mesa/src/mapi/glapi/gen/glX_doc.py

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Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
#!/usr/bin/env python
# (C) Copyright IBM Corporation 2004, 2005
# All Rights Reserved.
#
# Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a
# copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"),
# to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation
# on the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sub
# license, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom
# the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
#
# The above copyright notice and this permission notice (including the next
# paragraph) shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the
# Software.
#
# THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
# IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
# FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NON-INFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL
# IBM AND/OR ITS SUPPLIERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
# LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING
# FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS
# IN THE SOFTWARE.
#
# Authors:
# Ian Romanick <idr@us.ibm.com>
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
import gl_XML, glX_XML, glX_proto_common, license
import sys, getopt
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
class glx_doc_item_factory(glX_proto_common.glx_proto_item_factory):
"""Factory to create GLX protocol documentation oriented objects derived from glItem."""
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
def create_item(self, name, element, context):
if name == "parameter":
return glx_doc_parameter(element, context)
else:
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
return glX_proto_common.glx_proto_item_factory.create_item(self, name, element, context)
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
class glx_doc_parameter(gl_XML.gl_parameter):
def packet_type(self, type_dict):
"""Get the type string for the packet header
GLX protocol documentation uses type names like CARD32,
FLOAT64, LISTofCARD8, and ENUM. This function converts the
type of the parameter to one of these names."""
list_of = ""
if self.is_array():
list_of = "LISTof"
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
t_name = self.get_base_type_string()
if not type_dict.has_key( t_name ):
type_name = "CARD8"
else:
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
type_name = type_dict[ t_name ]
return "%s%s" % (list_of, type_name)
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
def packet_size(self):
p = None
s = self.size()
if s == 0:
a_prod = "n"
b_prod = self.p_type.size
if not self.count_parameter_list and self.counter:
a_prod = self.counter
elif self.count_parameter_list and not self.counter or self.is_output:
pass
elif self.count_parameter_list and self.counter:
b_prod = self.counter
else:
raise RuntimeError("Parameter '%s' to function '%s' has size 0." % (self.name, self.context.name))
ss = "%s*%s" % (a_prod, b_prod)
return [ss, p]
else:
if s % 4 != 0:
p = "p"
return [str(s), p]
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
class PrintGlxProtoText(gl_XML.gl_print_base):
def __init__(self):
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
gl_XML.gl_print_base.__init__(self)
self.license = ""
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
def printHeader(self):
return
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
def body_size(self, f):
# At some point, refactor this function and
# glXFunction::command_payload_length.
size = 0;
size_str = ""
pad_str = ""
plus = ""
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
for p in f.parameterIterateGlxSend():
[s, pad] = p.packet_size()
try:
size += int(s)
except Exception,e:
size_str += "%s%s" % (plus, s)
plus = "+"
if pad != None:
pad_str = pad
return [size, size_str, pad_str]
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
def print_render_header(self, f):
[size, size_str, pad_str] = self.body_size(f)
size += 4;
if size_str == "":
s = "%u" % ((size + 3) & ~3)
elif pad_str != "":
s = "%u+%s+%s" % (size, size_str, pad_str)
else:
s = "%u+%s" % (size, size_str)
print ' 2 %-15s rendering command length' % (s)
print ' 2 %-4u rendering command opcode' % (f.glx_rop)
return
def print_single_header(self, f):
[size, size_str, pad_str] = self.body_size(f)
size = ((size + 3) / 4) + 2;
if f.glx_vendorpriv != 0:
size += 1
print ' 1 CARD8 opcode (X assigned)'
print ' 1 %-4u GLX opcode (%s)' % (f.opcode_real_value(), f.opcode_real_name())
if size_str == "":
s = "%u" % (size)
elif pad_str != "":
s = "%u+((%s+%s)/4)" % (size, size_str, pad_str)
else:
s = "%u+((%s)/4)" % (size, size_str)
print ' 2 %-15s request length' % (s)
if f.glx_vendorpriv != 0:
print ' 4 %-4u vendor specific opcode' % (f.opcode_value())
print ' 4 GLX_CONTEXT_TAG context tag'
return
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
def print_reply(self, f):
print ' =>'
print ' 1 1 reply'
print ' 1 unused'
print ' 2 CARD16 sequence number'
if f.output == None:
print ' 4 0 reply length'
elif f.reply_always_array:
