You were right about the CMAKE_MODULE_LINKER_FLAGS option for CMake, so here is a modification allowing to not generate the manifest files for the plugins making them a lot more easy to redistribute. I have also made the same modification to the wrappers as they are also put into the osgPlugin folder when generated.
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"" for all platforms except Cygwin where its set to "cygwin_" and Mingw where
it is set to "mingw_". Updated osgDB::Registry to look for these for the plugins.
Updated the osgintrospection example to search for these names as well.
I've done some additional small modification regarding constness in ReaderWriter and added
mutable on _pluginData so passing data back would be possible too.
Have updated the collada plugin (ReaderWriterDAE.cpp) to use the map to handle options and
have attached the changes.
The stuff in daeReader.h and daeWriter.h are just cosmetic changes to get rid of a warning."
- 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 ;-)
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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.
local function pointer to avoid compiler warnings related to case void*.
Moved various OSG classes across to using setGLExtensions instead of getGLExtensions,
and changed them to use typedef declarations in the headers rather than casts in
the .cpp.
Updated wrappers
stereo format to work. It's a good thing I tested these on a TV
before submitting them since I did indeed have a bug. One thing I
did not test was to see how this would work in windowed mode. Does
the interlaced stereo code have support for 'absolute' positions?
For example a given pixel on the screen is always shown in a given
eye no matter where the graphics context is placed?
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