The texture in data/Images should be copied to osg-data. I created the texture myself with the help of an explosion generator, so no license issues there.
"
"I've attached a small fix to osgUtil::SceneView so that is uses a scissor test when clearing the stencil buffer for stencil based stereo."
and
"I've added another small change for stencil based stereo, so please use this newer version. This newer version simplifies the calls to glOrtho and glRecti when drawing the stipple pattern. This change also happens to fix an issue where the stencil stereo would not work with certain viewport settings. I'm not exactly sure why this was happening, it might be a graphics driver issue, but either way I think the changes should be fine."
http://www.mail-archive.com/osg-users@lists.openscenegraph.org/msg33967.html
, interpolating through HSV space gives a rainbow color effect which
does not mimic the simple RGB color interpolation that OpenGL does.
It's overkill and causes unexpected visual artifacts. In the attached
files I've removed the conversion to HSV so that interpolation happens
in RGB space."
.dds texture files from internally-embedded textures during IVE writes."
From Robert Osfield, fixed a bug in the above submission, and changed the way that the filename of the file is passed into DataOutputStream to avoid issues with the .ive's plugins ability to read from istreams.
osg::GraphicsContext, in order to give good integration with the
application's GUI toolkit. This works really well.
However, I need to share OpenGL texture resources with the standard
osgViewer GraphicsContext implementations, in particular the
PixelBuffers. This is essential for my application to conserve graphics
memory on low-end hardware. Currently the standard osg implementations
will not share resources with another derived osg::GraphicsContext,
other than the pre-defined osgViewer classes e.g. PixelBufferX11 is
hardcoded to only share resources with GraphicsWindowX11 and
PixelBufferX11 objects, and no other osg::GraphicsContext object.
To address this in the cleanest way I could think of, I have moved the
OpenGL handle variables for each platform into a small utility class,
e.g. GraphicsHandleX11 for unix. Then GraphicsWindowX11, PixelBufferX11
and any other derived osg::GraphicsContext class can inherit from
GraphicsHandleX11 to share OpenGL resources.
I have updated the X11, Win32 and Carbon implementations to use this.
The changes are minor. I haven't touched the Cocoa implmentation as
I'm not familiar with it at all and couldn't test it - it will work
unchanged.
Without this I had some horrible hacks in my application, this greatly
simplifies things for me. It also simplifies the osgViewer
implementations slightly. Perhaps it may help with other users'
desires to share resources with external graphics contexts, as was
discussed on the user list recently."
Notes from Robert Osfield, adapted Colin's submission to work with the new EGL related changes.
filenames starting with a dash "-" character from the (std::vector<std::string>&) version
of osgDB::readNodeFiles. Handling of argument strings is properly implemented in the
osgDB::readNodeFiles(osg::ArgumentParser& arguments,const Options* options)
variant, which most code uses. The (std::vector<std::string>&) version is only called by
the osgconv utility, which does its own argument handling and stripping prior to calling
readNodeFiles().
Also, documented this behaviour in the header comments.
I believe this code removal is a meritful change because leavign the code in causes an
unexpected and undocumented behaviour (ignoring any filename starting with a dash) that
could bite users in the future. This behaviour is not needed for existing functionality
because existing code uses other APIs to handle dash-prefixed arguments anyway.
"
In Scene::updateSceneGraph(), change:
if (getSceneData())
{
updateVisitor.setImageRequestHandler(getImagePager());
getSceneData()->accept(updateVisitor);
}
if (getDatabasePager())
{
// synchronize changes required by the DatabasePager thread to the scene graph
getDatabasePager()->updateSceneGraph((*updateVisitor.getFrameStamp()));
}
to
if (getDatabasePager())
{
// synchronize changes required by the DatabasePager thread to the scene graph
getDatabasePager()->updateSceneGraph((*updateVisitor.getFrameStamp()));
}
if (getSceneData())
{
updateVisitor.setImageRequestHandler(getImagePager());
getSceneData()->accept(updateVisitor);
}
That is, just swap the positions of two 'if () {...}' segments.
While working on a paged terrain, I need to collect every newly allocated PagedLODs and make them temporarily unrenderable in the next frame, which are all done in a update callback. But I found that these PagedLODs will always be shown before collecting them, because of the unsuitable sequence in Scene::updateSceneGraph(). DatabasePager is synchronized AFTER the user updating traversal, that is, user cannot IMMEDIATELY find out changes made by DatabasePager.
