# Objective
Fixes#8596
## Solution
Change interface of the trait Map. Adjust implementations of this trait
---
## Changelog
### Changed
- Interface of Map trait
### Added
- `Map::get_at_mut`
## Migration Guide
Every implementor of Map trait would need to implement `get_at_mut`.
Which, judging by changes in this PR, should be fairly trivial.
- Supress false positive `redundant_clone` lints.
- Supress inactionable `result_large_err` lint.
Most of the size(50 out of 68 bytes) is coming from
`naga::WithSpan<naga::valid::ValidationError>`
# Objective
- Make the dependency job successful again
## Solution
- Update the list of duplicates
- Remove a security issue exception not needed anymore
- Also update a dependency that was missed by dependabot
# Objective
Right now it's impossible to construct a MapIter outside of the
bevy_reflect crate, making it impossible to implement the Map trait for
custom map types.
## Solution
Addition of a pub constructor to MapIter.
Updates the requirements on
[android_log-sys](https://github.com/nercury/android_log-sys-rs) to
permit the latest version.
<details>
<summary>Commits</summary>
<ul>
<li>See full diff in <a
href="https://github.com/nercury/android_log-sys-rs/commits">compare
view</a></li>
</ul>
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# Objective
The `Condition` trait is only implemented for systems and system
functions that take no input. This can make it awkward to write
conditions that are intended to be used with system piping.
## Solution
Add an `In` generic to the trait. It defaults to `()`.
---
## Changelog
- Made the `Condition` trait generic over system inputs.
# Objective
- Fix Wayland window client side decorations issue on Gnome Wayland,
fixes#3301.
## Solution
- One simple one line solution: Add winit's `wayland-csd-adwaita`
feature to Bevy's `wayland` feature.
Copied from
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/3301#issuecomment-1569611257:
### Investigation
1. Gnome forced Wayland apps to implement CSD, whether on their own or
using some libraries like Gnome's official solution
[libdecor](https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/libdecor/libdecor). Many Linux
apps do this with libdecor, like blender, kitty... I think it's not
comfortable for Bevy to fix this problem this way.
2. Winit has support for CSD on
wayland(8bb004a1d9/Cargo.toml (L42)),
but Bevy disabled Winit's default features, thus no winit's
`wayland-csd-adwaita` feature. And Bevy's `wayland` feature doesn't
include winit's `wayland-csd-adwaita` feature so users can't get window
decorations on Wayland even with Bevy's `wayland` feature enabled.
3. Many rust UI toolkit, like iced, doesn't disable winit's
`wayland-csd-adwaita` feature.
### Conclusion and one Possible solution
Bevy disabled `winit`'s default features in order to decrease package
size. But I think it's acceptable to add `winit`'s `wayland-csd-adwaita`
feature to Bevy's `wayland` feature gate to fix this issue easily for
this only add on crate: sctk-adwaita.
# Objective
Several of our built-in `Command` types are too public:
- `GetOrSpawn` is public, even though it only makes sense to call it
from within `Commands::get_or_spawn`.
- `Remove` and `RemoveResource` contain public `PhantomData` marker
fields.
## Solution
Remove `GetOrSpawn` and use an anonymous command. Make the marker fields
private.
---
## Migration Guide
The `Command` types `Remove` and `RemoveResource` may no longer be
constructed manually.
```rust
// Before:
commands.add(Remove::<T> {
entity: id,
phantom: PhantomData,
});
// After:
commands.add(Remove::<T>::new(id));
// Before:
commands.add(RemoveResource::<T> { phantom: PhantomData });
// After:
commands.add(RemoveResource::<T>::new());
```
The command type `GetOrSpawn` has been removed. It was not possible to
use this type outside of `bevy_ecs`.
## Objective
- Provide a way to use `CubicCurve` non-iter methods
- Accept a `FnMut` over a `fn` pointer on `iter_samples`
- Improve `build_*_cubic_100_points` benchmark by -45% (this means they
are twice as fast)
### Solution
Previously, the only way to iterate over an evenly spaced set of points
on a `CubicCurve` was to use one of the `iter_*` methods.
The return value of those methods were bound by `&self` lifetime, making
them unusable in certain contexts.
Furthermore, other `CubicCurve` methods (`position`, `velocity`,
`acceleration`) required normalizing `t` over the `CubicCurve`'s
internal segment count.
There were no way to access this segment count, making those methods
pretty much unusable.
The newly added `segment_count` allows accessing the segment count.
`iter_samples` used to accept a `fn`, a function pointer. This is
surprising and contrary to the rust stdlib APIs, which accept `Fn`
traits for `Iterator` combinators.
`iter_samples` now accepts a `FnMut`.
I don't trust a bit the bevy benchmark suit, but according to it, this
doubles (-45%) the performance on the `build_pos_cubic_100_points` and
`build_accel_cubic_100_points` benchmarks.
---
## Changelog
- Added the `CubicCurve::segments` method to access the underlying
segments of a cubic curve
- Allow closures as `CubicCurve::iter_samples` `sample_function`
argument.
# Objective
Add documentation to `Query` and `QueryState` errors in bevy_ecs
(`QuerySingleError`, `QueryEntityError`, `QueryComponentError`)
## Solution
- Change display message for `QueryEntityError::QueryDoesNotMatch`: this
error can also happen when the entity has a component which is filtered
out (with `Without<C>`)
- Fix wrong reference in the documentation of `Query::get_component` and
`Query::get_component_mut` from `QueryEntityError` to
`QueryComponentError`
- Complete the documentation of the three error enum variants.
- Add examples for `QueryComponentError::MissingReadAccess` and
`QueryComponentError::MissingWriteAccess`
- Add reference to `QueryState` in `QueryEntityError`'s documentation.
---
## Migration Guide
Expect `QueryEntityError::QueryDoesNotMatch`'s display message to
change? Not sure that counts.
---------
Co-authored-by: harudagondi <giogdeasis@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Make #8015 easier to review;
## Solution
- This commit contains changes not directly related to transmission
required by #8015, in easier-to-review, one-change-per-commit form.
---
## Changelog
### Fixed
- Clear motion vector prepass using `0.0` instead of `1.0`, to avoid TAA
artifacts on transparent objects against the background;
### Added
- The `E` mathematical constant is now available for use in shaders,
exposed under `bevy_pbr::utils`;
- A new `TAA` shader def is now available, for conditionally enabling
shader logic via `#ifdef` when TAA is enabled; (e.g. for jittering
texture samples)
- A new `FallbackImageZero` resource is introduced, for when a fallback
image filled with zeroes is required;
- A new `RenderPhase<I>::render_range()` method is introduced, for
render phases that need to render their items in multiple parceled out
“steps”;
### Changed
- The `MainTargetTextures` struct now holds both `Texture` and
`TextureViews` for the main textures;
- The fog shader functions under `bevy_pbr::fog` now take the a `Fog`
structure as their first argument, instead of relying on the global
`fog` uniform;
- The main textures can now be used as copy sources;
## Migration Guide
- `ViewTarget::main_texture()` and `ViewTarget::main_texture_other()`
now return `&Texture` instead of `&TextureView`. If you were relying on
these methods, replace your usage with
`ViewTarget::main_texture_view()`and
`ViewTarget::main_texture_other_view()`, respectively;
- `ViewTarget::sampled_main_texture()` now returns `Option<&Texture>`
instead of a `Option<&TextureView>`. If you were relying on this method,
replace your usage with `ViewTarget::sampled_main_texture_view()`;
- The `apply_fog()`, `linear_fog()`, `exponential_fog()`,
`exponential_squared_fog()` and `atmospheric_fog()` functions now take a
configurable `Fog` struct. If you were relying on them, update your
usage by adding the global `fog` uniform as their first argument;
Change the default tonemapping method from ReinhardLuminance to
TonyMcMapface, which generally looks nicer and works out of the box with
bloom.
---
## Changelog
- TonyMcMapface is now the default tonemapper, instead of
ReinhardLuminance.
## Migration Guide
- The default tonemapper has been changed from ReinhardLuminance to
TonyMcMapface. Explicitly set ReinhardLuminance on your cameras to get
back the previous look.
# Objective
When using `FromReflect`, fields can be optionally left out if they are
marked with `#[reflect(default)]`. This is very handy for working with
serialized data as giant structs only need to list a subset of defined
fields in order to be constructed.
<details>
<summary>Example</summary>
Take the following struct:
```rust
#[derive(Reflect, FromReflect)]
struct Foo {
#[reflect(default)]
a: usize,
#[reflect(default)]
b: usize,
#[reflect(default)]
c: usize,
#[reflect(default)]
d: usize,
}
```
Since all the fields are default-able, we can successfully call
`FromReflect` on deserialized data like:
```rust
(
"foo::Foo": (
// Only set `b` and default the rest
b: 123
)
)
```
</details>
Unfortunately, this does not work with fields in enum variants. Marking
a variant field as `#[reflect(default)]` does nothing when calling
`FromReflect`.
## Solution
Allow enum variant fields to define a default value using
`#[reflect(default)]`.
### `#[reflect(Default)]`
One thing that structs and tuple structs can do is use their `Default`
implementation when calling `FromReflect`. Adding `#[reflect(Default)]`
to the struct or tuple struct both registers `ReflectDefault` and alters
the `FromReflect` implementation to use `Default` to generate any
missing fields.
This works well enough for structs and tuple structs, but for enums it's
not as simple. Since the `Default` implementation for an enum only
covers a single variant, it's not as intuitive as to what the behavior
will be. And (imo) it feels weird that we would be able to specify
default values in this way for one variant but not the others.
Because of this, I chose to not implement that behavior here. However,
I'm open to adding it in if anyone feels otherwise.
---
## Changelog
- Allow enum variant fields to define a default value using
`#[reflect(default)]`
# Objective
Fix#7833.
Safety comments in the multi-threaded executor don't really talk about
system world accesses, which makes it unclear if the code is actually
valid.
## Solution
Update the `System` trait to use `UnsafeWorldCell`. This type's API is
written in a way that makes it much easier to cleanly maintain safety
invariants. Use this type throughout the multi-threaded executor, with a
liberal use of safety comments.
---
## Migration Guide
The `System` trait now uses `UnsafeWorldCell` instead of `&World`. This
type provides a robust API for interior mutable world access.
- The method `run_unsafe` uses this type to manage world mutations
across multiple threads.
- The method `update_archetype_component_access` uses this type to
ensure that only world metadata can be used.
```rust
let mut system = IntoSystem::into_system(my_system);
system.initialize(&mut world);
// Before:
system.update_archetype_component_access(&world);
unsafe { system.run_unsafe(&world) }
// After:
system.update_archetype_component_access(world.as_unsafe_world_cell_readonly());
unsafe { system.run_unsafe(world.as_unsafe_world_cell()) }
```
---------
Co-authored-by: James Liu <contact@jamessliu.com>
# Objective
- Right now we can't really benefit from [early depth
testing](https://www.khronos.org/opengl/wiki/Early_Fragment_Test) in our
PBR shader because it includes codepaths with `discard`, even for
situations where they are not necessary.
## Solution
- This PR introduces a new `MeshPipelineKey` and shader def,
`MAY_DISCARD`;
- All possible material/mesh options that that may result in `discard`s
being needed must set `MAY_DISCARD` ahead of time:
- Right now, this is only `AlphaMode::Mask(f32)`, but in the future
might include other options/effects; (e.g. one effect I'm personally
interested in is bayer dither pseudo-transparency for LOD transitions of
opaque meshes)
- Shader codepaths that can `discard` are guarded by an `#ifdef
MAY_DISCARD` preprocessor directive:
- Right now, this is just one branch in `alpha_discard()`;
- If `MAY_DISCARD` is _not_ set, the `@early_depth_test` attribute is
added to the PBR fragment shader. This is a not yet documented, possibly
non-standard WGSL extension I found browsing Naga's source code. [I
opened a PR to document it
there](https://github.com/gfx-rs/naga/pull/2132). My understanding is
that for backends where this attribute is supported, it will force an
explicit opt-in to early depth test. (e.g. via
`layout(early_fragment_tests) in;` in GLSL)
## Caveats
- I included `@early_depth_test` for the sake of us being explicit, and
avoiding the need for the driver to be “smart” about enabling this
feature. That way, if we make a mistake and include a `discard`
unguarded by `MAY_DISCARD`, it will either produce errors or noticeable
visual artifacts so that we'll catch early, instead of causing a
performance regression.
- I'm not sure explicit early depth test is supported on the naga Metal
backend, which is what I'm currently using, so I can't really test the
explicit early depth test enable, I would like others with Vulkan/GL
hardware to test it if possible;
- I would like some guidance on how to measure/verify the performance
benefits of this;
- If I understand it correctly, this, or _something like this_ is needed
to fully reap the performance gains enabled by #6284;
- This will _most definitely_ conflict with #6284 and #6644. I can fix
the conflicts as needed, depending on whether/the order they end up
being merging in.
---
## Changelog
### Changed
- Early depth tests are now enabled whenever possible for meshes using
`StandardMaterial`, reducing the number of fragments evaluated for
scenes with lots of occlusions.
# Objective
Fix#8604
## Solution
Use `.add_srgb_suffix()` when creating the screenshot texture.
Allow converting `Bgra8Unorm` images.
Only a two line change for the fix, the `screenshot.rs` changes are just
a bit of cleanup.
# Objective
Fix warnings:
```rs
warning: variable does not need to be mutable
--> /bevy/crates/bevy_app/src/plugin_group.rs:147:13
|
147 | let mut plugin_entry = self
| ----^^^^^^^^^^^^
| |
| help: remove this `mut`
|
= note: `#[warn(unused_mut)]` on by default
warning: variable does not need to be mutable
--> /bevy/crates/bevy_app/src/plugin_group.rs:161:13
|
161 | let mut plugin_entry = self
| ----^^^^^^^^^^^^
| |
| help: remove this `mut`
warning: `bevy_app` (lib) generated 2 warnings (run `cargo fix --lib -p bevy_app` to apply 2 suggestions)
warning: variable does not need to be mutable
--> /bevy/crates/bevy_render/src/view/window.rs:126:13
|
126 | ... let mut extracted_window = extracted_windows.entry(entity).or_insert(Extracte...
| ----^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
= note: `#[warn(unused_mut)]` on by default
warning: `bevy_render` (lib) generated 1 warning (run `cargo fix --lib -p bevy_render` to apply 1 suggestion)
```
## Solution
- Remove the mut keyword in those variables.
