This change adds a few new features:
- Decompiler automatically knows the type of `find-parent-method` use in
jak 1 and jak2 when used in a method or virtual state handler.
- Decompiler inserts a call to `call-parent-method` or
`find-parent-state`
- Removed most casts related to these functions
There are still a few minor issues around this:
- There are still some casts needed when using `post` methods, as `post`
is just a `function`, and needs a cast to `(function none)` or similar.
It didn't seem easy to change the type of `post`, so I'm not going to
worry about it for this PR. It only shows up in like 3 places in jak 2.
(and 0 in jak 1)
- If "call the handler if it's not #f" logic should probably be another
macro.
Fixes#805
Adds controller LED features to Jak 2:
- progressive flickering denoting health
- copies tomb simon says puzzle colors
- unique colors for each gun
- orange color for being indax
- yellow color for being in mech
- purple color for being darkjak
- blue color for being in board
- red flash when wanted.
May add more features later?
Also did some minor clean-up on some types.
- state handlers that are not inlined lambdas have smarter type
checking, getting rid of 99.9% of the casts emitted (they were not
useful)
- art groups were not being properly linked to their "master" groups.
- `max` in `ja` in Jak 2 was not being detected.
Another huge PR...
This PR adds a frame rate option to the graphics menu for some of the
most common refresh rates.
Jak 2 has much better support for variable frame rates than Jak 1 out of
the box, but there are still some edge cases, most prominently the fact
that sprites are still limited to the 300 tick system, which is most
noticeable on glow sprites. For this, I abused the glow boost debug
setting to scale the glow based on the frame rate.
While testing, I noticed two other cases that I have also patched,
there's likely to be many more that are yet to be found, but aside from
that, the game is playable as normal.
https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/assets/6624576/ad4db24f-cd27-4237-a155-0db7008160f3
- fix speaker names and time frames being uneditable in Jak 1
- added toggle to auto-selected a newly created scene as current
- changed the subtitle summary format slightly.
- current scene's name now appears in the UI
Some general improvements for the texture animator:
- Clouds are special cased, saving about 1 ms per frame
- Adjusting the amount of clouds now actually works.
- Fixed an issue with the brightness of clouds, and the way that they
fade out around the edges.
Fix an issue where the commit sha would not use the right blending mode
if `draw-raw-image` is running at the same time.
Fix an issue where japanese subtitles would accidentally overwrite other
textures, leading to random textures missing. (in particular, glows
would disappear after watching a cutscene with the subtitles on)
- fix deci2 hang when closing the game in retail mode.
- change bigmap to always filter because the pixels look really ugly.
- don't start the game in fullscreen by default if we're debugging.
Rotates the log files with a timestamp instead of copying all files and
incrementing an integer. Increases the amount of info you have when
looking at user's log files (ie. when looking at all the files, the file
creation dates are accurate).
![image](https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/assets/13153231/61bcdf51-f0f6-4eee-b1e5-140aede5d19e)
Also simplifies the API for setting the log file, and `gk` logs are now
game specific with `jak1` or `jak2`. Which should be useful going
forward.
Lastly, added a flag to all CLIs to disable ansi colors for people that
want to do so. Though at the same time, there is finally a workaround in
jenkins to fix ANSI colors in the truncated log view -- so I'm not sure
why anyone would want to get rid of the color information. You can even
setup text editors to display the color info making log parsing much
easier. Fixes#1917
---------
Co-authored-by: ManDude <7569514+ManDude@users.noreply.github.com>
The way we got/stored background matrices is a bit weird and full of
leftovers from the first attempts at porting renderers. This doesn't
work well with the Jak 2 "other camera" system where some stuff is
rendered with a different camera matrix.
This cleans most of it up. The exception is that the collide mesh
renderer and the additional sprite culling I added still need to peek at
some cached camera matrices.
This fixes the problem where etie uses the wrong matrices for "other
camera" levels. Now the "hole covers" go in the holes in the background
of the throne room.
![image](https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/assets/48171810/73a88f7b-05d4-4e9c-bb34-5b45efffcb69)
This changes how `BlitDisplays.cpp` works so it looks at the current
render buffer, rather than the back buffer.
This approach is a bit faster because we avoid copying the back buffer
on every single frame.