"
functionality and I also modified osgmovie example to support "seek"."
Note from Robert Osfield, changes osgmovie to use '>' for the seek as '+' was already used in a separate submission that had been merged.
then reload a video and finally delete the second XineStreamImage.
In src/osgPlugins/xine/video_out_rgb.c, many code is ASM code, and 'clear()' function is one of them.
If OSG is compiled without the flag COMPILE_ASSEMBLY (default behaviours) the clear() function is an empty
function and allocated memory is never initialized to 0. So a structure which contain pointer haven't its pointer set to NULL.
And when we need to delete this pointer, all go bad.
I join the fixed file."
As Robert pointed out, i opted for modifying the resize code where the break is to minimize code changes, avoiding the duplicate resize of the viewport with the use of a vector and a search for duplicates. Not very elegant (avoiding an effect of a cause), another approach could be ripping out the method osg::Camera::setViewport(osg::Viewport*) which is more inline with Roberts rationale behind not to share viewports between cameras and left only its overloaded method setViewport(x,y,width,height). But this approach need some refactoring due to the intense use of the method. Notice also that the resize works well without this change if no sharing occurs, and the user of the method can opt for always call setViewport with a new instance.
"
Note from Robert Osfield, changed this submission to use an std::set<Viewport*> rather than an std::vector<> as it keeps the code a bit cleaner and more compact.
For example, when running FlightGear, I want the window to always have no title, so it opens full-screen without using the --full-screen option, which would prevent other windows from moving above the osg window.
I am attaching a patch I made to fix this problem."
being able to accurately provide the cool stuff that SVG is good for. :)
There is a one-line bug on line 68 in the
src/osgPlugins/svg/ReaderWriterSVG.cpp file where you can set the width
in the Options string, but not the height."
synchronization, improve capture device support.
here how to use it to display a capture device:
osg::Options* options = new osg::Options;
options->setPluginStringData("captureWantedWidth", "800");
options->setPluginStringData("captureWantedHeight", "600");
options->setPluginStringData("captureWantedFps", "30");
options->setPluginStringData("captureVideoDevice", "USB Video Device" );
options->setPluginStringData("captureSoundDevice", "");
then
osgDB::readImageFile("capture.directshow", options)
you can use a graphedit application to list devices available in
directshow.
for classic avi file you just need to do a
osgDB::readImageFile("file.avi.directshow");
You will need of course to install the codec needed by directshow to
read the avi files.
I recommand this tool http://avicodec.duby.info/, that check which
video/sound codec is needed to play an avi file.
You can test it with the osgmovie example.
"
only create 376, then the program would hang.
376 * 8MB stack per thread = 3008 MB
The stack size allocated per thread blew the process address stack.
To get more threads you have to specify a smaller per thread stack,
but while the Thread::start says it will limit the stack size to the
smallest allowable stack size, it won't let it be smaller than the
default. I included the limits.h header to use PTHREAD_STACK_MIN as
the minimum stack size.
As for the deadlock, if the pthread_create failed, the new thread
doesn't exist and doesn't call threadStartedBlock.release(), so the
existing thread deadlocks on threadStartedBlock.block(). Only block
if the thread was started."
similar remove-method.
The old code removed an element from a vector, which invalidates the
iterator of the loop This resulted in a crash on certain platforms. Now
the erasing is done the right way without invalidating the iterator."
The modification consists only in including osgGA::GUIEventAdapter::DOUBLECLICK in the list of "pointerEvent" events.
Test done to reproduce the problem and check the fix: in any osg application or example with an HandleInput function, break on events with a double-click event type. Without the changes, the event's buttonMask does not contain the double-clicked button. With the changes, it does.
Only simple tests (running some examples and playing with the mouse) were done to check that the changes do not break anything, since double-click is not used thoroughly in OSG.
Modification done against current SVN Trunk version (r10753).
As this is a fix, I do not wish to keep my copyright on this submission and assign it over to the project lead.