# Objective
Reduce missing docs warning noise when building examples for wasm
## Solution
Added "#[allow(missing_docs)]" on the wasm specific version of
BoxedFuture
# Objective
- Allow for directly call methods on states without first calling
`state.get().my_method()`
## Solution
- Implement `Deref` for `State<S>` with `Target = S`
---
*I did not implement `DerefMut` because states hold no data and should
only be changed via `NextState::set()`*
# Objective
- If I understand correctly, forward points in `direction`, so the
negative of `direction` should be back.
## Migration Guide
- `Transform::look_to` method changed default value of
`direction.try_normalize()` from `Vec3::Z` to `Vec3::NEG_Z`
# Objective
- Since the `RequestRedraw` event triggers the bevy app to run `update`
in `bevy_app::app::App`, the documentation should state that all the
windows in the application and its sub-apps are going to get redrawn,
rather than a single window.
## Solution
- Change `RequestRedraw` documentation in `bevy_window` to mention every
window.
# Objective
Make `Material2dPipeline` reusable. This was already done for PBR
materials in #7548.
## Solution
Expose `extract_materials_2d`, `prepare_materials_2d` and
`ExtractedMaterials2d`.
---
## Changelog
- bevy_sprite: Make `prepare_materials_2d`, `extract_materials_2d` and
`ExtractedMaterials2d` public.
Updates the requirements on
[libloading](https://github.com/nagisa/rust_libloading) to permit the
latest version.
<details>
<summary>Commits</summary>
<ul>
<li><a
href="83b1037f21"><code>83b1037</code></a>
Release 0.8.0</li>
<li><a
href="a6a394a7ef"><code>a6a394a</code></a>
bump MSRV to 1.48</li>
<li><a
href="c7955a761e"><code>c7955a7</code></a>
Replace winapi with windows-sys</li>
<li><a
href="95d03a1ddf"><code>95d03a1</code></a>
Add support for QNX Neutrino</li>
<li><a
href="6e284984ae"><code>6e28498</code></a>
Fix CI</li>
<li><a
href="95a0f62e8f"><code>95a0f62</code></a>
Placate clippy</li>
<li><a
href="224a3def35"><code>224a3de</code></a>
Release 0.7.4</li>
<li><a
href="bd17713dcc"><code>bd17713</code></a>
Support AIX dyld constants</li>
<li><a
href="6e07929736"><code>6e07929</code></a>
fix typo</li>
<li><a
href="6b33651a90"><code>6b33651</code></a>
Construct a PathBuf</li>
<li>Additional commits viewable in <a
href="https://github.com/nagisa/rust_libloading/compare/0.7.0...0.8.0">compare
view</a></li>
</ul>
</details>
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Updates the requirements on
[sysinfo](https://github.com/GuillaumeGomez/sysinfo) to permit the
latest version.
<details>
<summary>Changelog</summary>
<p><em>Sourced from <a
href="https://github.com/GuillaumeGomez/sysinfo/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md">sysinfo's
changelog</a>.</em></p>
<blockquote>
<h1>0.29.0</h1>
<ul>
<li>Add <code>ProcessExt::effective_user_id</code> and
<code>ProcessExt::effective_group_id</code>.</li>
<li>Rename <code>DiskType</code> into <code>DiskKind</code>.</li>
<li>Rename <code>DiskExt::type_</code> into
<code>DiskExt::kind</code>.</li>
<li>macOS: Correctly handle <code>ProcessStatus</code> and remove public
<code>ThreadStatus</code> field.</li>
<li>Windows 11: Fix CPU core usage.</li>
</ul>
<h1>0.28.4</h1>
<ul>
<li>macOS: Improve CPU computation.</li>
<li>Strengthen a process test (needed for debian).</li>
</ul>
<h1>0.28.3</h1>
<ul>
<li>FreeBSD/Windows: Add missing frequency for global CPU.</li>
<li>macOS: Fix used memory computation.</li>
<li>macOS: Improve available memory computation.</li>
<li>Windows: Fix potential panic when getting process data.</li>
</ul>
<h1>0.28.2</h1>
<ul>
<li>Linux: Improve CPU usage computation.</li>
</ul>
<h1>0.28.1</h1>
<ul>
<li>macOS: Fix overflow when computing CPU usage.</li>
</ul>
<h1>0.28.0</h1>
<ul>
<li>Linux: Fix name and CPU usage for processes tasks.</li>
<li>unix: Keep all users, even "not real" accounts.</li>
<li>Windows: Use SID for Users ID.</li>
<li>Fix C API.</li>
<li>Disable default cdylib compilation.</li>
<li>Add <code>serde</code> feature to enable serialization.</li>
<li>Linux: Handle <code>Idle</code> state in
<code>ProcessStatus</code>.</li>
<li>Linux: Add brand and name of ARM CPUs.</li>
</ul>
<h1>0.27.8</h1>
<ul>
<li>macOS: Fix overflow when computing CPU usage.</li>
</ul>
<h1>0.27.7</h1>
<ul>
<li>macOS: Fix process CPU usage computation</li>
<li>Linux: Improve ARM CPU <code>brand</code> and <code>name</code>
information.</li>
<li>Windows: Fix resource leak.</li>
<li>Documentation improvements.</li>
</ul>
<!-- raw HTML omitted -->
</blockquote>
<p>... (truncated)</p>
</details>
<details>
<summary>Commits</summary>
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href="https://github.com/GuillaumeGomez/sysinfo/commits">compare
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</ul>
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# Objective
- Fixes#7352
## Solution
GLES doesn't support binding specific mip levels for sampling. Fallback
to using separate textures instead.
-
[wgpu-hal/src/gles/device.rs](628a95cd1c/wgpu-hal/src/gles/device.rs (L1038))
---
---------
Co-authored-by: Wilhelm Vallrand <>
# Objective
This method has no documentation and it's extremely unclear what it
does, or what the returned tick represents.
## Solution
Write documentation.
# Objective
- Update dependencies `ruzstd` and `basis-universal`
- Alternative to #5278 and #8133
## Solution
- Update the dependencies, fix the code
- Bevy now also depend on `syn@2` so it's not a blocker to update
`ruzstd` anymore
# Objective
Fix an out-of-date doc string.
The old doc string says "returns None if …" and "for a given
descriptor",
but this method neither takes an argument or returns an `Option`.
# Objective
Add support for the [Netpbm](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Netpbm) image
formats, behind a `pnm` feature flag.
My personal use case for this was robotics applications, with `pgm`
being a popular format used in the field to represent world maps in
robots.
I chose the formats and feature name by checking the logic in
[image.rs](a35ed552fa/crates/bevy_render/src/texture/image.rs (L76))
## Solution
Quite straightforward, the `pnm` feature flag already exists in the
`image` crate so it's just creating and exposing a `pnm` feature flag in
the root `Cargo.toml` and forwarding it through `bevy_internal` and
`bevy_render` all the way to the `image` crate.
---
## Changelog
### Added
`pnm` feature to add support for `pam`, `pbm`, `pgm` and `ppm` image
formats.
---------
Signed-off-by: Luca Della Vedova <lucadv@intrinsic.ai>
# Objective
Bevy code tends to make heavy use of the [newtype](
https://doc.rust-lang.org/rust-by-example/generics/new_types.html)
pattern, which is why we have a dedicated derive for
[`Deref`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/ops/trait.Deref.html) and
[`DerefMut`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/ops/trait.DerefMut.html).
This derive works for any struct with a single field:
```rust
#[derive(Component, Deref, DerefMut)]
struct MyNewtype(usize);
```
One reason for the single-field limitation is to prevent confusion and
footguns related that would arise from allowing multi-field structs:
<table align="center">
<tr>
<th colspan="2">
Similar structs, different derefs
</th>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>
```rust
#[derive(Deref, DerefMut)]
struct MyStruct {
foo: usize, // <- Derefs usize
bar: String,
}
```
</td>
<td>
```rust
#[derive(Deref, DerefMut)]
struct MyStruct {
bar: String, // <- Derefs String
foo: usize,
}
```
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<th colspan="2">
Why `.1`?
</th>
</tr>
<tr>
<td colspan="2">
```rust
#[derive(Deref, DerefMut)]
struct MyStruct(Vec<usize>, Vec<f32>);
let mut foo = MyStruct(vec![123], vec![1.23]);
// Why can we skip the `.0` here?
foo.push(456);
// But not here?
foo.1.push(4.56);
```
</td>
</tr>
</table>
However, there are certainly cases where it's useful to allow for
structs with multiple fields. Such as for structs with one "real" field
and one `PhantomData` to allow for generics:
```rust
#[derive(Deref, DerefMut)]
struct MyStruct<T>(
// We want use this field for the `Deref`/`DerefMut` impls
String,
// But we need this field so that we can make this struct generic
PhantomData<T>
);
// ERROR: Deref can only be derived for structs with a single field
// ERROR: DerefMut can only be derived for structs with a single field
```
Additionally, the possible confusion and footguns are mainly an issue
for newer Rust/Bevy users. Those familiar with `Deref` and `DerefMut`
understand what adding the derive really means and can anticipate its
behavior.
## Solution
Allow users to opt into multi-field `Deref`/`DerefMut` derives using a
`#[deref]` attribute:
```rust
#[derive(Deref, DerefMut)]
struct MyStruct<T>(
// Use this field for the `Deref`/`DerefMut` impls
#[deref] String,
// We can freely include any other field without a compile error
PhantomData<T>
);
```
This prevents the footgun pointed out in the first issue described in
the previous section, but it still leaves the possible confusion
surrounding `.0`-vs-`.#`. However, the idea is that by making this
behavior explicit with an attribute, users will be more aware of it and
can adapt appropriately.
---
## Changelog
- Added `#[deref]` attribute to `Deref` and `DerefMut` derives
# Objective
The unit test `chang_tick_wraparound` is meant to ensure that change
ticks correctly deal with wrapping by setting the world's
`last_change_tick` to `u32::MAX`. However, since systems don't use* the
value of `World::last_change_tick`, this test doesn't actually involve
any wrapping behavior.
*exclusive systems do use `World::last_change_tick`; however it gets
overwritten by the system's own last tick in `System::run`.
## Solution
Use `QueryState` instead of systems in the unit test. This approach
actually uses `World::last_change_tick`, so it properly tests that
change ticks deal with wrapping correctly.
# Objective
- Simplify API and make authoring styles easier
See:
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/8540#issuecomment-1536177102
## Solution
- The `size`, `min_size`, `max_size`, and `gap` properties have been
replaced by `width`, `height`, `min_width`, `min_height`, `max_width`,
`max_height`, `row_gap`, and `column_gap` properties
---
## Changelog
- Flattened `Style` properties that have a `Size` value directly into
`Style`
## Migration Guide
- The `size`, `min_size`, `max_size`, and `gap` properties have been
replaced by the `width`, `height`, `min_width`, `min_height`,
`max_width`, `max_height`, `row_gap`, and `column_gap` properties. Use
the new properties instead.
---------
Co-authored-by: ickshonpe <david.curthoys@googlemail.com>
# Objective
- Fix#5631
## Solution
- Wait 50ms (configurable) after the last modification event before
reloading an asset.
---
## Changelog
- `AssetPlugin::watch_for_changes` is now a `ChangeWatcher` instead of a
`bool`
- Fixed https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/5631
## Migration Guide
- Replace `AssetPlugin::watch_for_changes: true` with e.g.
`ChangeWatcher::with_delay(Duration::from_millis(200))`
---------
Co-authored-by: François <mockersf@gmail.com>
# Objective
* `Node::physical_rect` divides the logical size of the node by the
scale factor, when it should multiply.
* Add a `physical_size` method to `Node` that calculates the physical
size of a node.
---
## Changelog
* Added a method `physical_size` to `Node` that calculates the physical
size of the `Node` based on the given scale factor.
* Fixed the `Node::physical_rect` method, the logical size should be
multiplied by the scale factor to get the physical size.
* Removed the `scale_value` function from the `text` widget module and
replaced its usage with `Node::physical_size`.
* Derived `Copy` for `Node` (since it's only a wrapped `Vec2`).
* Made `Node::size` const.
# Objective
`ScheduleGraph` currently stores run conditions in a
`Option<Vec<BoxedCondition>>`. The `Option` is unnecessary, since we can
just use an empty vector instead of `None`.
# Objective
The method `UnsafeWorldCell::world_mut` is a special case, since its
safety contract is more difficult to satisfy than the other methods on
`UnsafeWorldCell`. Rewrite its documentation to be specific about when
it can and cannot be used. Provide examples and emphasize that it is
unsound to call in most cases.
# Objective
The method `UnsafeWorldCell::read_change_tick` is longer than it needs
to be. `World` only has a method called this because it has two methods
for getting a change tick: one that takes `&self` and one that takes
`&mut self`. Since this distinction is not applicable to
`UnsafeWorldCell`, we should just call this method `change_tick`.
## Solution
Deprecate the current method and add a new one called `change_tick`.
---
## Changelog
- Renamed `UnsafeWorldCell::read_change_tick` to `change_tick`.
## Migration Guide
The `UnsafeWorldCell` method `read_change_tick` has been renamed to
`change_tick`.
# Objective
`ScheduleRunnerPlugin` was still configured via a resource, meaning
users would be able to change the settings while the app is running, but
the changes wouldn't have an effect.
## Solution
Configure plugin directly
---
## Changelog
- Changed: merged `ScheduleRunnerSettings` into `ScheduleRunnerPlugin`
## Migration Guide
- instead of inserting the `ScheduleRunnerSettings` resource, configure
the `ScheduleRunnerPlugin`
# Objective
- Fixes#3531
## Solution
- Added an append wrapper to BufferVec based on the function signature
for vec.append()
---
First PR to Bevy. I didn't see any tests for other BufferVec methods
(could have missed them) and currently this method is not used anywhere
in the project. Let me know if there are tests to add or if I should
find somewhere to use append so it is not dead code. The issue mentions
implementing `truncate` and `extend` which were already implemented and
merged
[here](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/6833/files#diff-c8fb332382379e383f1811e30c31991b1e0feb38ca436c357971755368012ced)
# Objective
Replace `Query<&T, Changed<T>>` style queries with the more efficient
`Query<Ref<T>>` form in two of the UI systems.
---
## Changelog
Replaced use of `Changed` with `Ref` in queries in the
`ui_layout_system` and `calc_bounds` UI systems.
# Objective
- When writing render nodes that need a view, you always need to define
a `Query` on the associated view and make sure to update it manually and
query it manually. This is verbose and error prone.
## Solution
- Introduce a new `ViewNode` trait and `ViewNodeRunner` `Node` that will
take care of managing the associated view query automatically.
- The trait is currently a passthrough of the `Node` trait. So it still
has the update/run with all the same data passed in.
