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/15187 for bevy_gltf
2024-09-15 14:47:43 +00:00
Blazepaws
379696a468
Reflect derived traits on all components and resources: bevy_gizmos (#15217)
Solves https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/15187 for bevy_gizmos
2024-09-15 14:41:49 +00:00
poopy
2ea8d35900
explicitly mention component in methods on DynamicSceneBuilder (#15210)
# Objective

The method names on `DynamicSceneBuilder` are misleading. Specifically,
`deny_all` and `allow_all` implies everything will be denied/allowed,
including all components and resources. In reality, these methods only
apply to components (which is mentioned in the docs).

## Solution

- change `deny_all` and `allow_all` to `deny_all_components` and
`allow_all_components`
- also, change the remaining methods to mention component where it makes
sense

We could also add the `deny_all` and `allow_all` methods back later,
only this time, they would deny/allow both resources and components.

## Showcase

### Before
```rust
let builder = DynamicSceneBuilder::from_world(world)
    .deny_all()
    .deny_all_resources()
    .allow::<MyComponent>();
```

### After
```rust
let builder = DynamicSceneBuilder::from_world(world)
    .deny_all_components()
    .deny_all_resources()
    .allow_component::<MyComponent>();
```

## Migration Guide

the following invocations on `DynamicSceneBuilder` should be changed by
users
- `with_filter` -> `with_component_filter`
- `allow` -> `allow_component`
- `deny` -> `deny_component`
- `allow_all` -> `allow_all_components`
- `deny_all` -> `deny_all_components`
2024-09-15 14:37:32 +00:00
Al M.
2ea51fc60f
Use FromReflect when extracting entities in dynamic scenes (#15174)
# Objective

Fix #10284.

## Solution

When `DynamicSceneBuilder` extracts entities, they are cloned via
`PartialReflect::clone_value`, making them into dynamic versions of the
original components. This loses any custom `ReflectSerialize` type data.
Dynamic scenes are deserialized with the original types, not the dynamic
versions, and so any component with a custom serialize may fail. In this
case `Rect` and `Vec2`. The dynamic version includes the field names 'x'
and 'y' but the `Serialize` impl doesn't, hence the "expect float"
error.

The solution here: Instead of using `clone_value` to clone the
components, `FromReflect` clones and retains the original information
needed to serialize with any custom `Serialize` impls. I think using
something like `reflect_clone` from
(https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/13432) might make this more
efficient.

I also did the same when deserializing dynamic scenes to appease some of
the round-trip tests which use `ReflectPartialEq`, which requires the
types be the same and not a unique/proxy pair. I'm not sure it's
otherwise necessary. Maybe this would also be more efficient when
spawning dynamic scenes with `reflect_clone` instead of `FromReflect`
again?

An alternative solution would be to fall back to the dynamic version
when deserializing `DynamicScene`s if the custom version fails. I think
that's possible. Or maybe simply always deserializing via the dynamic
route for dynamic scenes?

## Testing

This example is similar to the original test case in #10284:

``` rust
#![allow(missing_docs)]

use bevy::{prelude::*, scene::SceneInstanceReady};

fn main() {
    App::new()
        .add_plugins(DefaultPlugins)
        .add_systems(Startup, (save, load).chain())
        .observe(check)
        .run();
}

static SAVEGAME_SAVE_PATH: &str = "savegame.scn.ron";

fn save(world: &mut World) {
    let entity = world.spawn(OrthographicProjection::default()).id();

    let scene = DynamicSceneBuilder::from_world(world)
        .extract_entity(entity)
        .build();

    if let Some(registry) = world.get_resource::<AppTypeRegistry>() {
        let registry = registry.read();
        let serialized_scene = scene.serialize(&registry).unwrap();
        // println!("{}", serialized_scene);
        std::fs::write(format!("assets/{SAVEGAME_SAVE_PATH}"), serialized_scene).unwrap();
    }

    world.entity_mut(entity).despawn_recursive();
}

fn load(mut commands: Commands, asset_server: Res<AssetServer>) {
    commands.spawn(DynamicSceneBundle {
        scene: asset_server.load(SAVEGAME_SAVE_PATH),
        ..default()
    });
}

fn check(_trigger: Trigger<SceneInstanceReady>, query: Query<&OrthographicProjection>) {
    dbg!(query.single());
}
```