It also removes the black frames when the transition starts/stops.
The remaining issues are:
- there's still a single frame of weirdness with the sprite glow
renderer.
- when changing resolutions, it doesn't work super well.
There was a single static path buffer being shared between multiple file
i/o threads. So sometimes you would end up using the wrong path for the
file, and getting size/data for the wrong file.
I think the original reason to have this buffer was just me being lazy
when we changed how project paths works a long time ago. It was a bad
idea in the first place.
Fixes skull gems using a low resolution texture.
Fixes issue where jak in cutscenes is dark after watching oracle-level-1
(and likely other bugs with texture animations getting stuck)
---------
Co-authored-by: ManDude <7569514+ManDude@users.noreply.github.com>
The progress menu loads its icon textures from a .STR file that we were
previously ignoring.
This change:
- updates the decompiler so it can process a .STR file containing a
texture
- adds a feature to force an entire page to always be loaded in the PC
renderer by putting all textures in the GAME.FR3 file.
- regenerates the texture offset map file for jak 2 with these new
textures
For now, I've just put the icon textures in GAME.FR3. The downside is
that these will always stay on the GPU, using up VRAM even when they
aren't needed. But the entire GAME.FR3 file is under 3 MB so I think
it's ok.
![image](https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/assets/48171810/39f075b5-7cc5-4168-872a-33026342afab)
- Add security wall animation
- Add waterfall animations
- Add lava animations
- Update layer values from the game to fix the security wall
- Remove leftover debug in `level.gc` that would break level-specific
animations on the second time you visited the level
- Optionally load animated slot textures to the pool so generic can use
them (fixes skull gems in UI)
This fixes the crash reported in
https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/issues/2833
There was a memory bug here for a long time where our array of `VagCmd`
in `iso_queue.cpp` was too small. This caused GetVagCommand to return
bogus pointers, and sound code would write over other parts of memory.
Added framework to do texture animations entirely in C++. Currently only
works on relatively simple ones, and doesn't handle updating all
parameters - only the speeds.
Connected texture animations to merc and tfrag for skull gems, dark
bomb, and scrolling conveyors.
Cleaned up Tfragment/Tfrag3, which used to be two classes. This was one
of the first C++ renderers, so it had a weird design.
I havn't tested it yet, but I can almost guarantee that atleast `goalc`
will not work in the slightest!
But the project is atleast fully compiling. My hope is to start
translating some AVX to NEON next / get `goalc` working...eventually.
The main thing that was done here was to slightly modify the new
subtitle-v2 JSON schema to be more similar to the existing one so that
it can properly be used in Crowdin.
Draft while I double-check the diff myself
Along the way the following was also done (among other things):
- got rid of as much duplication as was feasible in the serialization
and editor code
- separated the text serialization code from the subtitle code for
better organization
- simplified "base language" in the editor. The new subtitle format has
built-in support for defining a base language so the editor doesn't have
to be used as a crutch. Also, cutscenes only defined in the base come
first in the list now as that is generally the order you'd work from
(what you havn't done first)
- got rid of the GOAL subtitle format code completely
- switched jak 2 text translations to the JSON format as well
- found a few mistakes in the jak 1 subtitle metadata files
- added a couple minor features to the editor
- consolidate and removed complexity, ie. recently all jak 1 hints were
forced to the `named` type, so I got rid of the two types as there isn't
a need anymore.
- removed subtitle editor groups for jak 1, the only reason they existed
was so when the GOAL file was manually written out they were somewhat
organized, the editor has a decent filter control, there's no need for
them.
- removed the GOAL -> JSON python script helper, it's been a month or so
and no one has come forward with existing translations that they need
help with migrating. If they do need it, the script will be in the git
history.
I did some reasonably through testing in Jak1/Jak 2 and everything
seemed to work. But more testing is always a good idea.
---------
Co-authored-by: ManDude <7569514+ManDude@users.noreply.github.com>
## Problem
OpenGOAL uses OpenGL 4.3.
Apple stopped upgrading OpenGL after 4.1, so the way OpenGOAL currently
works will never be playable on Macs using OpenGL.
## Solution
Luckily, downgrading to OpenGL 4.1 is not a huge change (at least it
doesn't seem like it to my untrained eyes).