- The `ViewNodeRunner` is the actual node that is added to the render
graph and it contains the custom node. This is necessary because it's
the one that takes care of updating the node.
---
## Changelog
- Add `ViewNode`
- Add `ViewNodeRunner`
## Notes
Currently, this only handles the view query, but it could probably have
a ReadOnlySystemState that would also simplify querying all the readonly
resources that most render nodes currently query manually. The issue is
that I don't know how to do that without a `&mut self`.
At first, I tried making this a default feature of all `Node`, but I
kept hitting errors related to traits and generics and stuff I'm not
super comfortable with. This implementations is much simpler and keeps
the default Node behaviour so isn't a breaking change
## Reviewer Notes
The PR looks quite big, but the core of the PR is the changes in
`render_graph/node.rs`. Every other change is simply updating existing
nodes to use this new feature.
## Open questions
~~- Naming is not final, I'm opened to anything. I named it
ViewQueryNode because it's a node with a managed Query on a View.~~
~~- What to do when the query fails? All nodes using this pattern
currently just `return Ok(())` when it fails, so I chose that, but
should it be more flexible?~~
~~- Is the ViewQueryFilter actually necessary? All view queries run on
the entity that is already guaranteed to be a view. Filtering won't do
much, but maybe someone wants to control an effect with the presence of
a component instead of a flag.~~
~~- What to do with Nodes that are empty struct? Implementing
`FromWorld` is pretty verbose but not implementing it means there's 2
ways to create a `ViewNodeRunner` which seems less ideal. This is an
issue now because most node simply existed to hold the query, but now
that they don't hold the query state we are left with a bunch of empty
structs.~~
- Should we have a `RenderGraphApp::add_render_graph_view_node()`, this
isn't necessary, but it could make the code a bit shorter.
---------
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Add Reflect and FromReflect for AssetPath
- Fixes#8458
## Solution
- Straightforward derive of `Reflect` and `FromReflect` for `AssetPath`
- Implement `Reflect` and `FromReflect` for `Cow<'static, Path>` as to
satisfy the 'static lifetime requierments of bevy_reflect.
Implementation is a direct copy of that for `Cow<'static, str>` so maybe
it begs the question that was already asked in #7429 - maybe it would be
benefitial to write a general implementation for `Reflect` for
`Cow<'static, T>`.
# Objective
Sometimes we might want to read from the depth texture in some custom
rendering features. We must then add `STORAGE_BINDING` or
`TEXTURE_BINDING` to the texture usage flags when creating them.
## Solution
This PR allows one to customize the usage flags in the `Camera3d`
component.
# Objective
- Fixes#8563
## Solution
~~- Implement From<Color> for [u8; 4]~~
~~- also implement From<[u8; 4]> for Color because why not.~~
- implement method `as_rgba_u8` in Color
---------
Co-authored-by: Gino Valente <49806985+MrGVSV@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
`text_system` and `measure_text_system` both keep local queues to keep
track of text node entities that need recomputations/remeasurement,
which scales very badly with large numbers of text entities (O(n^2)) and
makes the code quite difficult to understand.
Also `text_system` filters for `Changed<Text>`, this isn't something
that it should do. When a text node entity fails to be processed by
`measure_text_system` because a font can't be found, the text node will
still be added to `text_system`'s local queue for recomputation. `Text`
should only ever be queued by `text_system` when a text node's geometry
is modified or a new measure is added.
## Solution
Remove the local text queues and use a component `TextFlags` to schedule
remeasurements and recomputations.
## Changelog
* Created a component `TextFlags` with fields `remeasure` and
`recompute`, which can be used to schedule a text `remeasure` or
`recomputation` respectively and added it to `TextBundle`.
* Removed the local text queues from `measure_text_system` and
`text_system` and instead use the `TextFlags` component to schedule
remeasurements and recomputations.
## Migration Guide
The component `TextFlags` has been added to `TextBundle`.
# Objective
Copy the `debug::print_tree` function from Taffy except display entity
ids instead of Taffy's node ids and indicate which ui nodes have a
measure func.
# Objective
Ensure future consistency between the two compare functions for all
types with manual `Ord` and `PartialOrd` implementations.
## Solution
Use `Self::cpm` in the implementation of `partial_cpm` for types
`Handle` and `Name`.
# Objective
there were typos in AxisSettings livezone/deadzone get/set function doc
comments.
## Solution
I changed the comments to be (hopefully) correct this time. I could be
wrong though.
# Objective
- Support WebGPU
- alternative to #5027 that doesn't need any async / await
- fixes#8315
- Surprise fix#7318
## Solution
### For async renderer initialisation
- Update the plugin lifecycle:
- app builds the plugin
- calls `plugin.build`
- registers the plugin
- app starts the event loop
- event loop waits for `ready` of all registered plugins in the same
order
- returns `true` by default
- then call all `finish` then all `cleanup` in the same order as
registered
- then execute the schedule
In the case of the renderer, to avoid anything async:
- building the renderer plugin creates a detached task that will send
back the initialised renderer through a mutex in a resource
- `ready` will wait for the renderer to be present in the resource
- `finish` will take that renderer and place it in the expected
resources by other plugins
- other plugins (that expect the renderer to be available) `finish` are
called and they are able to set up their pipelines
- `cleanup` is called, only custom one is still for pipeline rendering
### For WebGPU support
- update the `build-wasm-example` script to support passing `--api
webgpu` that will build the example with WebGPU support
- feature for webgl2 was always enabled when building for wasm. it's now
in the default feature list and enabled on all platforms, so check for
this feature must also check that the target_arch is `wasm32`
---
## Migration Guide
- `Plugin::setup` has been renamed `Plugin::cleanup`
- `Plugin::finish` has been added, and plugins adding pipelines should
do it in this function instead of `Plugin::build`
```rust
// Before
impl Plugin for MyPlugin {
fn build(&self, app: &mut App) {
app.insert_resource::<MyResource>
.add_systems(Update, my_system);
let render_app = match app.get_sub_app_mut(RenderApp) {
Ok(render_app) => render_app,
Err(_) => return,
};
render_app
.init_resource::<RenderResourceNeedingDevice>()
.init_resource::<OtherRenderResource>();
}
}
// After
impl Plugin for MyPlugin {
fn build(&self, app: &mut App) {
app.insert_resource::<MyResource>
.add_systems(Update, my_system);
let render_app = match app.get_sub_app_mut(RenderApp) {
Ok(render_app) => render_app,
Err(_) => return,
};
render_app
.init_resource::<OtherRenderResource>();
}
fn finish(&self, app: &mut App) {
let render_app = match app.get_sub_app_mut(RenderApp) {
Ok(render_app) => render_app,
Err(_) => return,
};
render_app
.init_resource::<RenderResourceNeedingDevice>();
}
}
```
# Objective
Fixes#8528
## Solution
Manually implement `PartialEq`, `Eq`, `PartialOrd`, `Ord`, and `Hash`
for `bevy_ecs::event::EventId`. These new implementations do not rely on
the `Event` implementing the same traits allowing `EventId` to be used
in more cases.
# Objective
there was a typo in AxisSettings. It said "Values that are higher than
`livezone_upperbound` will be rounded up to -1.0." which I'm pretty
confident should be "1.0".
## Solution
I removed the '-'
# Objective
After fixing dynamic scene to only map specific entities, we want
map_entities to default to the less error prone behavior and have the
previous behavior renamed to "map_all_entities." As this is a breaking
change, it could not be pushed out with the bug fix.
## Solution
Simple rename and refactor.
## Changelog
### Changed
- `map_entities` now accepts a list of entities to apply to, with
`map_all_entities` retaining previous behavior of applying to all
entities in the map.
## Migration Guide
- In `bevy_ecs`, `ReflectMapEntities::map_entites` now requires an
additional `entities` parameter to specify which entities it applies to.
To keep the old behavior, use the new
`ReflectMapEntities::map_all_entities`, but consider if passing the
entities in specifically might be better for your use case to avoid
bugs.
# Objective
- I want to take screenshots of examples in CI to help with validation
of changes
## Solution
- Can override how much time is updated per frame
- Can specify on which frame to take a screenshots
- Save screenshots in CI
I reused the `TimeUpdateStrategy::ManualDuration` to be able to set the
time update strategy to a fixed duration every frame. Its previous
meaning didn't make much sense to me. This change makes it possible to
have screenshots that are exactly the same across runs.
If this gets merged, I'll add visual comparison of screenshots between
runs to ensure nothing gets broken
## Migration Guide
* `TimeUpdateStrategy::ManualDuration` meaning has changed. Instead of
setting time to `Instant::now()` plus the given duration, it sets time
to last update plus the given duration.
# Objective
- For many UI use cases (e.g. tree views, lists), it is important to be
able to imperatively sort child nodes.
- This also enables us to eventually support something like the
[`order`](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/order) CSS
property, that declaratively re-orders flex box items by a numeric
value, similar to z-index, but in space.
## Solution
We removed the ability to directly construct `Children` from `&[Entity]`
some time ago (#4197#5532) to enforce consistent hierarchies ([RFC
53](https://github.com/bevyengine/rfcs/blob/main/rfcs/53-consistent-hierarchy.md)).
If I understand it correctly, it's currently possible to re-order
children by using `Children::swap()` or
`commands.entity(id).replace_children(...)`, however these are either
too cumbersome, needlessly inefficient, and/or don't take effect
immediately.
This PR exposes the in-place sorting methods from the `slice` primitive
in `Children`, enabling imperatively sorting children in place via `&mut
Children`, while still preserving consistent hierarchies.
---
## Changelog
### Added
- The sorting methods from the `slice` primitive are now exposed by the
`Children` component, allowing imperatively sorting children in place
(Useful for UI scenarios such as lists)
# Objective
- Handle dangling entity references inside scenes
- Handle references to entities with generation > 0 inside scenes
- Fix a latent bug in `Parent`'s `MapEntities` implementation, which
would, if the parent was outside the scene, cause the scene to be loaded
into the new world with a parent reference potentially pointing to some
random entity in that new world.
- Fixes#4793 and addresses #7235
## Solution
- DynamicScenes now identify entities with a `Entity` instead of a u32,
therefore including generation
- `World` exposes a new `reserve_generations` function that despawns an
entity and advances its generation by some extra amount.
- `MapEntities` implementations have a new `get_or_reserve` function
available that will always return an `Entity`, establishing a new
mapping to a dead entity when the entity they are called with is not in
the `EntityMap`. Subsequent calls with that same `Entity` will return
the same newly created dead entity reference, preserving equality
semantics.
- As a result, after loading a scene containing references to dead
entities (or entities otherwise outside the scene), those references
will all point to different generations on a single entity id in the new
world.
---
## Changelog
### Changed
- In serialized scenes, entities are now identified by a u64 instead of
a u32.
- In serialized scenes, components with entity references now have those
references serialize as u64s instead of structs.
### Fixed
- Scenes containing components with entity references will now
deserialize and add to a world reliably.
## Migration Guide
- `MapEntities` implementations must change from a `&EntityMap`
parameter to a `&mut EntityMapper` parameter and can no longer return a
`Result`. Finally, they should switch from calling `EntityMap::get` to
calling `EntityMapper::get_or_reserve`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Nicola Papale <nicopap@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
fixes#8516
* Give `CalculatedSize` a more specific and intuitive name.
* `MeasureFunc`s should only be updated when their `CalculatedSize` is
modified by the systems managing their content.
For example, suppose that you have a UI displaying an image using an
`ImageNode`. When the window is resized, the node's `MeasureFunc` will
be updated even though the dimensions of the texture contained by the
node are unchanged.
* Fix the `CalculatedSize` API so that it no longer requires the extra
boxing and the `dyn_clone` method.
## Solution
* Rename `CalculatedSize` to `ContentSize`
* Only update `MeasureFunc`s on `CalculatedSize` changes.
* Remove the `dyn_clone` method from `Measure` and move the `Measure`
from the `ContentSize` component rather than cloning it.
* Change the measure_func field of `ContentSize` to type
`Option<taffy::node::MeasureFunc>`. Add a `set` method that wraps the
given measure appropriately.
---
## Changelog
* Renamed `CalculatedSize` to `ContentSize`.
* Replaced `upsert_leaf` with a function `update_measure` that only
updates the node's `MeasureFunc`.
* `MeasureFunc`s are only updated when the `ContentSize` changes and not
when the layout changes.
* Scale factor is no longer applied to the size values passed to the
`MeasureFunc`.
* Remove the `ContentSize` scaling in `text_system`.
* The `dyn_clone` method has been removed from the `Measure` trait.
* `Measure`s are moved from the `ContentSize` component instead of
cloning them.
* Added `set` method to `ContentSize` that replaces the `new` function.
## Migration Guide
* `CalculatedSize` has been renamed to `ContentSize`.
* The `upsert_leaf` function has been removed from `UiSurface` and
replaced with `update_measure` which updates the `MeasureFunc` without
node insertion.
* The `dyn_clone` method has been removed from the `Measure` trait.
* The new function of `CalculatedSize` has been replaced with the method
`set`.
# Objective
after calling `SceneSpawner::spawn_as_child`, the scene spawner system
will always try to attach the scene instance to the parent once it is
loaded, even if the parent has been deleted, causing a panic.
## Solution
check if the parent is still alive, and don't spawn the scene instance
if not.
# Objective
- Enable taking a screenshot in wasm
- Followup on #7163
## Solution
- Create a blob from the image data, generate a url to that blob, add an
`a` element to the document linking to that url, click on that element,
then revoke the url
- This will automatically trigger a download of the screenshot file in
the browser
# Objective
This is just an oversight on my part when I implemented this in
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/7186, there isn't much reason to
print out the hash of a `Name` like it does currently:
```
Name { hash: 1608798714325729304, name: "Suzanne" } (7v0)
```
## Solution
Instead it would be better if we just printed out the string like so:
```
"Suzanne" (7v0)
```
As it conveys all of the information in a less cluttered and immediately
intuitive way which was the original purpose of `DebugName`. Which I
also think translates to `Name` as well since I mostly see it as a thin
wrapper around a string.
---------
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Updated to wgpu 0.16.0 and wgpu-hal 0.16.0
---
## Changelog
1. Upgrade wgpu to 0.16.0 and wgpu-hal to 0.16.0
2. Fix the error in native when using a filterable
`TextureSampleType::Float` on a multisample `BindingType::Texture`.