## Migration Guide

The `DynamicScene` format is changed to use custom serialize impls so
old scene files will need updating:

Old: 

```ron
(
  resources: {},
  entities: {
    4294967299: (
      components: {
        "bevy_render:📷:projection::OrthographicProjection": (
          near: 0.0,
          far: 1000.0,
          viewport_origin: (
            x: 0.5,
            y: 0.5,
          ),
          scaling_mode: WindowSize(1.0),
          scale: 1.0,
          area: (
            min: (
              x: -1.0,
              y: -1.0,
            ),
            max: (
              x: 1.0,
              y: 1.0,
            ),
          ),
        ),
      },
    ),
  },
)
```

New:

```ron
(
  resources: {},
  entities: {
    4294967299: (
      components: {
        "bevy_render:📷:projection::OrthographicProjection": (
          near: 0.0,
          far: 1000.0,
          viewport_origin: (0.5, 0.5),
          scaling_mode: WindowSize(1.0),
          scale: 1.0,
          area: (
            min: (-1.0, -1.0),
            max: (1.0, 1.0),
          ),
        ),
      },
    ),
  },
)
```

---------

Co-authored-by: Gino Valente <49806985+MrGVSV@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-09-15 14:33:39 +00:00
Blazepaws
21e39360f7
Example for bevy_ecs::event::Events uses deprecated function get_reader (#15216)
Fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/15214
2024-09-15 14:24:04 +00:00
Blazepaws
abac8c7b0f
Reflect derived traits on all components and resources: bevy_audio (#15211)
Solves https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/15187 for bevy_audio
2024-09-15 14:24:00 +00:00
Blazepaws
53d2bc9482
Reflect derived traits on all components and resources: bevy_ecs (#15215)
Solves https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/15187 for bevy_ecs
2024-09-15 14:23:54 +00:00
Blazepaws
df8cb3e5e2
Reflect derived traits on all components and resources: bevy_core_pipeline (#15213)
Solves https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/15187 for
bevy_core_pipeline
2024-09-15 14:23:41 +00:00
Blazepaws
c909a0572d
Reflect derived traits on all components and resources: bevy_animation (#15209)
Solves https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/15187 for the
bevy_animation subcrate
2024-09-15 11:58:51 +00:00
kivi
3f425da66e
Improve schedule note of .after/.before & encourage to use .chain ins… (#14986)
# Objective

- Fixes #14552 
- Make the current note of `before` and `after` understandable. 
- > The given set is not implicitly added to the schedule when this
system set is added.

## Solution

- Replace note in docs of [`after` and
`before`](https://docs.rs/bevy/latest/bevy/ecs/prelude/trait.IntoSystemConfigs.html#method.before)
- Note of after was removed completely, and links to `before`, because
they notes would be identical.
- Also encourage to use `.chain`, which is much simpler and safer to use

## Testing

- Checked the docs after running `cargo doc` and `cargo run -p ci --
lints`
- Are there any parts that need more testing?
- no need to test, but please review the text. If it is still including
the intended message and especially if its understandable.

---------

Co-authored-by: Jan Hohenheim <jan@hohenheim.ch>
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2024-09-14 21:03:21 +00:00
Wybe Westra
70808af776
Added ordering information to observer tests (#14332) (#15178)
Fixes #14332 by recording the order in which the events occur.
2024-09-14 14:08:49 +00:00
Joona Aalto
b36443b6ed
Fix Capsule2d::sample_interior (#15191)
# Objective

`Capsule2d::sample_interior` uses the radius of the capsule for the
width of its rectangular section. It should be using two times the
radius for the full width!

I noticed this as I was getting incorrect results for angular inertia
approximated from a point cloud of points sampled on the capsule. This
hinted that something was wrong with the sampling.