## Changes
* set hints for OpenGL 4.1 instead of 4.3 for __APPLE__
* skip the OpenGL debugging callback setup for macOS (requires 4.3)
* bump down the version string for all shaders
* stop using the `binding` layout qualifier in shader code
* move the `flat` qualifier first (not sure if this is a 4.1 thing or
just Macs being more strict)
* don't mix signed and unsigned ints in shaders (not sure if this is a
4.1 thing or just Macs being more strict)
* add some hacky CPP to the Shader constructor for binding texture units
and bones buffers based on variable names in the shader code
## Results
![image](https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/assets/33322/dd487c2a-61ac-4e36-a595-976204302977)
![Skärmavbild 2023-07-07 kl 13 10
30](https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/assets/33322/7976d411-0604-4046-9e8a-123106cedf57)
![Skärmavbild 2023-07-07 kl 13 13
48](https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/assets/33322/78db4f0c-da31-4889-995c-8f54e56deb5c)
The current event-based approach is very difficult to get right, and it
depends on no events ever being missed. This changes the keyboard/mouse
handling code to a polling-based approach.
Other fixes:
- an issue where modifier keys were not able to be successfully bound
(like Left Shift to `X`)
- improves cursor hiding (except when you use the start menu, this seems
like an SDL issue, see comment)
- Better discarding of kb/mouse inputs when imgui intercepts input
- properly swap bindings when an already set key is assigned, even if it
crosses the distinction of an analog vs normal button
Fixes#2800
Avoids blocking other IOP threads on IO.
Idk if it'll really help anything, but at least theoretically it might
stop some pathologically slow IO case from blocking the VAG buffer
switching.
Trying to make up for some of the startup speed lost in the SDL
transition. This saves about 1s from start (from ~3s), and about 500 MB
of RAM.
- Faster TIE unpack by merging matrix groups, more efficient vertex
transforms, and skipping normal transforms on groups with no normals.
- Refactor generic merc and merc to use a single renderer with multiple
interfaces, rather than many renderers. Removed "LightningRenderer" as a
special thing, but Warp is still special
- Add more profiling stuff to startup and the loader.
- Remove `SDL_INIT_HAPTIC` - this turned out to be needed for
force-feedback steering wheels, and not needed for controller vibration
- Switched `vag-player` to use quicksort instead of the default GOAL
sort (very slow)
This moves the blerc math from mips2c to the Merc2 renderer, and uses
floats instead.
We could potentially do this on the GPU, which would be even faster, but
this isn't that slow in the first place.
Adds support for adding custom subtitles to Jak 2 audio. Comes with a
new editor for the new system and format. Compared to the Jak 1 system,
this is much simpler to make an editor for.
Comes with a few subtitles already made as an example.
Cutscenes are not officially supported but you can technically subtitle
those with editor, so please don't right now.
This new system supports multiple subtitles playing at once (even from a
single source!) and will smartly push the subtitles up if there's a
message already playing:
![image](https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/assets/7569514/033e6374-a05a-4c31-b029-51868153a932)
![image](https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/assets/7569514/5298aa6d-a183-446e-bdb6-61c4682df917)
Unlike in Jak 1, it will not hide the bottom HUD when subtitles are
active:
![image](https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/assets/7569514/d466bfc0-55d0-4689-a6e1-b7784b9fff59)
Sadly this leaves us with not much space for the subtitle region (and
the subtitles are shrunk when the minimap is enabled) but when you have
guards and citizens talking all the time, hiding the HUD every time
anyone spoke would get really frustrating.
The subtitle speaker is also color-coded now, because I thought that
would be fun to do.
TODO:
- [x] proper cutscene support.
- [x] merge mode for cutscenes so we don't have to rewrite the script?
---------
Co-authored-by: Hat Kid <6624576+Hat-Kid@users.noreply.github.com>
Should fix https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/issues/2679
Here's a test program that will trigger the bug when near these guards:
```lisp
(define *cquery* (new 'global 'collide-query))
(defun test-bad-collide ()
(let ((lower (new 'static 'vector :x 1681893.8750 :y 61314.2031 :z 345208.6562 :w 1.))
(upper (new 'static 'vector :x 1701603.8750 :y 67624.0625 :z 357881.0312 :w 1.))