([https://github.com/gfx-rs/wgpu/pull/3686](https://github.com/gfx-rs/wgpu/pull/3686))
---------
Co-authored-by: François <mockersf@gmail.com>
# Objective
> This PR is based on discussion from #6601
The Dynamic types (e.g. `DynamicStruct`, `DynamicList`, etc.) act as
both:
1. Dynamic containers which may hold any arbitrary data
2. Proxy types which may represent any other type
Currently, the only way we can represent the proxy-ness of a Dynamic is
by giving it a name.
```rust
// This is just a dynamic container
let mut data = DynamicStruct::default();
// This is a "proxy"
data.set_name(std::any::type_name::<Foo>());
```
This type name is the only way we check that the given Dynamic is a
proxy of some other type. When we need to "assert the type" of a `dyn
Reflect`, we call `Reflect::type_name` on it. However, because we're
only using a string to denote the type, we run into a few gotchas and
limitations.
For example, hashing a Dynamic proxy may work differently than the type
it proxies:
```rust
#[derive(Reflect, Hash)]
#[reflect(Hash)]
struct Foo(i32);
let concrete = Foo(123);
let dynamic = concrete.clone_dynamic();
let concrete_hash = concrete.reflect_hash();
let dynamic_hash = dynamic.reflect_hash();
// The hashes are not equal because `concrete` uses its own `Hash` impl
// while `dynamic` uses a reflection-based hashing algorithm
assert_ne!(concrete_hash, dynamic_hash);
```
Because the Dynamic proxy only knows about the name of the type, it's
unaware of any other information about it. This means it also differs on
`Reflect::reflect_partial_eq`, and may include ignored or skipped fields
in places the concrete type wouldn't.
## Solution
Rather than having Dynamics pass along just the type name of proxied
types, we can instead have them pass around the `TypeInfo`.
Now all Dynamic types contain an `Option<&'static TypeInfo>` rather than
a `String`:
```diff
pub struct DynamicTupleStruct {
- type_name: String,
+ represented_type: Option<&'static TypeInfo>,
fields: Vec<Box<dyn Reflect>>,
}
```
By changing `Reflect::get_type_info` to
`Reflect::represented_type_info`, hopefully we make this behavior a
little clearer. And to account for `None` values on these dynamic types,
`Reflect::represented_type_info` now returns `Option<&'static
TypeInfo>`.
```rust
let mut data = DynamicTupleStruct::default();
// Not proxying any specific type
assert!(dyn_tuple_struct.represented_type_info().is_none());
let type_info = <Foo as Typed>::type_info();
dyn_tuple_struct.set_represented_type(Some(type_info));
// Alternatively:
// let dyn_tuple_struct = foo.clone_dynamic();
// Now we're proxying `Foo`
assert!(dyn_tuple_struct.represented_type_info().is_some());
```
This means that we can have full access to all the static type
information for the proxied type. Future work would include
transitioning more static type information (trait impls, attributes,
etc.) over to the `TypeInfo` so it can actually be utilized by Dynamic
proxies.
### Alternatives & Rationale
> **Note**
> These alternatives were written when this PR was first made using a
`Proxy` trait. This trait has since been removed.
<details>
<summary>View</summary>
#### Alternative: The `Proxy<T>` Approach
I had considered adding something like a `Proxy<T>` type where `T` would
be the Dynamic and would contain the proxied type information.
This was nice in that it allows us to explicitly determine whether
something is a proxy or not at a type level. `Proxy<DynamicStruct>`
proxies a struct. Makes sense.
The reason I didn't go with this approach is because (1) tuples, (2)
complexity, and (3) `PartialReflect`.
The `DynamicTuple` struct allows us to represent tuples at runtime. It
also allows us to do something you normally can't with tuples: add new
fields. Because of this, adding a field immediately invalidates the
proxy (e.g. our info for `(i32, i32)` doesn't apply to `(i32, i32,
NewField)`). By going with this PR's approach, we can just remove the
type info on `DynamicTuple` when that happens. However, with the
`Proxy<T>` approach, it becomes difficult to represent this behavior—
we'd have to completely control how we access data for `T` for each `T`.
Secondly, it introduces some added complexities (aside from the manual
impls for each `T`). Does `Proxy<T>` impl `Reflect`? Likely yes, if we
want to represent it as `dyn Reflect`. What `TypeInfo` do we give it?
How would we forward reflection methods to the inner type (remember, we
don't have specialization)? How do we separate this from Dynamic types?
And finally, how do all this in a way that's both logical and intuitive
for users?
Lastly, introducing a `Proxy` trait rather than a `Proxy<T>` struct is
actually more inline with the [Unique Reflect
RFC](https://github.com/bevyengine/rfcs/pull/56). In a way, the `Proxy`
trait is really one part of the `PartialReflect` trait introduced in
that RFC (it's technically not in that RFC but it fits well with it),
where the `PartialReflect` serves as a way for proxies to work _like_
concrete types without having full access to everything a concrete
`Reflect` type can do. This would help bridge the gap between the
current state of the crate and the implementation of that RFC.
All that said, this is still a viable solution. If the community
believes this is the better path forward, then we can do that instead.
These were just my reasons for not initially going with it in this PR.
#### Alternative: The Type Registry Approach
The `Proxy` trait is great and all, but how does it solve the original
problem? Well, it doesn't— yet!
The goal would be to start moving information from the derive macro and
its attributes to the generated `TypeInfo` since these are known
statically and shouldn't change. For example, adding `ignored: bool` to
`[Un]NamedField` or a list of impls.
However, there is another way of storing this information. This is, of
course, one of the uses of the `TypeRegistry`. If we're worried about
Dynamic proxies not aligning with their concrete counterparts, we could
move more type information to the registry and require its usage.
For example, we could replace `Reflect::reflect_hash(&self)` with
`Reflect::reflect_hash(&self, registry: &TypeRegistry)`.
That's not the _worst_ thing in the world, but it is an ergonomics loss.
Additionally, other attributes may have their own requirements, further
restricting what's possible without the registry. The `Reflect::apply`
method will require the registry as well now. Why? Well because the
`map_apply` function used for the `Reflect::apply` impls on `Map` types
depends on `Map::insert_boxed`, which (at least for `DynamicMap`)
requires `Reflect::reflect_hash`. The same would apply when adding
support for reflection-based diffing, which will require
`Reflect::reflect_partial_eq`.
Again, this is a totally viable alternative. I just chose not to go with
it for the reasons above. If we want to go with it, then we can close
this PR and we can pursue this alternative instead.
#### Downsides
Just to highlight a quick potential downside (likely needs more
investigation): retrieving the `TypeInfo` requires acquiring a lock on
the `GenericTypeInfoCell` used by the `Typed` impls for generic types
(non-generic types use a `OnceBox which should be faster). I am not sure
how much of a performance hit that is and will need to run some
benchmarks to compare against.
</details>
### Open Questions
1. Should we use `Cow<'static, TypeInfo>` instead? I think that might be
easier for modding? Perhaps, in that case, we need to update
`Typed::type_info` and friends as well?
2. Are the alternatives better than the approach this PR takes? Are
there other alternatives?
---
## Changelog
### Changed
- `Reflect::get_type_info` has been renamed to
`Reflect::represented_type_info`
- This method now returns `Option<&'static TypeInfo>` rather than just
`&'static TypeInfo`
### Added
- Added `Reflect::is_dynamic` method to indicate when a type is dynamic
- Added a `set_represented_type` method on all dynamic types
### Removed
- Removed `TypeInfo::Dynamic` (use `Reflect::is_dynamic` instead)
- Removed `Typed` impls for all dynamic types
## Migration Guide
- The Dynamic types no longer take a string type name. Instead, they
require a static reference to `TypeInfo`:
```rust
#[derive(Reflect)]
struct MyTupleStruct(f32, f32);
let mut dyn_tuple_struct = DynamicTupleStruct::default();
dyn_tuple_struct.insert(1.23_f32);
dyn_tuple_struct.insert(3.21_f32);
// BEFORE:
let type_name = std::any::type_name::<MyTupleStruct>();
dyn_tuple_struct.set_name(type_name);
// AFTER:
let type_info = <MyTupleStruct as Typed>::type_info();
dyn_tuple_struct.set_represented_type(Some(type_info));
```
- `Reflect::get_type_info` has been renamed to
`Reflect::represented_type_info` and now also returns an
`Option<&'static TypeInfo>` (instead of just `&'static TypeInfo`):
```rust
// BEFORE:
let info: &'static TypeInfo = value.get_type_info();
// AFTER:
let info: &'static TypeInfo = value.represented_type_info().unwrap();
```
- `TypeInfo::Dynamic` and `DynamicInfo` has been removed. Use
`Reflect::is_dynamic` instead:
```rust
// BEFORE:
if matches!(value.get_type_info(), TypeInfo::Dynamic) {
// ...
}
// AFTER:
if value.is_dynamic() {
// ...
}
```
---------
Co-authored-by: radiish <cb.setho@gmail.com>
# Objective
A lot of items in `bevy_ui` could be `FromReflect` but aren't. This
prevents users and library authors from being able to convert from a
`dyn Reflect` to one of these items.
## Solution
Derive `FromReflect` where possible. Also register the
`ReflectFromReflect` type data.
# Objective
Considering that `FromReflect` is a very common trait to derive, it
would make sense to include `ReflectFromReflect` in the `bevy_reflect`
prelude so users don't need to import it separately.
## Solution
Add `ReflectFromReflect` to the prelude.
# Objective
Currently, there isn't a clean way of getting an untyped handle to an
asset during asset loading. This is useful for when an asset needs to
reference other assets, but may not know the concrete type of each
asset.
We could "hack" this together by just using some random asset:
```rust
// We don't care what `bar.baz` is, so we "pretend" it's an `Image`
let handle: Handle<Image> = load_context.get_handle("foo/bar.baz");
```
This should work since we don't actually care about the underlying type
in this case. However, we can do better.
## Solution
Add the `LoadContext::get_handle_untyped` method to get untyped handles
to assets.
# Objective
- Reduce compilation time
## Solution
- Make `spirv` and `glsl` shader format support optional. They are not
needed for Bevy shaders.
- on my mac (where shaders are compiled to `msl`), this reduces the
total build time by 2 to 5 seconds, improvement should be even better
with less cores
There is a big reduction in compile time for `naga`, and small
improvements on `wgpu` and `bevy_render`
This PR with optional shader formats enabled timings:
<img width="1478" alt="current main"
src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/8672791/234347032-cbd5c276-a9b0-49c3-b793-481677391c18.png">
This PR:
<img width="1479" alt="this pr"
src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/8672791/234347059-a67412a9-da8d-4356-91d8-7b0ae84ca100.png">
---
## Migration Guide
- If you want to use shaders in `spirv`, enable the
`shader_format_spirv` feature
- If you want to use shaders in `glsl`, enable the `shader_format_glsl`
feature
# Objective
- Fixes#8484
## Solution
Since #8445 fonts need to register a debug asset, otherwise the
`debug_asset_server` feature doesn't work. This adds the debug asset
registration
# Objective
Provide the ability to trigger controller rumbling (force-feedback) with
a cross-platform API.
## Solution
This adds the `GamepadRumbleRequest` event to `bevy_input` and adds a
system in `bevy_gilrs` to read them and rumble controllers accordingly.
It's a relatively primitive API with a `duration` in seconds and
`GamepadRumbleIntensity` with values for the weak and strong gamepad
motors. It's is an almost 1-to-1 mapping to platform APIs. Some
platforms refer to these motors as left and right, and low frequency and
high frequency, but by convention, they're usually the same.
I used #3868 as a starting point, updated to main, removed the low-level
gilrs effect API, and moved the requests to `bevy_input` and exposed the
strong and weak intensities.
I intend this to hopefully be a non-controversial cross-platform
starting point we can build upon to eventually support more fine-grained
control (closer to the gilrs effect API)
---
## Changelog
### Added
- Gamepads can now be rumbled by sending the `GamepadRumbleRequest`
event.
---------
Co-authored-by: Nicola Papale <nico@nicopap.ch>
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Nicola Papale <nicopap@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Bruce Reif (Buswolley) <bruce.reif@dynata.com>
# Objective
`Camera::logical_viewport_rect()` returns `Option<(Vec2, Vec2)>` which
is a tuple of vectors representing the `(min, max)` bounds of the
viewport rect. Since the function says it returns a rect and there is a
`Rect { min, max }` struct in `bevy_math`, using the struct will be
clearer.
## Solution
Replaced `Option<(Vec2, Vec2)>` with `Option<Rect>` for
`Camera::logical_viewport_rect()`.
---
## Changelog
- Changed `Camera::logical_viewport_rect` return type from `(Vec2,
Vec2)` to `Rect`
## Migration Guide
Before:
```
fn view_logical_camera_rect(camera_query: Query<&Camera>) {
let camera = camera_query.single();
let Some((min, max)) = camera.logical_viewport_rect() else { return };
dbg!(min, max);
}
```
After:
```
fn view_logical_camera_rect(camera_query: Query<&Camera>) {
let camera = camera_query.single();
let Some(Rect { min, max }) = camera.logical_viewport_rect() else { return };
dbg!(min, max);
}
```
# Objective
Add a bounding box gizmo
![Screenshot from 2023-04-22
23-49-40](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/29694403/233808825-7593dc38-0623-48a9-b0d7-a4ca24a9e071.png)
## Changes
- Added the `AabbGizmo` component that will draw the `Aabb` component on
that entity.
- Added an option to draw all bounding boxes in a scene on the
`GizmoConfig` resource.
- Added `TransformPoint` trait to generalize over the point
transformation methods on various transform types (e.g `Transform` and
`GlobalTransform`).
- Changed the `Gizmos::cuboid` method to accept an `impl TransformPoint`
instead of separate translation, rotation, and scale.
# Objective
Timer with zero `Duration` panics at `tick()` because of division by
zero. This PR Fixes#8463 .
## Solution
- Handle division by zero separately with `checked_div` and
`checked_rem`.
---
## Changelog
- Replace division with `checked_div`. Set `times_finished_this_tick` to
u32::MAX when duration is zero.
- Set `elapsed` to `Duration::ZERO` when timer duration is zero.
- Set `percent` to `1.0` when duration is zero.
- `times_finished_this_tick` is [not used
anywhere](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/search?q=times_finished_this_tick),
that's why this change will not affect other parts of the project.
- `times_finished_this_tick` is set to `0` after `reset()` and before
first `tick()` call.
# Objective
- Add `Aabb` calculation for `Sprite`, `TextureAtlasSprite` and
`Mesh2d`.
- Enable frustum culling for 2D entities since frustum culling requires
a `Aabb` component in the entity to function.
- Improve 2D performance massively when there are many sprites out of
view. (ex: `many_sprites`)
## Solution
- Derived from @Weasy666's #3944 pull request, which had no activity
since multiple months.