print ' 4 m reply length'
else:
print ' 4 m reply length, m = (n == 1 ? 0 : n)'
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
output = None
for x in f.parameterIterateOutputs():
output = x
break
unused = 24
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
if f.return_type != 'void':
print ' 4 %-15s return value' % (f.return_type)
unused -= 4
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
elif output != None:
print ' 4 unused'
unused -= 4
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
if output != None:
print ' 4 CARD32 n'
unused -= 4
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
if output != None:
if not f.reply_always_array:
print ''
print ' if (n = 1) this follows:'
print ''
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
print ' 4 CARD32 %s' % (output.name)
print ' %-2u unused' % (unused - 4)
print ''
print ' otherwise this follows:'
print ''
print ' %-2u unused' % (unused)
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
[s, pad] = output.packet_size()
print ' %-8s %-15s %s' % (s, output.packet_type( self.type_map ), output.name)
if pad != None:
try:
bytes = int(s)
bytes = 4 - (bytes & 3)
print ' %-8u %-15s unused' % (bytes, "")
except Exception,e:
print ' %-8s %-15s unused, %s=pad(%s)' % (pad, "", pad, s)
else:
print ' %-2u unused' % (unused)
def print_body(self, f):
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
for p in f.parameterIterateGlxSend():
[s, pad] = p.packet_size()
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
print ' %-8s %-15s %s' % (s, p.packet_type( self.type_map ), p.name)
if pad != None:
try:
bytes = int(s)
bytes = 4 - (bytes & 3)
print ' %-8u %-15s unused' % (bytes, "")
except Exception,e:
print ' %-8s %-15s unused, %s=pad(%s)' % (pad, "", pad, s)
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
def printBody(self, api):
self.type_map = {}
for t in api.typeIterate():
self.type_map[ "GL" + t.name ] = t.glx_name
# At some point this should be expanded to support pixel
# functions, but I'm not going to lose any sleep over it now.
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
for f in api.functionIterateByOffset():
if f.client_handcode or f.server_handcode or f.vectorequiv or len(f.get_images()):
continue
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
if f.glx_rop:
print ' %s' % (f.name)
self.print_render_header(f)
elif f.glx_sop or f.glx_vendorpriv:
print ' %s' % (f.name)
self.print_single_header(f)
else:
continue
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
self.print_body(f)
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
if f.needs_reply():
self.print_reply(f)
print ''
return
if __name__ == '__main__':
file_name = "gl_API.xml"
try:
(args, trail) = getopt.getopt(sys.argv[1:], "f:")
except Exception,e:
show_usage()
for (arg,val) in args:
if arg == "-f":
file_name = val
Mammoth update to the Python code generator scripts that live in src/mesa/glapi. Basically, the scripts that did simple things (like gl_offsets.py) were simple, and the scripts that did more complicated things (like glX_proto_send.py) were getting progressively more and more out of control. So, I re-write the foundation classes on which everything is based. One problem with the existing code is that the division between the GL API database representation and the way the output code is generated was either blury or nonexistant. The new code somewhat follows the Model-View-Controller pattern, minus the Controller. There is a distinct set of classes that model the API data, and there is a distinct set of classes that generate code from that data. One big change is in the class that represents GL functions (was glFunction, is now gl_function). There used to be an instance of this calls for each function and for each alias to that function. For example, there was an instance for PointParameterivSGIS, PointParameterivEXT, PointParameterivARB, and PointParameteriv. In the new code, there is one instance. Each instance has a list of entrypoint names for the function. In the next revision, this will allow a couple useful things. The script will be able to verify that the parameters, return type, and GLX protocol for a function and all it's aliases match. It will also allow aliases to be represented in the XML more compactly. Instead of repeating all the information, an alias can be listed as: <function name="PointParameterivARB" alias="PointParameterivEXT"/> Because the data representation was changed, the order that the alias functions are processed by the scripts also changed. This accounts for at least 2,700 of the ~3,600 lines of diffs in the generated code. Most of the remaining ~900 lines of diffs are the result of bugs *fixed* by the new scripts. The old scripts also generated code with some bugs in it. These bugs were discovered while the new code was being written. These changes were discussed on the mesa3d-dev mailing list back at the end of May: http://marc.theaimsgroup.com/?t=111714569000004&r=1&w=2 Xorg bug: 3197, 3208
2005-06-21 23:42:43 +00:00
api = gl_XML.parse_GL_API( file_name, glx_doc_item_factory() )
printer = PrintGlxProtoText()
printer.Print( api )