"
The patched loader also complains more loudly if a material library file wasn't found or if a referenced material wasn't found in the material library."
was able to follow the problem until following addition to Texture.cpp:
// GLES doesn't cope with internal formats of 1,2,3 and 4 so map them to
the appropriate equivilants.
if (_internalFormat==1) _internalFormat = GL_ALPHA;
if (_internalFormat==2) _internalFormat = GL_LUMINANCE_ALPHA;
if (_internalFormat==3) _internalFormat = GL_RGB;
if (_internalFormat==4) _internalFormat = GL_RGBA;
The problem is that internal format "1" corresponds to GL_LUMINANCE, not
GL_ALPHA. I double checked this from the Red Book. Fixed version is
attached to the email."
I've needed to run a recorded simulation offscreen and save it to a sequence of images, and the ScreenCaptureHandler seemed to be the simplest way to do that, and with this change it's possible.
Another change: I've also added the ability to specify continuous capture of all frames, or a certain number of frames. ScreenCaptureHandler now has a setFramesToCapture(int) method. The argument will be interpreted as:
0 : don't capture
<0 : capture continuously
>0 : capture that number of frames then stop
I also added startCapture() and stopCapture() methods so that user code can start capturing (either continuously or the given number of frames) at a given point in their program. setFramesToCapture() won't start capturing, you have to call startCapture() afterwards. The handler also now has another key to toggle continuous capture (defaults to 'C').
Note that continuous capture will of course only work if the CaptureOperation writes to different files (for example, a WriteToFile with SEQUENTIAL_NUMBER mode) or does something different each time... Otherwise it will just overwrite of course. :-)
I've also taken the chance to refactor the addCallbackToViewer() method a bit too, since finding the right camera is needed in two places now.
I've tested all cases (I think). If you want to try, in osgviewer.cpp and replace the line
// add the screen capture handler
viewer.addEventHandler(new osgViewer::ScreenCaptureHandler);
with
// add the screen capture handler
osgViewer::ScreenCaptureHandler* captureHandler = new
osgViewer::ScreenCaptureHandler(
new osgViewer::ScreenCaptureHandler::WriteToFile(
"screenshot", "jpg",
osgViewer::ScreenCaptureHandler::WriteToFile::SEQUENTIAL_NUMBER),
-1);
viewer.addEventHandler(captureHandler);
captureHandler->startCapture();
And vary the "-1" (put 0, 10, 50) and then use the 'c' and 'C' keys and see how it reacts.
"
terrain. The triangulator is quite tricky to use properly but works
quite well, constraint triangulation is not an easy task... I have
encounter some crash during the development that the following patch
fix.
The two fixes are :
- Fix in removeVerticesInside() : needs to take into account UByte and
UShort version of DrawElements to avoid a crash later
- Fix a crash in triangulate() : detect degenerate adjacency case to
exit early form the adjacent triangle traversal loop to avoid a crash
later"
DisplaySettings now define COLOR and DEPTH as defaults for implicit buffers. Consequently Camera by default uses the same defaults through USE_DISPLAY_SETTINGS_MASK. However, particular Camera mask can be easily overriden through Camera::setImplicitBufferAttachmentMask method. I hope, that in this way we can have global control over implicit buffer defaults, and we can still retain fine grained control at Camera level.
I have also replaced original unsigned ints used to store masks to signed ints because complier resolves enums as signed integer (I got a number of warnings with unsigned int)."
makes smoothing optional for verticies which do not have a normal
associated with them in the OBJ input file. The previous behavior was
to always smooth at all verticies which did not have surface normals.
In this new implementation smoothing is on by default to be compatible
with previous behavior. The user can now specify the "generateFacetNormals"
option to the reader to use facet normals for verticies where the OBJ
file does not specify a normal."
Note from Robert Osfield, changed "noSmoothing" naming used by Lee to "generateFacetNormals".
settimeofday), OSG animations will freeze your application because
osg::Timer uses gettimeofday internally on non-Win32 platforms. This
is wrong and should be replace with times(2) or clock_gettime(2).
The attached patch fixes the issue in a binary-compatible way by using
clock_gettime when it's available, and falling back to gettimeofday
when it's not."
Most notable the __hpux define stuff. The __hpux__ variant seems to be not
defined which resulted in a compile error at this time. Consequently I have
replaced all occurances of __hpux__ with __hpux. And huge surprise: now osg
plugins are found and loaded correctly ...
The next notable one is the MSVC_IDE fix which makes the nmake Makefiles cmake
generator target behave like the ide one. Showed up because I started to do
scripted builds with nmake instead of devenv...
The rest is the usual bunch of stuff that just happens during normal
coding ..."