- Adapted the code to the latest version of Bevy.
- Added support for sprites with non-center `Anchor`s to avoid culling
prematurely when part of the sprite is still in view or not culling when
sprite is already out of view.
### Note
- Gives 15.8x performance boosts in some scenarios. (5 fps vs 79 fps
with 409600 sprites in `many_sprites`)
---------
Co-authored-by: ira <JustTheCoolDude@gmail.com>
# Objective
The objective is to be able to load data from "application-specific"
(see glTF spec 3.7.2.1.) vertex attribute semantics from glTF files into
Bevy meshes.
## Solution
Rather than probe the glTF for the specific attributes supported by
Bevy, this PR changes the loader to iterate through all the attributes
and map them onto `MeshVertexAttribute`s. This mapping includes all the
previously supported attributes, plus it is now possible to add mappings
using the `add_custom_vertex_attribute()` method on `GltfPlugin`.
## Changelog
- Add support for loading custom vertex attributes from glTF files.
- Add the `custom_gltf_vertex_attribute.rs` example to illustrate
loading custom vertex attributes.
## Migration Guide
- If you were instantiating `GltfPlugin` using the unit-like struct
syntax, you must instead use `GltfPlugin::default()` as the type is no
longer unit-like.
This line does not appear to be an intended part of the `Panics`
section, but instead looks like it was missed when copy-pasting a
`Panics` section from above.
It confused me when I was reading the docs. At first I read it as if it
was an imperative statement saying not to use `match` statements which
seemed odd and out of place. Once I saw the code it was clearly in err.
# Objective
- Cleanup documentation string to reduce end-user confusion.
Links in the api docs are nice. I noticed that there were several places
where structs / functions and other things were referenced in the docs,
but weren't linked. I added the links where possible / logical.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: François <mockersf@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Enabling AlphaMode::Opaque in the shader_prepass example crashes. The
issue seems to be that enabling opaque also generates vertex_uvs
Fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/8273
## Solution
- Use the vertex_uvs in the shader if they are present
# Objective
The first query of `measure_text_system`'s `text_queries` `ParamSet`
queries for all changed `Text` meaning that non-UI `Text` entities could
be added to its queue.
## Solution
Add a `With<Node>` query filter.
---
## Changelog
changes:
* Added a `With<Node>` query filter to first query of
`measure_text_system`'s `text_queries` `ParamSet` to ensure that only UI
node entities are added to its local queue.
* Fixed comment (text is not computed on changes to style).
# Objective
- Fix the issue described in #8183: Box<dyn Reflect> structs with a
hashmap in them will panic when clone_value is called on it
- Fixes: #8183
## Solution
- Updates the implementation of Reflect for Hashmaps to make clone_value
call from_reflect on the key before inserting it into the new struct
# Objective
- Have a default font
## Solution
- Add a font based on FiraMono containing only ASCII characters and use
it as the default font
- It is behind a feature `default_font` enabled by default
- I also updated examples to use it, but not UI examples to still show
how to use a custom font
---
## Changelog
* If you display text without using the default handle provided by
`TextStyle`, the text will be displayed
# Objective
Added the possibility to draw arcs in 2d via gizmos
## Solution
- Added `arc_2d` function to `Gizmos`
- Added `arc_inner` function
- Added `Arc2dBuilder<'a, 's>`
- Updated `2d_gizmos.rs` example to draw an arc
---------
Co-authored-by: kjolnyr <kjolnyr@protonmail.ch>
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: ira <JustTheCoolDude@gmail.com>
# Objective
If a UI node has a changed `CalculatedSize` component and either the UI
does a full update or the node also has a changed `Style` component, the
node's corresponding Taffy node will be updated twice by
`flex_node_system`.
## Solution
Add a `Without<Calculated>` query filter so that the two changed node
queries in `flex_node_system` are mutually exclusive and move the
`CalculatedSize` node updater into the else block of the full-update if
conditional.
# Objective
- Mesh entities should cast shadows when not having Aabbs and having
NoFrustumCulling
- Fixes#8442
## Solution
- Mesh entities with NoFrustumCulling get no automatic Aabbs added
- Point and spot lights do not cull mesh entities for their shadow
mapping if they do not have an Aabb, but directional lights do
- Make directional lights not cull mesh entities from cascades if the do
not have Aabbs. So no Aabb as a consequence of a NoFrustumCulling
component will mean that those mesh entities are not culled and so are
visible to the light.
---
## Changelog
- Fixed: Mesh entities with NoFrustumCulling will cast shadows for
directional light shadow maps
Fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/1207
# Objective
Right now, it's impossible to capture a screenshot of the entire window
without forking bevy. This is because
- The swapchain texture never has the COPY_SRC usage
- It can't be accessed without taking ownership of it
- Taking ownership of it breaks *a lot* of stuff
## Solution
- Introduce a dedicated api for taking a screenshot of a given bevy
window, and guarantee this screenshot will always match up with what
gets put on the screen.
---
## Changelog
- Added the `ScreenshotManager` resource with two functions,
`take_screenshot` and `save_screenshot_to_disk`
# Objective
Methods for interacting with world schedules currently have two
variants: one that takes `impl ScheduleLabel` and one that takes `&dyn
ScheduleLabel`. Operations such as `run_schedule` or `schedule_scope`
only use the label by reference, so there is little reason to have an
owned variant of these functions.
## Solution
Decrease maintenance burden by merging the `ref` variants of these
functions with the owned variants.
---
## Changelog
- Deprecated `World::run_schedule_ref`. It is now redundant, since
`World::run_schedule` can take values by reference.
## Migration Guide
The method `World::run_schedule_ref` has been deprecated, and will be
removed in the next version of Bevy. Use `run_schedule` instead.
# Objective
Label traits such as `ScheduleLabel` currently have a major footgun: the
trait is implemented for `Box<dyn ScheduleLabel>`, but the
implementation does not function as one would expect since `Box<T>` is
considered to be a distinct type from `T`. This is because the behavior
of the `ScheduleLabel` trait is specified mainly through blanket
implementations, which prevents `Box<dyn ScheduleLabel>` from being
properly special-cased.
## Solution
Replace the blanket-implemented behavior with a series of methods
defined on `ScheduleLabel`. This allows us to fully special-case
`Box<dyn ScheduleLabel>` .
---
## Changelog
Fixed a bug where boxed label types (such as `Box<dyn ScheduleLabel>`)
behaved incorrectly when compared with concretely-typed labels.
## Migration Guide
The `ScheduleLabel` trait has been refactored to no longer depend on the
traits `std::any::Any`, `bevy_utils::DynEq`, and `bevy_utils::DynHash`.
Any manual implementations will need to implement new trait methods in
their stead.
```rust
impl ScheduleLabel for MyType {
// Before:
fn dyn_clone(&self) -> Box<dyn ScheduleLabel> { ... }
// After:
fn dyn_clone(&self) -> Box<dyn ScheduleLabel> { ... }
fn as_dyn_eq(&self) -> &dyn DynEq {
self
}
// No, `mut state: &mut` is not a typo.
fn dyn_hash(&self, mut state: &mut dyn Hasher) {
self.hash(&mut state);
// Hashing the TypeId isn't strictly necessary, but it prevents collisions.
TypeId::of::<Self>().hash(&mut state);
}
}
```
Added helper extracted from #7711. that PR contains some controversy
conditions, but this one should be good to go.
---
## Changelog
### Added
- `any_component_removed` condition.
---------
Co-authored-by: François <mockersf@gmail.com>
# Objective
Split the UI overflow enum so that overflow can be set for each axis
separately.
## Solution
Change `Overflow` from an enum to a struct with `x` and `y`
`OverflowAxis` fields, where `OverflowAxis` is an enum with `Clip` and
`Visible` variants. Modify `update_clipping` to calculate clipping for
each axis separately. If only one axis is clipped, the other axis is
given infinite bounds.
<img width="642" alt="overflow"
src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/27962798/227592983-568cf76f-7e40-48c4-a511-43c886f5e431.PNG">
---
## Changelog
* Split the UI overflow implementation so overflow can be set for each
axis separately.
* Added the enum `OverflowAxis` with `Clip` and `Visible` variants.
* Changed `Overflow` to a struct with `x` and `y` fields of type
`OverflowAxis`.
* `Overflow` has new methods `visible()` and `hidden()` that replace its
previous `Clip` and `Visible` variants.
* Added `Overflow` helper methods `clip_x()` and `clip_y()` that return
a new `Overflow` value with the given axis clipped.
* Modified `update_clipping` so it calculates clipping for each axis
separately. If a node is only clipped on a single axis, the other axis
is given `-f32::INFINITY` to `f32::INFINITY` clipping bounds.
## Migration Guide
The `Style` property `Overflow` is now a struct with `x` and `y` fields,
that allow for per-axis overflow control.
Use these helper functions to replace the variants of `Overflow`:
* Replace `Overflow::Visible` with `Overflow::visible()`
* Replace `Overflow::Hidden` with `Overflow::clip()`
# Objective
Avoid queuing empty meshes for rendering.
Should prevent #8144 from triggering when no gizmos are in use. Not a
real fix, unfortunately.
## Solution
Add an `in_use` field to `GizmoStorage` and only set it to true when
there are gizmos to draw.
# Objective
Follow-up to #8377.
As the system module has been refactored, there are many types that no
longer make sense to live in the files that they do:
- The `IntoSystem` trait is in `function_system.rs`, even though this
trait is relevant to all kinds of systems. Same for the `In<T>` type.
- `PipeSystem` is now just an implementation of `CombinatorSystem`, so
`system_piping.rs` no longer needs its own file.
## Solution
- Move `IntoSystem`, `In<T>`, and system piping combinators & tests into
the top-level `mod.rs` file for `bevy_ecs::system`.
- Move `PipeSystem` into `combinator.rs`.
# Objective
Add Reflection to `TextureAtlasSprite` to bring it inline with `Sprite`
## Solution
Addition of appropriate macros to the type
---
## Changelog
`#[reflect(Component)]` and derive `FromReflect` for
`TextureAtlasSprite`
Added `TextureAtlasSprite` to the TypeRegistry
# Objective
Fixes#8415.
## Solution
I simply added the missing types to the type registry.
## Changelog
Added `#[reflect(Component]` to `bevi_ui::ui_node::ZIndex`, since it
impls `Component` and `Reflect.`
The following types have been added to the type registry:
1. `bevy_ui::ZIndex`
2. `bevy_math::Rect`
3. `bevy_text::BreakLineOn`
4. `bevy_text::Text2dBounds`
# Objective
Followup to #7779 which tweaks the actual text measurement algorithm to
be more robust.
Before:
<img width="822" alt="Screenshot 2023-04-17 at 18 12 05"
src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1007307/232566858-3d3f0fd5-f3d4-400a-8371-3c2a3f541e56.png">
After:
<img width="810" alt="Screenshot 2023-04-17 at 18 41 40"
src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1007307/232566919-4254cbfa-1cc3-4ea7-91ed-8ca1b759bacf.png">
(note extra space taken up in header in before example)
## Solution
- Text layout of horizontal text (currently the only kind of text we
support) is now based solely on the layout constraints in the horizontal
axis. It ignores constraints in the vertical axis and computes vertical
size based on wrapping subject to the horizontal axis constraints.
- I've also added a paragraph to the `grid` example for testing / demo
purposes.
# Objective
When changing an Entity's `Parent` to a new one from an old `Parent`
that doesn't exist, Bevy panics. Fixes#8337.
## Solution
Use `get_entity_mut` instead of `entity_mut` in `remove_from_children`.
---------
Co-authored-by: James Liu <contact@jamessliu.com>
# Objective
- Incorrectly resolved merge conflicts in
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/8026 have caused UI text to not
render at all.
## Solution
Restore correct system schedule for text systems
# Objective
An easy way to create 2D grid layouts
## Solution
Enable the `grid` feature in Taffy and add new style types for defining
grids.
## Notes
- ~I'm having a bit of trouble getting `#[derive(Reflect)]` to work
properly. Help with that would be appreciated (EDIT: got it to compile
by ignoring the problematic fields, but this presumably can't be
merged).~ This is now fixed
- ~The alignment types now have a `Normal` variant because I couldn't
get reflect to work with `Option`.~ I've decided to stick with the
flattened variant, as it saves a level of wrapping when authoring
styles. But I've renamed the variants from `Normal` to `Default`.
- ~This currently exposes a simplified API on top of grid. In particular
the following is not currently supported:~
- ~Negative grid indices~ Now supported.
- ~Custom `end` values for grid placement (you can only use `start` and
`span`)~ Now supported
- ~`minmax()` track sizing functions~ minmax is now support through a
`GridTrack::minmax()` constructor
- ~`repeat()`~ repeat is now implemented as `RepeatedGridTrack`
- ~Documentation still needs to be improved.~ An initial pass over the
documentation has been completed.
## Screenshot
<img width="846" alt="Screenshot 2023-03-10 at 17 56 21"
src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1007307/224435332-69aa9eac-123d-4856-b75d-5449d3f1d426.png">
---
## Changelog
- Support for CSS Grid layout added to `bevy_ui`
---------
Co-authored-by: Rob Parrett <robparrett@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Andreas Weibye <13300393+Weibye@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
- Currently, it is not possible to call `.pipe` on a system that takes
any input other than `()`.
- The `IntoPipeSystem` trait is currently very difficult to parse due to
its use of generics.
## Solution
Remove the `IntoPipeSystem` trait, and move the `pipe` method to
`IntoSystem`.
---
## Changelog
- System piping has been made more flexible: it is now possible to call
`.pipe` on a system that takes an input.
## Migration Guide
The `IntoPipeSystem` trait has been removed, and the `pipe` method has
been moved to the `IntoSystem` trait.
```rust
// Before:
use bevy_ecs::system::IntoPipeSystem;
schedule.add_systems(first.pipe(second));
// After:
use bevy_ecs::system::IntoSystem;
schedule.add_systems(first.pipe(second));
```
# Objective
- Fixes unclear warning when `insert_non_send_resource` is called on a
Send resource
## Solution
- Add a message to the asssert statement that checks this
---------
Co-authored-by: James Liu <contact@jamessliu.com>
# Objective
`text_system` runs before the UI layout is calculated and the size of
the text node is determined, so it cannot correctly shape the text to
fit the layout, and has no way of determining if the text needs to be
wrapped.