## Solution

Multiply the radius by two to get the full width of the rectangular
section. With this, the sampling produces the correct result in my
tests.
2024-09-14 02:24:08 +00:00
Blazepaws
583e034796
Reflected traits for resources and components: bevy_a11y (#15192)
Solves https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/15187 for the bevy_a11y
subcrate.
2024-09-14 01:43:16 +00:00
Cole Varner
cf55e6cb22
ParsedPath::try_from<&str> (#15180)
# Objective

- implements ParsedPath::try_from<&str>
- resolves #14438

## Testing

- Added unit test for ParsedPath::try_from<&str>

Note: I don't claim to be an expert on lifetimes! That said I think it
makes sense that the error shares a lifetime with input string as deeper
down it is used to construct it.
2024-09-13 17:37:09 +00:00
Gino Valente
37443e0f3f
bevy_reflect: Add DynamicTyped trait (#15108)
# Objective

Thanks to #7207, we now have a way to validate at the type-level that a
reflected value is actually the type it says it is and not just a
dynamic representation of that type.

`dyn PartialReflect` values _might_ be a dynamic type, but `dyn Reflect`
values are guaranteed to _not_ be a dynamic type.

Therefore, we can start to add methods to `Reflect` that weren't really
possible before. For example, we should now be able to always get a
`&'static TypeInfo`, and not just an `Option<&'static TypeInfo>`.

## Solution

Add the `DynamicTyped` trait.

This trait is similar to `DynamicTypePath` in that it provides a way to
use the non-object-safe `Typed` trait in an object-safe way.

And since all types that derive `Reflect` will also derive `Typed`, we
can safely add `DynamicTyped` as a supertrait of `Reflect`. This allows
us to use it when just given a `dyn Reflect` trait object.

## Testing

You can test locally by running:

```
cargo test --package bevy_reflect
```

---

## Showcase

`Reflect` now has a supertrait of `DynamicTyped`, allowing `TypeInfo` to
be retrieved from a `dyn Reflect` trait object without having to unwrap
anything!

```rust
let value: Box<dyn Reflect> = Box::new(String::from("Hello!"));

// BEFORE
let info: &'static TypeInfo = value.get_represented_type_info().unwrap();

// AFTER
let info: &'static TypeInfo = value.reflect_type_info();
```

## Migration Guide

`Reflect` now has a supertrait of `DynamicTyped`. If you were manually
implementing `Reflect` and did not implement `Typed`, you will now need
to do so.
2024-09-13 17:17:10 +00:00
Wybe Westra
ae80a20690
Reccomend using AssetPlugin.file_path instead of CARGO_MANIFEST_DIR (#15176)
Fixes #15175.

One question I have: I see that the scene_viewer example uses the
CARGO_MANIFEST_DIR. Should that line be removed, or would that break the
tool?

1fd478277e/examples/tools/scene_viewer/main.rs (L40)
2024-09-13 16:16:23 +00:00
ickshonpe
1b1105e327
Remove border radius scaling (#15173)
# Objective

Fixes #15142

Split this off from #15163 as it's a very simple fix.

## Solution

UiScale was applied twice to border radius, remove the second
application.