;(cquery (new 'stack-no-clear 'collide-query))
)
(set! (-> *cquery* collide-with) (the-as collide-spec 1))
(set! (-> *cquery* ignore-process0) #f)
(set! (-> *cquery* ignore-process1) #f)
(set! (-> *cquery* ignore-pat) (new 'static 'pat-surface :noentity #x1 :nojak #x1 :probe #x1 :noendlessfall #x1))
(set! (-> *cquery* action-mask) (collide-action solid))
(set! (-> *cquery* bbox min quad) (-> lower quad))
(set! (-> *cquery* bbox max quad) (-> upper quad))
(format 0 "doing collide...~%")
(fill-using-bounding-box *collide-cache* *cquery*)
(format 0 "have ~d and ~d~%" (-> *collide-cache* num-tris) (-> *collide-cache* num-prims))
)
(none)
)
```
As far as I can tell, there's a totally invalid collide-hash with an
inside `axis-scale.z`. On the PS2, it gets ignore because of how
float->int works for floats that are too big. On PC, it ends up using a
negative value and loop forever.
Normally, when they allocate a VagCmd, they do a bunch of stuff to clear
all the status bits and reset things
in particular the InitVAGCmd function does a lot
![image](https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/assets/48171810/9b355020-ad37-496c-9438-2f8d34f24e0a)
but for the stereo command, they do a lot less:
![image](https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/assets/48171810/12a36712-0e68-4377-a6be-3bde82c2aa15)
Which means that the new_stereo_command can just have random status bits
left over from whatever the last user had.
we seem to end up in a state where byte21 is set, and this causes
everything else to be wrong and off-by-one dma transfer. My guess is
that the original game avoided this bug due to lucky timing that I don't
understand.
I think the fix of just clearing byte21 is ok because there's no way
that the old value of the byte is useful after the command is
repurposed.
Also fixed an original game bug in `loader.gc` on a method that's called
quite often, though I have no clue what erroneous behavior it could have
even caused.
I sorted the list of sources on my SDL PR to reduce future merge
conflicts, but in the meantime everytime something gets added to it I
have a pretty rough set of conflicts to resolve. Committing this early
to preserve my sanity
This PR is a combination of
https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/pull/2507 and some additional
changes to port Shadow VU1 to OpenGL. As far as I can tell, it's
working.
---------
Co-authored-by: Hat Kid <6624576+Hat-Kid@users.noreply.github.com>
Saves 16 bits and lets us align the `color_index` field properly.
This shouldn't improve or decrease performance by any noticeable amount
except maybe in really low end systems.
Adds sprite distort, fixes buggy sprite rendering in progress, adds
scissoring support (used in various scrolling menus) and a very basic
implementation of `blit-displays`. This is enough to make the fade
effect in the progress menu work, along with all the menus working
properly without needing to use the REPL. This does not make screen
flipping and the filter when failing a mission work.
Added support in the decompiler for detecting `dma-buffer-add-gs-set`
and `dma-buffer-add-gs-set-flusha` and updated all of the Jak 2 code to
use it. Readability improved!
Fixes decompiler issue with `with-dma-buffer-add-bucket` not inlining
forms which broke syntax. Fixes store error warnings showing up for
non-existent stores, there is now a dedicated pass for this at the end.
I started work on making `BITBLTBUF` stuff work in the DirectRenderer,
but stopped for now because it wasn't strictly necessary. It will still
assert like before.
I'm not sure what has changed here...but rebooting in debug mode now
hangs.
- It seems to exit the GFX loop prematurely because `MasterExit` is
still set to `RESTART_IN_DEBUG`
https://github.com/open-goal/jak-project/blob/master/game/runtime.cpp#L431
- And then it gets stuck waiting for the DECI thread to close
This works, but im not sure if it's the right fix / what has changed to
require this.
Allows for removing a line in the subtitle editor finally, also fixed
the following:
- The path the editor used didn't include the game name
- Loading the subtitle project is too slow to do on startup now
(4-5seconds in a debug build), do it on demand now
Updates the decompiler for the new format and there's new macros. This
new format should be easier to read/parse.
Also rewrote `sp-init-fields!` (both jak 1 and 2) from assembly to GOAL.