The function `text_constraint` attempts to determine the size of the
node from the local size constraints in the `Style` component. It can't
be made to work, you have to compute the whole layout to get the correct
size. A simple example of where this fails completely is a text node set
to stretch to fill the empty space adjacent to a node with size
constraints set to `Val::Percent(50.)`. The text node will take up half
the space, even though its size constraints are `Val::Auto`
Also because the `text_system` queries for changes to the `Style`
component, when a style value is changed that doesn't affect the node's
geometry the text is recomputed unnecessarily.
Querying on changes to `Node` is not much better. The UI layout is
changed to fit the `CalculatedSize` of the text, so the size of the node
is changed and so the text and UI layout get recalculated multiple times
from a single change to a `Text`.
Also, the `MeasureFunc` doesn't work at all, it doesn't have enough
information to fit the text correctly and makes no attempt.
Fixes#7663, #6717, #5834, #1490,
## Solution
Split the `text_system` into two functions:
* `measure_text_system` which calculates the size constraints for the
text node and runs before `UiSystem::Flex`
* `text_system` which runs after `UiSystem::Flex` and generates the
actual text.
* Fix the `MeasureFunc` calculations.
---
Text wrapping in main:
<img width="961" alt="Capturemain"
src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/27962798/220425740-4fe4bf46-24fb-4685-a1cf-bc01e139e72d.PNG">
With this PR:
<img width="961" alt="captured_wrap"
src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/27962798/220425807-949996b0-f127-4637-9f33-56a6da944fb0.PNG">
## Changelog
* Removed the previous fields from `CalculatedSize`. `CalculatedSize`
now contains a boxed `Measure`.
* Added `measurement` module to `bevy_ui`.
* Added the method `create_text_measure` to `TextPipeline`.
* Added a new system `measure_text_system` that runs before
`UiSystem::Flex` that creates a `MeasureFunc` for the text.
* Rescheduled `text_system` to run after `UiSystem::Flex`.
* Added a trait `Measure`. A `Measure` is used to compute the size of a
UI node when the size of that node is based on its content.
* Added `ImageMeasure` and `TextMeasure` which implement `Measure`.
* Added a new component `UiImageSize` which is used by
`update_image_calculated_size_system` to track image size changes.
* Added a `UiImageSize` component to `ImageBundle`.
## Migration Guide
`ImageBundle` has a new component `UiImageSize` which contains the size
of the image bundle's texture and is updated automatically by
`update_image_calculated_size_system`
---------
Co-authored-by: François <mockersf@gmail.com>
# Objective
The implementation of `System::run_unsafe` for `FunctionSystem` requires
that the world is the same one used to initialize the system. However,
the `System` trait has no requirements that the world actually matches,
which makes this implementation unsound.
This was previously mentioned in
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/7605#issuecomment-1426491871
Fixes part of #7833.
## Solution
Add the safety invariant that
`System::update_archetype_component_access` must be called prior to
`System::run_unsafe`. Since
`FunctionSystem::update_archetype_component_access` properly validates
the world, this ensures that `run_unsafe` is not called with a
mismatched world.
Most exclusive systems are not required to be run on the same world that
they are initialized with, so this is not a concern for them. Systems
formed by combining an exclusive system with a regular system *do*
require the world to match, however the validation is done inside of
`System::run` when needed.
# Objective
This PR attempts to improve query compatibility checks in scenarios
involving `Or` filters.
Currently, for the following two disjoint queries, Bevy will throw a
panic:
```
fn sys(_: Query<&mut C, Or<(With<A>, With<B>)>>, _: Query<&mut C, (Without<A>, Without<B>)>) {}
```
This PR addresses this particular scenario.
## Solution
`FilteredAccess::with` now stores a vector of `AccessFilters`
(representing a pair of `with` and `without` bitsets), where each member
represents an `Or` "variant".
Filters like `(With<A>, Or<(With<B>, Without<C>)>` are expected to be
expanded into `A * B + A * !C`.
When calculating whether queries are compatible, every `AccessFilters`
of a query is tested for incompatibility with every `AccessFilters` of
another query.
---
## Changelog
- Improved system and query data access compatibility checks in
scenarios involving `Or` filters
---------
Co-authored-by: MinerSebas <66798382+MinerSebas@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
If you want to execute a schedule on the world using arbitrarily complex
behavior, you currently need to use "hokey-pokey strats": remove the
schedule from the world, do your thing, and add it back to the world.
Not only is this cumbersome, it's potentially error-prone as one might
forget to re-insert the schedule.
## Solution
Add the `World::{try}schedule_scope{ref}` family of functions, which is
a convenient abstraction over hokey pokey strats. This method
essentially works the same way as `World::resource_scope`.
### Example
```rust
// Run the schedule five times.
world.schedule_scope(MySchedule, |world, schedule| {
for _ in 0..5 {
schedule.run(world);
}
});
```
---
## Changelog
Added the `World::schedule_scope` family of methods, which provide a way
to get mutable access to a world and one of its schedules at the same
time.
---------
Co-authored-by: James Liu <contact@jamessliu.com>
# Objective
The default StandardMaterial values of `pbr_material.rs` and
`pbr_types.wgsl` are out of sync.
I think they are out of sync since
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/7664.
## Solution
Adapt the values: `metallic = 0.0`, `perceptual_roughness = 0.5`.
# Objective
We don't have a constructor function for `UiRect` that sets uniform
horizontal and vertical values, even though it is a common pattern.
## Solution
Add a constructor function to `UiRect` called `axes`, that sets both
`left` and `right` to the same given horizontal value,
and sets both `top` and `bottom` to same given vertical value.
## Changelog
* Added a constructor function `axes` to `UiRect`.
# Objective
fixes#8348
## Solution
- Uses multi-line string with backslashes allowing rustfmt to work
properly in the surrounding area.
---------
Co-authored-by: François <mockersf@gmail.com>
# Objective
The behavior of change detection within `PipeSystem` is very tricky and
subtle, and is not currently covered by any of our tests as far as I'm
aware.
# Objective
Upon closer inspection, there are a few functions in the ECS that are
not being inlined, even with the highest optimizations and LTO enabled:
- Almost all
[WorldQuery::init_fetch](9fd5f20e25/results/query_get.s (L57))
calls. Affects `Query::get` calls in hot loops. In particular, the
`WorldQuery` implementation for `()` is used *everywhere* as the default
filter and is effectively a no-op.
-
[Entities::get](9fd5f20e25/results/query_get.s (L39)).
Affects `Query::get`, `World::get`, and any component insertion or
removal.
-
[Entities::set](9fd5f20e25/results/entity_remove.s (L2487)).
Affects any component insertion or removal.
-
[Tick::new](9fd5f20e25/results/entity_insert.s (L1368)).
I've only seen this in component insertion and spawning.
- ArchetypeRow::new
- BlobVec::set_len
Almost all of these have trivial or even empty implementations or have
significant opportunity to be optimized into surrounding code when
inlined with LTO enabled.
## Solution
Inline them
# Objective
The method `World::try_run_schedule` currently panics if the `Schedules`
resource does not exist, but it should just return an `Err`. Similarly,
`World::add_schedule` panics unnecessarily if the resource does not
exist.
Also, the documentation for `World::add_schedule` is completely wrong.
## Solution
When the `Schedules` resource does not exist, we now treat it the same
as if it did exist but was empty. When calling `add_schedule`, we
initialize it if it does not exist.
# Objective
Fixes#8215 and #8152. When systems panic, it causes the main thread to
panic as well, which clutters the output.
## Solution
Resolves the panic in the multi-threaded scheduler. Also adds an extra
message that tells the user the system that panicked.
Using the example from the issue, here is what the messages now look
like:
```rust
use bevy::prelude::*;
fn main() {
App::new()
.add_plugins(DefaultPlugins)
.add_systems(Update, panicking_system)
.run();
}
fn panicking_system() {
panic!("oooh scary");
}
```
### Before
```
Compiling bevy_test v0.1.0 (E:\Projects\Rust\bevy_test)
Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 2m 58s
Running `target\debug\bevy_test.exe`
2023-03-30T22:19:09.234932Z INFO bevy_diagnostic::system_information_diagnostics_plugin::internal: SystemInfo { os: "Windows 10 Pro", kernel: "19044", cpu: "AMD Ryzen 5 2600 Six-Core Processor", core_count: "6", memory: "15.9 GiB" }
thread 'Compute Task Pool (5)' panicked at 'oooh scary', src\main.rs:11:5
note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace
thread 'Compute Task Pool (5)' panicked at 'A system has panicked so the executor cannot continue.: RecvError', E:\Projects\Rust\bevy\crates\bevy_ecs\src\schedule\executor\multi_threaded.rs:194:60
thread 'main' panicked at 'called `Option::unwrap()` on a `None` value', E:\Projects\Rust\bevy\crates\bevy_tasks\src\task_pool.rs:376:49
error: process didn't exit successfully: `target\debug\bevy_test.exe` (exit code: 101)
```
### After
```
Compiling bevy_test v0.1.0 (E:\Projects\Rust\bevy_test)
Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 2.39s
Running `target\debug\bevy_test.exe`
2023-03-30T22:11:24.748513Z INFO bevy_diagnostic::system_information_diagnostics_plugin::internal: SystemInfo { os: "Windows 10 Pro", kernel: "19044", cpu: "AMD Ryzen 5 2600 Six-Core Processor", core_count: "6", memory: "15.9 GiB" }
thread 'Compute Task Pool (5)' panicked at 'oooh scary', src\main.rs:11:5
note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace
Encountered a panic in system `bevy_test::panicking_system`!
Encountered a panic in system `bevy_app::main_schedule::Main::run_main`!
error: process didn't exit successfully: `target\debug\bevy_test.exe` (exit code: 101)
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: François <mockersf@gmail.com>
# Objective
Fix#8191.
Currently, a state transition will be triggered whenever the `NextState`
resource has a value, even if that "transition" is to the same state as
the previous one. This caused surprising/meaningless behavior, such as
the existence of an `OnTransition { from: A, to: A }` schedule.
## Solution
State transition schedules now only run if the new state is not equal to
the old state. Change detection works the same way, only being triggered
when the states compare not equal.
---
## Changelog
- State transition schedules are no longer run when transitioning to and
from the same state.
## Migration Guide
State transitions are now only triggered when the exited and entered
state differ. This means that if the world is currently in state `A`,
the `OnEnter(A)` schedule (or `OnExit`) will no longer be run if you
queue up a state transition to the same state `A`.
# Objective
Noticed while writing #7728 that we are using `trace!` logs in our event
functions. This has shown to have significant overhead, even trace level
logs are disabled globally, as seen in #7639.
## Solution
Use the `detailed_trace!` macro introduced in #7639. Also removed the
`event_trace` function that was only used in one location.
---
## Changelog
Changed: Event trace logs are now feature gated behind the
`detailed-trace` feature.
# Objective
Fix#8321
## Solution
The `old_viewport_size` that is used to detect whether the viewport has
changed was not being updated and thus always `None`.
# Objective
Adds a new resource to control a global volume.
Fixes#7690
---
## Solution
Added a new resource to control global volume, this is then multiplied
with an audio sources volume to get the output volume, individual audio
sources can opt out of this my enabling the `absolute_volume` field in
`PlaybackSettings`.
---
## Changelog
### Added
- `GlobalVolume` a resource to control global volume (in prelude).
- `global_volume` field to `AudioPlugin` or setting the initial value of
`GlobalVolume`.
- `Volume` enum that can be `Relative` or `Absolute`.
- `VolumeLevel` struct for defining a volume level.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
when a mesh uses zero for all bone weights, vertices end up in the
middle of the screen.
## Solution
we can address this by explicitly setting the first bone weight to 1
when the weights are given as zero. this is the approach taken by
[unity](https://forum.unity.com/threads/whats-the-problem-with-this-import-fbx-warning.133736/)
(although that also sets the bone index to zero) and
[three.js](94c1a4b86f/src/objects/SkinnedMesh.js (L98)),
and likely other engines.
## Alternatives
it does add a bit of overhead, and users can always fix this themselves,
though it's a bit awkward particularly with gltfs.
(note - this is for work so my sme status shouldn't apply)
---------
Co-authored-by: ira <JustTheCoolDude@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Fix#7263
This has nothing to do with #7024. This is for the case where the
user opted to **not** keep the same global transform on update.
## Solution
- Add a `RemovedComponent<Parent>` to `propagate_transforms`
- Add a `RemovedComponent<Parent>` and `Local<Vec<Entity>>` to
`sync_simple_transforms`
- Add test to make sure all of this works.
### Performance note
This should only incur a cost in cases where a parent is removed.
A minimal overhead (one look up in the `removed_components`
sparse set) per root entities without children which transform didn't
change. A `Vec` the size of the largest number of entities removed
with a `Parent` component in a single frame, and a binary search on
a `Vec` per root entities.
It could slow up considerably in situations where a lot of entities are
orphaned consistently during every frame, since
`sync_simple_transforms` is not parallel. But in this situation,
it is likely that the overhead of archetype updates overwhelms
everything.
---
## Changelog
- Fix the `GlobalTransform` not getting updated when `Parent` is removed
## Migration Guide
- If you called `bevy_transform::systems::sync_simple_transforms` and
`bevy_transform::systems::propagate_transforms` (which is not
re-exported by bevy) you need to account for the additional
`RemovedComponents<Parent>` parameter.
---------
Co-authored-by: vyb <vyb@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: JoJoJet <21144246+JoJoJet@users.noreply.github.com>
Fixes#8333
# Objective
Fixes issue which causes failure to compile if using
`#![deny(missing_docs)]`.
## Solution
Added some very basic commenting to the generated read-only fields.
honestly I feel this to be up for debate since the comments are very
basic and give very little useful information but the purpose of this PR
is to fix the issue at hand.
---
## Changelog
Added comments to the derive macro and the projects now successfully
compile.
---------
Co-authored-by: lupan <kallll5@hotmail.com>
Fixes issue mentioned in PR #8285.
_Note: By mistake, this is currently dependent on #8285_
# Objective
Ensure consistency in the spelling of the documentation.
Exceptions:
`crates/bevy_mikktspace/src/generated.rs` - Has not been changed from
licence to license as it is part of a licensing agreement.
Maybe for further consistency,
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy-website should also be given a look.
## Solution
### Changed the spelling of the current words (UK/CN/AU -> US) :
cancelled -> canceled (Breaking API changes in #8285)
behaviour -> behavior (Breaking API changes in #8285)
neighbour -> neighbor
grey -> gray
recognise -> recognize
centre -> center
metres -> meters
colour -> color
### ~~Update [`engine_style_guide.md`]~~ Moved to #8324
---
## Changelog
Changed UK spellings in documentation to US
## Migration Guide
Non-breaking changes*
\* If merged after #8285
# Objective
The clippy lint `type_complexity` is known not to play well with bevy.
