parameter in osg::Image. To support this Image::setData(..) now has a new optional rowLength parameter which
defaults to 0, which provides the original behaviour, Image::setRowLength(int) and int Image::getRowLength() are also provided.
With the introduction of RowLength support in osg::Image it is now possible to create a sub image where
the t size of the image are smaller than the row length, useful for when you have a large image on the CPU
and which to use a small portion of it on the GPU. However, when these sub images are created the data
within the image is no longer contiguous so data access can no longer assume that all the data is in
one block. The new method Image::isDataContiguous() enables the user to check whether the data is contiguous,
and if not one can either access the data row by row using Image::data(column,row,image) accessor, or use the
new Image::DataIterator for stepping through each block on memory assocatied with the image.
To support the possibility of non contiguous osg::Image usage of image objects has had to be updated to
check DataContiguous and handle the case or use access via the DataIerator or by row by row. To achieve
this a relatively large number of files has had to be modified, in particular the texture classes and
image plugins that doing writing.
CID 11692: Uninitialized scalar field (UNINIT_CTOR)
Non-static class member _allocationMode is not initialized in this constructor nor in any functions that it calls.
The pvr format which can be used as a wrapper for different compressed and uncompressed formats supports this compression algorithm. The original pvr compression uses the pvrtc format. The handling of pvrtc is already implemented in the pvr plugin. PVR provides wrapper functionality for some formats, e.g. etc or even dxt/dds.
Our target system (gles2) is able to use the etc compression format. With minor changes in the submitted files, there is no need to write a separate plugin. However the original pvr texture compression formats are not supported on our target, which is the reason for this extension.
The changes mainly consist in the definition on new enum values in the classes and headers of ReaderWriterPVR,Image and Texture. I also found some locations where the handling of the original pvr textures was not implemented. These are also part of this submission."
changed extensions from .c to .cpp and got compiling as C files as part of the osg core library.
Updated and cleaned up the rest of the OSG to use the new internal GLU.
Texture.cpp:applyTexImage2D_subload:
<code>
unsigned char* data = = (unsigned char*)image->data();
if (needImageRescale) {
// allocates rescale buffer
data = new unsigned char[newTotalSize];
// calls gluScaleImage into the data buffer
}
const unsigned char* dataPtr = image->data();
// subloads 'dataPtr'
// deletes 'data'
</code>
In effect, the scaled data would never be used.
I've also replaced bits of duplicate code in Texture1D/2D/2DArray/3D/Cubemap/Rectangle
that checks if the texture image can/should be unref'd with common functionality in
Texture.cpp.
"
1) Add getShadowComparison() accessor function to osg::Texture class
2) Modify ReaderWriterTiff::writeTifStream() and _readColor() (in Image.cpp) to handle pixelFormat==GL_DEPTH_COMPONENT as if it were GL_LUMINANCE
3) Modify the Texture classes of the ive and osg plug-ins so that they save/load the following Texture members: _use_shadow_comparison, _shadow_compare_func and _shadow_texture_mode
"
To enable the automatic attachment of the required update callback to call osg::Image::update(..) subclasses from osg::Image will
need to implement the osg::Image::requestUpdateCall() and return true, and implement the osg::Image::update(NodeVisitor*) method to recieve the update call during the update traversal.
used but never restored to the decimal notation. That made OSG print messages
like the following after some notifications:
Warning: detected OpenGL error 'invalid value' after RenderBin::draw(,)
RenderStage::drawInner(,) FBO status= 0x8cd5
[...]
Scaling image 'brick_side.JPG' from (1b4,24f) to (200,200) <--- Values in hex
because of previous error.
[...]"
unsigned int Image::computeNumComponents(GLenum pixelFormat)
so I added these types to the switch statement:
case(GL_RED_INTEGER_EXT): return 1;
case(GL_GREEN_INTEGER_EXT): return 1;
case(GL_BLUE_INTEGER_EXT): return 1;
case(GL_ALPHA_INTEGER_EXT): return 1;
case(GL_RGB_INTEGER_EXT): return 3;
case(GL_RGBA_INTEGER_EXT): return 4;
case(GL_BGR_INTEGER_EXT): return 3;
case(GL_BGRA_INTEGER_EXT): return 4;
case(GL_LUMINANCE_INTEGER_EXT): return 1;
case(GL_LUMINANCE_ALPHA_INTEGER_EXT): return 2;
That's all... now it computes the number of components and, thus, the image size
correctly."
they are written to disk, either inline or as an external file. Added support for
this in the .ive plugin. Default of WriteHint is NO_PREFERNCE, in which case it's
up to the reader/writer to decide.
MemoryBarrier() is used in the implementation, so it should be checked.
This in effect disables the faster atomic ops on msvc 7.1 and older, even if
only the MemoryBarrier() call is missing. But it ensures for the fist cut
that it will build everywhere. If somebody cares for msvc 7.1 enough and has
one for testing installed, he might provide the apropriate defines to guard
that MemoryBarrier() call.
I tested that msvc8 32/64bit still passes the configure tests and compiles.
"
two lines has to be included into the Image.cpp in the
computeNumComponents(...) method:
case(GL_RGBA16F_ARB): return 4;
case(GL_RGBA32F_ARB): return 4;"
- Implementation of integer textures as in EXT_texture_integer
- setBorderColor(Vec4) changed to setBorderColor(Vec4d) to pass double values
as border color. (Probably we have to provide an overloading function to
still support Vec4f ?)
- new method Texture::getInternalFormatType() added. Gives information if the
internal format normalized, float, signed integer or unsigned integer. Can
help people to write better code ;-)
"
Futher changes to this submission by Robert Osfield, changed the dirty mipmap
flag into a buffer_value<> vector to ensure safe handling of multiple contexts.
"A new texture class Texture2DArray derived from
Texture extends the osg to support the new
EXT_texture_array extensions. Texture arrays provides
a feature for people interesting in GPGPU programming.
Faetures and changes:
- Full support for layered 2D textures.
- New uniform types were added (sampler2DArray)
- FrameBufferObject implementation were changed to
support attaching of 2D array textures to the
framebuffer
- StateSet was slightly changed to support texture
arrays. NOTE: array textures can not be used in fixed
function pipeline. Thus using the layered texture as a
statemode for a Drawable produce invalid enumerant
OpenGL errors.
- Image class was extended to support handling of
array textures
Tests:
I have used this class as a new feature of my
application. It works for me without problems (Note:
Texture arrays were introduced only for shading
languages and not for fixed function pipelines!!!).
RTT with Texture2DArray works, as I have tested them
as texture targets for a camera with 6 layers/faces
(i.e. replacement for cube maps). I am using the array
textures in shader programming. Array textures can be
attached to the FBO and used as input and as output."
is not the usual OpenGL BOTTOM_LEFT orientation, but with the origin TOP_LEFT. This
allows geometry setup code to flip the t tex coord to render the movie the correct way up.