Fixes https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/issues/3563
These users have the following spamming in logs:
> OpenGL error 0x502 S8246 T824C: GL_INVALID_OPERATION error generated.
Source and destination dimensions must be identical with the current
filtering modes.
And the solution is to correctly set their game-size. The way this
change accomplishes that is by confirming whether or not the set
`game-size` is a valid resolution informed by SDL, if not, it defaults
to the monitor's currently set display mode's resolution.
This also moves the selected display id, and the display mode into the
C++ settings -- closer to where it's actually managed and used. I'm
tempted to do this eventually for the resolutions as well but that stuff
is much more burdensome. This hopefully simplifies debugging, reduces
startup flickering, and removes back-and-forth complexity. Hopefully
this makes debugging display related problems easier. It also adds a
bunch more logging to the related code.
They still don't work yet, this is just naming/comments to help with
debug.
The vehicle tracks are now at least trying to draw, but like the others,
don't actually show up.
A few minor fixes:
- Fix crash in overlord3 during final boss
https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/issues/3605
- Update goal_src for `scene-actor.gc`, which was not updated after a
bug fix for decompiling skelgroups, making some cutscene actors
invisible due to using the wrong joint for culling checks.
- Stop using `-1` as an invalid value for texture id's in Merc.cpp. This
could sometimes cause Merc2.cpp to accidentally skip updating the OpenGL
texture. This fixes the bug where skull gems sometimes didn't have the
animated textures.
I found two issues with Jak 3 eyes. The first was simple - we were
missing a `-pc` texture upload in `texture.gc` for `pris2` textures,
which has eye textures for a few characters, like torn or damas.
The second was a little more annoying. Unlike jak 2 and jak 1, jak 3 can
dynamically assign eye slots when merc models are loaded. This involves
modifying eye data to tell the eye renderer where to render, and
modifying the merc model's adgif shaders to point to the correct eye
texture. The modification to the merc adgif shader is problematic since
our PC port of merc assumes this slot is constant.
My solution here was to bypass this whole slot system entirely for jak
3. I modified the GOAL eye renderer to tell the c++ eye renderer the
name of the merc-ctrl containing the eye. Then, the PC C++ Merc renderer
can just look up the merc-ctrl by name. To make this fit nicely in the
existing memory layout, I used a 64-bit fnv hash of the name. (which
honestly is how we should have handled a lot of other texture/model
names stuff...)
Unrelated fix to Overlord2 so it handles the case where file size
changes after the game starts, I had this in jak2/jak1 and forgot it for
jak 3.
Fixes a couple of NaN bugs, making the Arena and Marauder Stronghold
missions, the leaper corralling mission and final boss playable:
- Fixes#3579:
- After catching a leaper, the `flut` that spawns would have a NaN
`world-sphere`
- Fixes#3580:
- `vf0` was being clobbered after a `suspend`, causing them to spawn at
the origin.
- The Terraformer's `world-sphere` would be NaN until an animation
started playing.
This does a couple of things:
- The `custom_levels` folder was renamed to `custom_assets` and contains
`levels`, `models` and `texture_replacements` folders for Jak 1, 2 and 3
in order to keep everything regarding custom stuff in one place.
- With this, texture replacements now use separate folders for all games
- A build actor tool was added that generates art groups for custom
actors
- Custom levels can now specify what custom models from the `models`
folder they want to import, this will add them to the level's FR3.
- A `test-zone-obs.gc` file was added, containing a `test-actor` process
that uses a custom model as an example.
The build actor tool is still very WIP, the joints and the default
animation are hardcoded, but it allows for importing any GLB file as a
merc model.
For now, this just adds sky (clouds and fog), darkjak, and skull gem.
There are some unknown issues with drawing the skull gems still, but I
think it's unrelated to texture animations.
Also fixes https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/issues/3523
Relates to #1353
This adds no new functionality or overhead to the compiler, yet. This is
the preliminary work that has:
- added code to the compiler in several spots to flag when something is
used without being properly required/imported/whatever (disabled by
default)
- that was used to generate project wide file dependencies (some
circulars were manually fixed)
- then that graph underwent a transitive reduction and the result was
written to all `jak1` source files.
The next step will be making this actually produce and use a dependency
graph. Some of the reasons why I'm working on this:
- eliminates more `game.gp` boilerplate. This includes the `.gd` files
to some extent (`*-ag` files and `tpage` files will still need to be
handled) this is the point of the new `bundles` form. This should make
it even easier to add a new file into the source tree.
- a build order that is actually informed from something real and
compiler warnings that tell you when you are using something that won't
be available at build time.
- narrows the search space for doing LSP actions -- like searching for
references. Since it would be way too much work to store in the compiler
every location where every symbol/function/etc is used, I have to do
ad-hoc searches. By having a dependency graph i can significantly reduce
that search space.
- opens the doors for common shared code with a legitimate pattern.
Right now jak 2 shares code from the jak 1 folder. This is basically a
hack -- but by having an explicit require syntax, it would be possible
to reference arbitrary file paths, such as a `common` folder.
Some stats:
- Jak 1 has about 2500 edges between files, including transitives
- With transitives reduced at the source code level, each file seems to
have a modest amount of explicit requirements.
Known issues:
- Tracking the location for where `defmacro`s and virtual state
definitions were defined (and therefore the file) is still problematic.
Because those forms are in a macro environment, the reader does not
track them. I'm wondering if a workaround could be to search the
reader's text_db by not just the `goos::Object` but by the text
position. But for the purposes of finishing this work, I just statically
analyzed and searched the code with throwaway python code.
This adds hfrag, but with a few remaining issues:
- The textures aren't animated. Instead, it just uses one texture.
- The texture filtering isn't as good as at it could be.
I also cleaned up a few issues with the background renderers:
- Cleaned up some stuff that is common to hfrag, tie, tfrag, shrub
- Moved time-of-day color packing stuff to FR3 creation, rather than at
level load. This appears to reduce the frame time spikes when a level is
first drawn by about 5 or 6 ms in big levels.
- Cleaned up the x86 specific stuff used in time of day. Now there's
only one place where we have an `ifdef`, rather than spreading it all
over the rendering code.
This fixes issues with certain Jak 3 levels not rendering because there
is a mismatch between the DGO name, nickname and real level name (bsp
name).
FR3s use a different filename, so you can delete the ones you have after
this is merged.
This affects custom levels, but I don't have that toolchain set up so
someone else will have to test that.