It frequently triggers when writing complex queries, and taking the
lint's advice of using a type alias almost always just obfuscates the
code with no benefit. Because of this, this lint is currently ignored in
CI, but unfortunately it still shows up when viewing bevy code in an
IDE.
As someone who's made a fair amount of pull requests to this repo, I
will say that this issue has been a consistent thorn in my side. Since
bevy code is filled with spurious, ignorable warnings, it can be very
difficult to spot the *real* warnings that must be fixed -- most of the
time I just ignore all warnings, only to later find out that one of them
was real after I'm done when CI runs.
## Solution
Suppress this lint in all bevy crates. This was previously attempted in
#7050, but the review process ended up making it more complicated than
it needs to be and landed on a subpar solution.
The discussion in https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/10571
explores some better long-term solutions to this problem. Since there is
no timeline on when these solutions may land, we should resolve this
issue in the meantime by locally suppressing these lints.
### Unresolved issues
Currently, these lints are not suppressed in our examples, since that
would require suppressing the lint in every single source file. They are
still ignored in CI.
# Objective
Make the coordinate systems of screen-space items (cursor position, UI,
viewports, etc.) consistent.
## Solution
Remove the weird double inversion of the cursor position's Y origin.
Once in bevy_winit to the bottom and then again in bevy_ui back to the
top.
This leaves the origin at the top left like it is in every other popular
app framework.
Update the `world_to_viewport`, `viewport_to_world`, and
`viewport_to_world_2d` methods to flip the Y origin (as they should
since the viewport coordinates were always relative to the top left).
## Migration Guide
`Window::cursor_position` now returns the position of the cursor
relative to the top left instead of the bottom left.
This now matches other screen-space coordinates like
`RelativeCursorPosition`, UI, and viewports.
The `world_to_viewport`, `viewport_to_world`, and `viewport_to_world_2d`
methods on `Camera` now return/take the viewport position relative to
the top left instead of the bottom left.
If you were using `world_to_viewport` to position a UI node the returned
`y` value should now be passed into the `top` field on `Style` instead
of the `bottom` field.
Note that this might shift the position of the UI node as it is now
anchored at the top.
If you were passing `Window::cursor_position` to `viewport_to_world` or
`viewport_to_world_2d` no change is necessary.
# Objective
Text glyphs that were clipped were not sized correctly because the
transform extracted from the `extract_text_uinodes` had a scaling on it
that wasn't accounted for.
fixes#8167
## Solution
Remove the scaling from the transform and multiply the size of the
glyphs by the inverse of the scale factor.
# Objective
Add helper functions to `UiImage` for creating flipped images.
## Changelog
* Added `with_flip_x` and `with_flip_y` methods to `UiImage` that return
the `UiImage` flipped along the respective axis.
# Objective
Exposes `empty()` method for `AudioSink`.
Based on `0.10.0`, should be a non-breaking change.
---
## Changelog
- Expose `empty()` method for `AudioSink`
- Add `AudioSink::empty()` example
---------
Co-authored-by: hank <hank@hank.co.in>
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
# Objective
When a `CalculatedSize` component from a UI Node entity is removed, the
corresponding Taffy measure isn't removed which will mess up the layout
in confusing, unpredictable ways.
## Solution
Iterate through all the entities with removed `CalculatedSize`
components and remove the corresponding Taffy measures.
# Objective
In the
[`Text`](3442a13d2c/crates/bevy_text/src/text.rs (L18))
struct the field is named: `linebreak_behaviour`, the British spelling
of _behavior_.
**Update**, also found:
- `FileDragAndDrop::HoveredFileCancelled`
- `TouchPhase::Cancelled`
- `Touches.just_cancelled`
The majority of all spelling is in the US but when you have a lot of
contributors across the world, sometimes
spelling differences can pop up in APIs such as in this case.
For consistency, I think it would be worth a while to ensure that the
API is persistent.
Some examples:
`from_reflect.rs` has `DefaultBehavior`
TextStyle has `color` and uses the `Color` struct.
In `bevy_input/src/Touch.rs` `TouchPhase::Cancelled` and _canceled_ are
used interchangeably in the documentation
I've found that there is also the same type of discrepancies in the
documentation, though this is a low priority but is worth checking.
**Update**: I've now checked the documentation (See #8291)
## Solution
I've only renamed the inconsistencies that have breaking changes and
documentation pertaining to them. The rest of the documentation will be
changed via #8291.
Do note that the winit API is written with UK spelling, thus this may be
a cause for confusion:
`winit::event::TouchPhase::Cancelled => TouchPhase::Canceled`
`winit::event::WindowEvent::HoveredFileCancelled` -> Related to
`FileDragAndDrop::HoveredFileCanceled`
But I'm hoping to maybe outline other spelling inconsistencies in the
API, and maybe an addition to the contribution guide.
---
## Changelog
- `Text` field `linebreak_behaviour` has been renamed to
`linebreak_behavior`.
- Event `FileDragAndDrop::HoveredFileCancelled` has been renamed to
`HoveredFileCanceled`
- Function `Touches.just_cancelled` has been renamed to
`Touches.just_canceled`
- Event `TouchPhase::Cancelled` has been renamed to
`TouchPhase::Canceled`
## Migration Guide
Update where `linebreak_behaviour` is used to `linebreak_behavior`
Updated the event `FileDragAndDrop::HoveredFileCancelled` where used to
`HoveredFileCanceled`
Update `Touches.just_cancelled` where used as `Touches.just_canceled`
The event `TouchPhase::Cancelled` is now called `TouchPhase::Canceled`
# Objective
- RenderGraphExt was merged, but only used in limited situations
## Solution
- Fix some remaining issues with the existing api
- Use the new api in the main pass and mass writeback
- Add CORE_2D and CORE_3D constant to make render_graph code shorter
# Objective
While working on #8299, I noticed that we're using a `capacity` field,
even though `wgpu::Buffer` exposes a `size` accessor that does the same
thing.
## Solution
Remove it from all buffer wrappers. Use `wgpu::Buffer::size` instead.
Default to 0 if no buffer has been allocated yet.
# Objective
Fixes#8284. `values` is being pushed to separately from the actual
scratch buffer in `DynamicUniformBuffer::push` and
`DynamicStorageBuffer::push`. In both types, `values` is really only
used to track the number of elements being added to the buffer, yet is
causing extra allocations, size increments and excess copies.
## Solution
Remove it and its remaining uses. Replace it with accesses to `scratch`
instead.
I removed the `len` accessor, as it may be non-trivial to compute just
from `scratch`. If this is still desirable to have, we can keep a `len`
member field to track it instead of relying on `scratch`.
# Objective
State requires a kind of awkward `state.0` to get the current state and
exposes the field directly to manipulation.
## Solution
Make it accessible through a getter method as well as privatize the
field to make sure false assumptions about setting the state aren't
made.
## Migration Guide
- Use `State::get` instead of accessing the tuple field directly.
# Objective
- Adding a node to the render_graph can be quite verbose and error prone
because there's a lot of moving parts to it.
## Solution
- Encapsulate this in a simple utility method
- Mostly intended for optional nodes that have specific ordering
- Requires that the `Node` impl `FromWorld`, but every internal node is
built using a new function taking a `&mut World` so it was essentially
already `FromWorld`
- Use it for the bloom, fxaa and taa, nodes.
- The main nodes don't use it because they rely more on the order of
many nodes being added
---
## Changelog
- Impl `FromWorld` for `BloomNode`, `FxaaNode` and `TaaNode`
- Added `RenderGraph::add_node_edges()`
- Added `RenderGraph::sub_graph()`
- Added `RenderGraph::sub_graph_mut()`
- Added `RenderGraphApp`, `RenderGraphApp::add_render_graph_node`,
`RenderGraphApp::add_render_graph_edges`,
`RenderGraphApp::add_render_graph_edge`
## Notes
~~This was taken out of https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/7995
because it works on it's own. Once the linked PR is done, the new
`add_node()` will be simplified a bit since the input/output params
won't be necessary.~~
This feature will be useful in most of the upcoming render nodes so it's
impact will be more relevant at that point.
Partially fixes#7985
## Future work
* Add a way to automatically label nodes or at least make it part of the
trait. This would remove one more field from the functions added in this
PR
* Use it in the main pass 2d/3d
---------
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
# Objective
The `#[derive(WorldQuery)]` macro currently only supports structs with
named fields.
Same motivation as #6957. Remove sharp edges from the derive macro, make
it just work more often.
## Solution
Support tuple structs.
---
## Changelog
+ Added support for tuple structs to the `#[derive(WorldQuery)]` macro.
# Objective
bevy-scene does not have a reason to depend on bevy-render except to
include the `Visibility` and `ComputedVisibility` components. Including
that in the dependency chain is unnecessary for people not using
`bevy_render`.
Also fixed a problem where compilation fails when the `serialize`
feature was not enabled.
## Solution
This was added in #5335 to address some of the problems caused by #5310.
Imo the user just always have to remember to include `VisibilityBundle`
when they spawn `SceneBundle` or `DynamicSceneBundle`, but that will be
a breaking change. This PR makes `bevy_render` an optional dependency of
`bevy_scene` instead to respect the existing behavior.
# Objective
While migrating the engine to use the `Tick` type in #7905, I forgot to
update `UnsafeWorldCell::increment_change_tick`.
## Solution
Update the function.
---
## Changelog
- The function `UnsafeWorldCell::increment_change_tick` is now
strongly-typed, returning a value of type `Tick` instead of a raw `u32`.
## Migration Guide
The function `UnsafeWorldCell::increment_change_tick` is now
strongly-typed, returning a value of type `Tick` instead of a raw `u32`.
# Objective
TAA, FXAA, and some other post processing effects can cause the image to
become blurry. Sharpening helps to counteract that.
## Solution
~~This is a port of AMD's Contrast Adaptive Sharpening (I ported it from
the
[SweetFX](https://github.com/CeeJayDK/SweetFX/blob/master/Shaders/CAS.fx)
version, which is still MIT licensed). CAS is a good sharpening
algorithm that is better at avoiding the full screen oversharpening
artifacts that simpler algorithms tend to create.~~
This is a port of AMD's Robust Contrast Adaptive Sharpening (RCAS) which
they developed for FSR 1 ([and continue to use in FSR
2](149cf26e12/src/ffx-fsr2-api/shaders/ffx_fsr1.h (L599))).
RCAS is a good sharpening algorithm that is better at avoiding the full
screen oversharpening artifacts that simpler algorithms tend to create.
---
## Future Work
- Consider porting this to a compute shader for potentially better
performance. (In my testing it is currently ridiculously cheap (0.01ms
in Bistro at 1440p where I'm GPU bound), so this wasn't a priority,
especially since it would increase complexity due to still needing the
non-compute version for webgl2 support).
---
## Changelog
- Added Contrast Adaptive Sharpening.
---------
Co-authored-by: JMS55 <47158642+JMS55@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
- Closes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/8008
## Solution
- Add a skybox plugin that renders a fullscreen triangle, and then
modifies the vertices in a vertex shader to enforce that it renders as a
skybox background.
- Skybox is run at the end of MainOpaquePass3dNode.
- In the future, it would be nice to get something like bevy_atmosphere
built-in, and have a default skybox+environment map light.
---
## Changelog
- Added `Skybox`.
- `EnvironmentMapLight` now renders in the correct orientation.
## Migration Guide
- Flip `EnvironmentMapLight` maps if needed to match how they previously
rendered (which was backwards).
---------
Co-authored-by: Robert Swain <robert.swain@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: robtfm <50659922+robtfm@users.noreply.github.com>
These traits are both implemented, but not reflected, requiring user
code to do `app.register_type_data::<BloomSettings,
ReflectDefault>().register_type_data::<BloomSettings,
ReflectComponent>()` to make these usable via reflection.
# Objective
The type `&World` is currently in an awkward place, since it has two
meanings:
1. Read-only access to the entire world.
2. Interior mutable access to the world; immutable and/or mutable access
to certain portions of world data.
This makes `&World` difficult to reason about, and surprising to see in
function signatures if one does not know about the interior mutable
property.
The type `UnsafeWorldCell` was added in #6404, which is meant to
alleviate this confusion by adding a dedicated type for interior mutable
world access. However, much of the engine still treats `&World` as an
interior mutable-ish type. One of those places is `SystemParam`.
## Solution
Modify `SystemParam::get_param` to accept `UnsafeWorldCell` instead of
`&World`. Simplify the safety invariants, since the `UnsafeWorldCell`
type encapsulates the concept of constrained world access.
---
## Changelog
`SystemParam::get_param` now accepts an `UnsafeWorldCell` instead of
`&World`. This type provides a high-level API for unsafe interior
mutable world access.
## Migration Guide
For manual implementers of `SystemParam`: the function `get_item` now
takes `UnsafeWorldCell` instead of `&World`. To access world data, use:
* `.get_entity()`, which returns an `UnsafeEntityCell` which can be used
to access component data.
* `get_resource()` and its variants, to access resource data.
# Objective
Fix typo in bevy_reflect README: `MyType` is a struct and not a trait,
so `&dyn MyType` is incorrect.
## Solution
Replace `&dyn MyType` with `&dyn DoThing`
# Objective
The function `SyncUnsafeCell::from_mut` returns `&SyncUnsafeCell<T>`,
even though it could return `&mut SyncUnsafeCell<T>`. This means it is
not possible to call `get_mut` on the returned value, so you need to use
unsafe code to get exclusive access back.
## Solution
Return `&mut Self` instead of `&Self` in `SyncUnsafeCell::from_mut`.
This is consistent with my proposal for `UnsafeCell::from_mut`:
https://github.com/rust-lang/libs-team/issues/198.
Replace an unsafe pointer dereference with a safe call to `get_mut`.
---
## Changelog
+ The function `bevy_utils::SyncUnsafeCell::get_mut` now returns a value
of type `&mut SyncUnsafeCell<T>`. Previously, this returned an immutable
reference.
## Migration Guide
The function `bevy_utils::SyncUnsafeCell::get_mut` now returns a value
of type `&mut SyncUnsafeCell<T>`. Previously, this returned an immutable
reference.
# Objective
The documentation on `QueryState::for_each_unchecked` incorrectly says
that it can only be used with read-only queries.
## Solution
Remove the inaccurate sentence.
# Objective
Fix `CubicCurve::iter_samples` iteration count.
## Solution
If I understand the function and the docs correctly, this should iterate
over `0..=subdivisions` instead of `0..subdivisions`.
For example: Now the iteration returns 3 points at `subdivisions = 2`,
as indicated in the documentation.
# Objective
Follow-up to #8030.
