The i965 hardware cannot do GL_CLAMP behavior on textures; an earlier
commit forced a software fallback if strict conformance was required
(i.e. the INTEL_STRICT_CONFORMANCE environment variable was set) and
2D textures were used, but it was somewhat flawed - it could trigger
the software fallback even if 2D textures weren't enabled, as long
as one texture unit was enabled.
This fixes that, and adds software fallback for GL_CLAMP behavior with
1D and 3D textures.
It also adds support for a particular setting of the INTEL_STRICT_CONFORMANCE
environment variable, which forces software fallbacks to be taken *all*
the time. This is helpful with debugging. The value is:
export INTEL_STRICT_CONFORMANCE=2
Move _mesa_init_all_x86_transform_asm() into x86.c so that common_x86.c
has no dependencies on the vertex transformation code.
Plus some comments and clean-ups.
Most of the time unfilled rendering requires a lot more thought than
just translating triangles to lines or points. But sometimes, you can
do exactly that, and it can be quite a bit quicker. Add code to do the
translation. The caller has to determine whether it's a legal thing
to do in the current state, in particular you'd need:
- culling disabled
- offset disabled
- same front and back fill modes
- possibly other stuff I can't think of.
This catches the linux-uclibc case and any others that were being set
prior to 98fcdf3f. Fixes bug 20345.
Signed-off-by: Dan Nicholson <dbn.lists@gmail.com>
The core reference counting code is centralized in p_refcnt.h.
This has some consequences related to struct pipe_buffer:
* The screen member of struct pipe_buffer must be initialized, or
pipe_buffer_reference() will crash trying to destroy a buffer with reference
count 0. u_simple_screen takes care of this, but I may have missed some of
the drivers not using it.
* Except for rare exceptions deep in winsys code, buffers must always be
allocated via pipe_buffer_create() or via screen->*buffer_create() rather
than via winsys->*buffer_create().