Hopefully I did not miss any regressions in Jak 1/2 while updating the
files, it's a lot.
- [x] compare NTSC-K
- [x] compare NTSC-J
- [x] compare PAL
- [x] figure out version order
- [x] ~~write delta patch for spanish text~~ no need for now
Fixes#2530
Fixes issue where warp effect looks wrong near the edge of the screen -
there was an unhandled `REGION_CLAMP` texture setting.
Fixes a potential bug where "warp page" things wouldn't be drawn at all
because there is no PC warp bucket. Unclear if anything actually fits
this category, but it doesn't hurt.
Turn on PC-format texture uploads for the water page so the precursor
guy uses the right texture. It has to use generic because it abuses the
generic death query thing to spawn particles.
Workaround for some issues with rebuilding level files after changing
engine files. Not a perfect solution, but probably good enough.
Doesn't actually do anything in Jak 2 because the collide mesh isn't
extracted, but the functionality is all there. Also updated the renderer
a bit to keep the colors more readable.
Fixes crashes when killing the big spider, killing predator metal heads,
and watching the end cutscene. The presursor guy is the wrong color, but
I don't have time to look into this today.
I saw that some new speedrunning-related text was added to the English
language, so I decided to translate them. Meanwhile I also made some
minor adjustments/fixes to existing translations.
BUT I have a question...
Do we really need all this text?
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/18116946/221017680-cae74597-6627-4be3-a548-44f6c005b6a2.png)
They are displayed in a menu that is called 'NEW INDIVIDUAL LEVEL RUN'.
So adding IL after the level names is kind of redundant in my opinion -
the existing level name text entries could be used instead. And the
reason why I care so much is because it is hard to come up with a
"translation" for IL. But if I am forced to, I will come up with
something.
I will keep this PR a draft until I know what the main jak-project
people think about this "IL" issue. And I will adjust my branch
accordingly.
Disables the fog hack for Jak 2, where it's not useful and kind of
breaks in most levels which rely on dark vertices that aren't underwater
(e.g. city windows).
Add the vortex renderer. The vortex texture isn't there yet (it uses the
same texture as clouds), so it uses a checkerboard. But the
colors/vertices seem right.
This way a user can take multiple data samples from one/multiple play
sessions quickly. Creates a directory called profile_data that is added
to gitignore to place the data in, and checks to see if a file is there
and if so it creates prof1.json prof2.json prof3.json and so on...
- better handling of the `disable-fog` settings for merc, should fix the
spotlights. There's a setting in the merc effect, and also a runtime
flag for the draw-control. I'm not actually sure what reads these, but
the draw-control one is definitely used to disable fog on the
spotlights.
- increase merc draw limit to try to fix the issue about partially drawn
citizens in the city
- remove useless debug prints (it's okay to die in init, and the medium
load buffer size mode is understood now)
Fixes some mistakes with merc draw modes. The glass in the palace level
no longer writes to the depth buffer (it's "water"):
![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/48171810/227727825-d6726621-88a8-45a8-9cf3-8d6e9edc3d54.png)
Also fixes the one-frame flickers when level draw orders change. We
might be able to make this more efficient in the future, but this will
at least fix the frame with nothing drawn.
This should fix a bunch of texture-related issues by generating a table
of overlapping textures and just... adjusting them slightly so they
don't overlap. It's not the most elegant solution in the world, but I
think it's no worse than the existing hard-coded tpage dir stuff.
Definitely needs a clean up pass, but I think the functionality is very
close.
There's a few "hacks" still:
- I am using the emerc logic for environment mapping, which doesn't care
about the length of the normals. I can't figure out how the normal
scaling worked in etie. I want to do a little bit more experimentation
with this before merging.
- There is some part about adgifs for TIE and ETIE that I don't
understand. The clearly correct behavior of TIE/ETIE is that the alpha
settings from the adgif shader are overwritten by the settings from the
renderer. But I can't figure out how this happens in all cases.
- Fade out is completely disabled. I think this is fine because the
performance difference isn't bad. But if you are comparing screenshots
with PCSX2, it will make things look a tiny bit different.
My mistake -- testing focused too much on preserving the existing
behaviour I clearly forgot to make sure the new stuff worked properly.
Just had to early out and not modify the args if they were in the new
format.