Now that `SystemParam` and `WorldQuery` are implemented for
`PhantomData`, the `ignore` attributes are now unnecessary.
---
## Changelog
- Removed the attributes `#[system_param(ignore)]` and
`#[world_query(ignore)]`.
## Migration Guide
The attributes `#[system_param(ignore)]` and `#[world_query]` ignore
have been removed. If you were using either of these with `PhantomData`
fields, you can simply remove the attribute:
```rust
#[derive(SystemParam)]
struct MyParam<'w, 's, Marker> {
...
// Before:
#[system_param(ignore)
_marker: PhantomData<Marker>,
// After:
_marker: PhantomData<Marker>,
}
#[derive(WorldQuery)]
struct MyQuery<Marker> {
...
// Before:
#[world_query(ignore)
_marker: PhantomData<Marker>,
// After:
_marker: PhantomData<Marker>,
}
```
If you were using this for another type that implements `Default`,
consider wrapping that type in `Local<>` (this only works for
`SystemParam`):
```rust
#[derive(SystemParam)]
struct MyParam<'w, 's> {
// Before:
#[system_param(ignore)]
value: MyDefaultType, // This will be initialized using `Default` each time `MyParam` is created.
// After:
value: Local<MyDefaultType>, // This will be initialized using `Default` the first time `MyParam` is created.
}
```
If you are implementing either trait and need to preserve the exact
behavior of the old `ignore` attributes, consider manually implementing
`SystemParam` or `WorldQuery` for a wrapper struct that uses the
`Default` trait:
```rust
// Before:
#[derive(WorldQuery)
struct MyQuery {
#[world_query(ignore)]
str: String,
}
// After:
#[derive(WorldQuery)
struct MyQuery {
str: DefaultQuery<String>,
}
pub struct DefaultQuery<T: Default>(pub T);
unsafe impl<T: Default> WorldQuery for DefaultQuery<T> {
type Item<'w> = Self;
...
unsafe fn fetch<'w>(...) -> Self::Item<'w> {
Self(T::default())
}
}
```
# Objective
Our regression tests for `SystemParam` currently consist of a bunch of
loosely dispersed struct definitions. This is messy, and doesn't fully
test their functionality.
## Solution
Group the struct definitions into functions annotated with `#[test]`.
This not only makes the module more organized, but it allows us to call
`assert_is_system`, which has the potential to catch some bugs that
would have been missed with the old approach. Also, this approach is
consistent with how `WorldQuery` regression tests are organized.
# Objective
- Fixes#7659
## Solution
The idea of anonymous system sets or "implicit hidden organizational
sets" was briefly mentioned by @cart here:
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/7634#issuecomment-1428619449.
- `Schedule::add_systems` creates an implicit, anonymous system set of
all systems in `SystemConfigs`.
- All dependencies and conditions from the `SystemConfigs` are now
applied to the implicit system set, instead of being applied to each
individual system. This should not change the behavior, AFAIU, because
`before`, `after`, `run_if` and `ambiguous_with` are transitive
properties from a set to its members.
- The newly added `AnonymousSystemSet` stores the names of its members
to provide better error messages.
- The names are stored in a reference counted slice, allowing fast
clones of the `AnonymousSystemSet`.
- However, only the pointer of the slice is used for hash and equality
operations
- This ensures that two `AnonymousSystemSet` are not equal, even if they
have the same members / member names.
- So two identical `add_systems` calls will produce two different
`AnonymousSystemSet`s.
- Clones of the same `AnonymousSystemSet` will be equal.
## Drawbacks
If my assumptions are correct, the observed behavior should stay the
same. But the number of system sets in the `Schedule` will increase with
each `add_systems` call. If this has negative performance implications,
`add_systems` could be changed to only create the implicit system set if
necessary / when a run condition was added.
---------
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
# Objective
With the removal of base sets, some variants of `ScheduleBuildError` can
never occur and should be removed.
## Solution
- Remove the obsolete variants of `ScheduleBuildError`.
- Also fix a doc comment which mentioned base sets.
---
## Changelog
### Removed
- Remove `ScheduleBuildError::SystemInMultipleBaseSets` and
`ScheduleBuildError::SetInMultipleBaseSets`.
# Objective
When using `PhantomData` fields with the `#[derive(SystemParam)]` or
`#[derive(WorldQuery)]` macros, the user is required to add the
`#[system_param(ignore)]` attribute so that the macro knows to treat
that field specially. This is undesirable, since it makes the macro more
fragile and less consistent.
## Solution
Implement `SystemParam` and `WorldQuery` for `PhantomData`. This makes
the `ignore` attributes unnecessary.
Some internal changes make the derive macro compatible with types that
have invariant lifetimes, which fixes#8192. From what I can tell, this
fix requires `PhantomData` to implement `SystemParam` in order to ensure
that all of a type's generic parameters are always constrained.
---
## Changelog
+ Implemented `SystemParam` and `WorldQuery` for `PhantomData<T>`.
+ Fixed a miscompilation caused when invariant lifetimes were used with
the `SystemParam` macro.
# Objective
The type `ThinSlicePtr` has a manual implementation of `Clone` that
manually clones each field. Since this type implements `Copy`, we can
change this implementation to simply dereference `&self`.
# Objective
I ran into a case where I need to create a `CommandQueue` and push
standard `Command` actions like `Insert` or `Remove` to it manually. I
saw that `Remove` looked as follows:
```rust
struct Remove<T> {
entity: Entity,
phantom: PhantomData<T>
}
```
so naturally, I tried to use `Remove::<Foo>::from(entity)` but it didn't
exist. We need to specify the `PhantomData` explicitly when creating
this command action. The same goes for `RemoveResource` and
`InitResource`
## Solution
This PR implements the following:
- `From<Entity>` for `Remove<T>`
- `Default` for `RemoveResource` and `InitResource`
- use these traits in the implementation of methods of `Commands`
- rename `phantom` field on the structs above to `_phantom` to have a
more uniform field naming scheme for the command actions
---
## Changelog
> This section is optional. If this was a trivial fix, or has no
externally-visible impact, you can delete this section.
- Added: implemented `From<Entity>` for `Remove<T>` and `Default` for
`RemoveResource` and `InitResource` for ergonomics
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
- We support enabling a normal prepass, but the main pass never actually
uses it and recomputes the normals in the main pass. This isn't ideal
since it's doing redundant work.
## Solution
- Use the normal texture from the prepass in the main pass
## Notes
~~I used `NORMAL_PREPASS_ENABLED` as a shader_def because
`NORMAL_PREPASS` is currently used to signify that it is running in the
prepass while this shader_def need to indicate the prepass is done and
the normal prepass was ran before. I'm not sure if there's a better way
to name this.~~
# Objective
Fix#8179
## Solution
- Added `#![warn(missing_docs)]` and document all public items. All
methods on `Gizmos` have doc examples.
- Expanded the docs on the module/crate. Some unfortunate duplication
there :/
- Moved the methods from `GizmoBuffer` to be directly on `Gizmos` and
made `GizmoBuffer` private. This means the methods on `Gizmos` will show
up on its doc page.
---------
Co-authored-by: James Liu <contact@jamessliu.com>
# Objective
- Allow the use of the "glam _assert" feature to help catch runtime
errors and validate the arguments passed to glam.
e.g.
```rs
// Will panic if self is zero length when glam_assert is enabled.
pub fn normalize(self) -> Self {
let normalized = self.mul(self.length_recip());
glam_assert!(normalized.is_finite());
normalized
}
```
## Solution
- Re-export the optional feature glam_assert
---
## Changelog
Added: Optional feature "glam_assert"
# Objective
WebP is a modern image format developed by Google that offers a
significant reduction in file size compared to other image formats such
as PNG and JPEG, while still maintaining good image quality. This makes
it particularly useful for games with large numbers of images, such as
those with high-quality textures or detailed sprites, where file size
and loading times can have a significant impact on performance.
By adding support for WebP images in Bevy, game developers using this
engine can now take advantage of this modern image format and reduce the
memory usage and loading times of their games. This improvement can
ultimately result in a better gaming experience for players.
In summary, the objective of adding WebP image format support in Bevy is
to enable game developers to use a modern image format that provides
better compression rates and smaller file sizes, resulting in faster
loading times and reduced memory usage for their games.
## Solution
To add support for WebP images in Bevy, this pull request leverages the
existing `image` crate support for WebP. This implementation is easily
integrated into the existing Bevy asset-loading system. To maintain
compatibility with existing Bevy projects, WebP image support is
disabled by default, and developers can enable it by adding a feature
flag to their project's `Cargo.toml` file. With this feature, Bevy
becomes even more versatile for game developers and provides a valuable
addition to the game engine.
---
## Changelog
- Added support for WebP image format in Bevy game engine
## Migration Guide
To enable WebP image support in your Bevy project, add the following
line to your project's Cargo.toml file:
```toml
bevy = { version = "*", features = ["webp"]}
```
# Objective
Fixes#8089.
## Solution
Splits the MainPass3dNode into 2 nodes, one for the opaque + alpha
passes and one for the transparent pass.
---
## Changelog
- Split MainPass3dNode into MainOpaquePass3dNode and
MainTransparentPass3dNode
- Combine opaque and alpha phases in MainOpaquePass3dNode into one pass
- Create `START_MAIN_PASS` and `END_MAIN_PASS` empty nodes as labels
- Main pass becomes `START_MAIN_PASS -> MAIN_OPAQUE_PASS ->
MAIN_TRANSPARENT_PASS -> END_MAIN_PASS`
## Migration Guide
Nodes that previously added edges involving `MAIN_PASS` should now add
edges to or from `START_MAIN_PASS` or `END_MAIN_PASS` respectively.
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/47158642/214374911-412f0986-3927-4f7a-9a6c-413bdee6b389.png)
# Objective
- Implement an alternative antialias technique
- TAA scales based off of view resolution, not geometry complexity
- TAA filters textures, firefly pixels, and other aliasing not covered
by MSAA
- TAA additionally will reduce noise / increase quality in future
stochastic rendering techniques
- Closes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/3663
## Solution
- Add a temporal jitter component
- Add a motion vector prepass
- Add a TemporalAntialias component and plugin
- Combine existing MSAA and FXAA examples and add TAA
## Followup Work
- Prepass motion vector support for skinned meshes
- Move uniforms needed for motion vectors into a separate bind group,
instead of using different bind group layouts
- Reuse previous frame's GPU view buffer for motion vectors, instead of
recomputing
- Mip biasing for sharper textures, and or unjitter texture UVs
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/7323
- Compute shader for better performance
- Investigate FSR techniques
- Historical depth based disocclusion tests, for geometry disocclusion
- Historical luminance/hue based tests, for shading disocclusion
- Pixel "locks" to reduce blending rate / revamp history confidence
mechanism
- Orthographic camera support for TemporalJitter
- Figure out COD's 1-tap bicubic filter
---
## Changelog
- Added MotionVectorPrepass and TemporalJitter
- Added TemporalAntialiasPlugin, TemporalAntialiasBundle, and
TemporalAntialiasSettings
---------
Co-authored-by: IceSentry <c.giguere42@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: IceSentry <IceSentry@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Robert Swain <robert.swain@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Daniel Chia <danstryder@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: robtfm <50659922+robtfm@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Brandon Dyer <brandondyer64@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Edgar Geier <geieredgar@gmail.com>
# Objective
Fix a bug with scene reload.
(This is a copy of #7570 but without the breaking API change, in order
to allow the bugfix to be introduced in 0.10.1)
When a scene was reloaded, it was corrupting components that weren't
native to the scene itself. In particular, when a DynamicScene was
created on Entity (A), all components in the scene without parents are
automatically added as children of Entity (A). But if that scene was
reloaded and the same ID of Entity (A) was a scene ID as well*, that
parent component was corrupted, causing the hierarchy to become
malformed and bevy to panic.
*For example, if Entity (A)'s ID was 3, and the scene contained an
entity with ID 3
This issue could affect any components that:
* Implemented `MapEntities`, basically components that contained
references to other entities
* Were added to entities from a scene file but weren't defined in the
scene file
- Fixes#7529
## Solution
The solution was to keep track of entities+components that had
`MapEntities` functionality during scene load, and only apply the entity
update behavior to them. They were tracked with a HashMap from the
component's TypeID to a vector of entity ID's. Then the
`ReflectMapEntities` struct was updated to hold a function that took a
list of entities to be applied to, instead of naively applying itself to
all values in the EntityMap.
(See this PR comment
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/7570#issuecomment-1432302796 for
a story-based explanation of this bug and solution)
## Changelog
### Fixed
- Components that implement `MapEntities` added to scene entities after
load are not corrupted during scene reload.
# Objective
Documentation should no longer be using pre-stageless terminology to
avoid confusion.
## Solution
- update all docs referring to stages to instead refer to sets/schedules
where appropriate
- also mention `apply_system_buffers` for anything system-buffer-related
that previously referred to buffers being applied "at the end of a
stage"
# Objective
- Fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/7990.
## Solution
- Register needed types, verified pasted code in issue works.
Do I need to register more `Option<T>` types?
# Objective
Fixes#7989
Based on #7991 by @CoffeeVampir3
## Solution
There were three parts to this issue:
1. `extend_where_clause` did not account for the optionality of a where
clause's trailing comma
```rust
// OKAY
struct Foo<T> where T: Asset, {/* ... */}
// ERROR
struct Foo<T> where T: Asset {/* ... */}
```
2. `FromReflect` derive logic was not actively using
`extend_where_clause` which led to some inconsistencies (enums weren't
adding _any_ additional bounds even)
3. Using `extend_where_clause` in the `FromReflect` derive logic meant
we had to optionally add `Default` bounds to ignored fields iff the
entire item itself was not already `Default` (otherwise the definition
for `Handle<T>` wouldn't compile since `HandleType` doesn't impl
`Default` but `Handle<T>` itself does)
---
## Changelog
- Fixed issue where a missing trailing comma could break the reflection
derives
- Fixes#7965
- Code quality improvements.
- Removes the unreferenced function `dither` in pbr_functions.wgsl
introduced in 72fbcc7, but made obsolete in c069c54.
- Makes the reference to `screen_space_dither` in pbr.wgsl conditional
on `#ifdef TONEMAP_IN_SHADER`, as the required import is conditional on
the same, as deband dithering can only occur if tonemapping is also
occurring.
---------
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
# Objective
- `Sprite` components are not included in scene (de)serialization.
- Fixes#8206
## Solution
- Add `#[reflect(Component, Default)]` to `Sprite`
- Add `#[derive(FromReflect)]` to `Sprite` and `Anchor`
---------
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>