## Testing

You can use this modified button example from the issue for testing:

```
use bevy::{color::palettes::basic::*, prelude::*, winit::WinitSettings};

fn main() {
    App::new()
        .add_plugins(DefaultPlugins)
        // Only run the app when there is user input. This will significantly reduce CPU/GPU use.
        .insert_resource(UiScale(2.))
        .insert_resource(WinitSettings::desktop_app())
        .add_systems(Startup, setup)
        .add_systems(Update, button_system)
        .run();
}

const NORMAL_BUTTON: Color = Color::srgb(0.15, 0.15, 0.15);
const HOVERED_BUTTON: Color = Color::srgb(0.25, 0.25, 0.25);
const PRESSED_BUTTON: Color = Color::srgb(0.35, 0.75, 0.35);

fn button_system(
    mut interaction_query: Query<
        (
            &Interaction,
            &mut BackgroundColor,
            &mut BorderColor,
            &Children,
        ),
        (Changed<Interaction>, With<Button>),
    >,
    mut text_query: Query<&mut Text>,
) {
    for (interaction, mut color, mut border_color, children) in &mut interaction_query {
        let mut text = text_query.get_mut(children[0]).unwrap();
        match *interaction {
            Interaction::Pressed => {
                text.sections[0].value = "Press".to_string();
                *color = PRESSED_BUTTON.into();
                border_color.0 = RED.into();
            }
            Interaction::Hovered => {
                text.sections[0].value = "Hover".to_string();
                *color = HOVERED_BUTTON.into();
                border_color.0 = Color::WHITE;
            }
            Interaction::None => {
                text.sections[0].value = "Button".to_string();
                *color = NORMAL_BUTTON.into();
                border_color.0 = Color::BLACK;
            }
        }
    }
}

fn setup(mut commands: Commands, asset_server: Res<AssetServer>) {
    // ui camera
    commands.spawn(Camera2dBundle::default());
    commands
        .spawn(NodeBundle {
            style: Style {
                width: Val::Percent(100.0),
                height: Val::Percent(100.0),
                align_items: AlignItems::Center,
                justify_content: JustifyContent::Center,
                ..default()
            },
            ..default()
        })
        .with_children(|parent| {
            parent
                .spawn(ButtonBundle {
                    style: Style {
                        width: Val::Px(250.0),
                        height: Val::Px(100.0),
                        border: UiRect::all(Val::Px(25.0)),
                        // horizontally center child text
                        justify_content: JustifyContent::Center,
                        // vertically center child text
                        align_items: AlignItems::Center,
                        ..default()
                    },
                    border_color: BorderColor(Color::BLACK),
                    border_radius: BorderRadius::all(Val::Px(25.)),
                    background_color: NORMAL_BUTTON.into(),
                    ..default()
                })
                .with_child(TextBundle::from_section(
                    "Button",
                    TextStyle {
                        font: asset_server.load("fonts/FiraSans-Bold.ttf"),
                        font_size: 40.0,
                        color: Color::srgb(0.9, 0.9, 0.9),
                    },
                ));
            parent
                .spawn(NodeBundle {
                    style: Style {
                        width: Val::Px(150.0),
                        padding: UiRect::vertical(Val::Px(25.)),
                        height: Val::Px(100.0),
                        align_items: AlignItems::Stretch,
                        justify_content: JustifyContent::Stretch,
                        ..Default::default()
                    },
                    ..default()
                })
                .with_child(NodeBundle {
                    style: Style {
                        flex_basis: Val::Percent(100.),
                        ..Default::default()
                    },
                    background_color: RED.into(),
                    ..Default::default()
                });
        });
}
```

## Showcase

Using the modified button example

### main

<img alt="366023197-e6124f07-e522-4514-bd8e-7986ac32890c"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/b7b909ed-1184-4d9d-b50b-e30f4c1f76b2">


### this PR

![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/89b89a2f-533f-41bd-b2cb-4743aec6519e)
2024-09-13 15:52:42 +00:00
SpecificProtagonist
f570f52aa2
Optimize observer unregistration (#15150)
# Objective

Fixes #14980

## Solution

Only iterate over archetypes containing the component.

## Alternatives

Additionally, for each archetype, cache how many observers are watching
one of its components & use this to speed up the check for each affected
archetype ([implemented
here](55c89aa033)).
Benchmarking showed this to lead only to a minor speedup.

## Testing

There's both already a test checking that observers don't run after
being despawned as well as a regression test for the bug that
necessitates the check this PR optimizes.
2024-09-13 15:47:24 +00:00
Pēteris Pakalns
e567669c31
TrackedRenderPass internal tracking state reset (#14948)
# Objective

Fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/13225

## Solution

Invalidate `TrackedRenderPass` internal state upon accessing internal
`wgpu::RenderPass`.

## Testing

- Tested by calling `set_bind_group` on `RenderPass` returned by
`TrackedRenderPass::wgpu_pass` and checking if in later `set_bind_group`
calls on `TrackedRenderPass` correct bind group is restored.
2024-09-12 16:51:36 +00:00
charlotte
1fd478277e
Fix mesh 2d non indexed draw. (#15155)
Closes #15154. Looks like 2d was just missed in
d235d41af1.


![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/1656d320-fed2-4a25-b2b0-14755e10faf7)
2024-09-12 12:38:56 +00:00
Robert Walter
327e1ddba4
Micro typo in bevy_ecs (#15167)
I'm currently reading through the code and docs and found this.
2024-09-12 08:43:33 +00:00