newtree/source/gl_rsurf.c

1563 lines
33 KiB
C
Raw Normal View History

/*
gl_rsurf.c
2000-05-22 06:58:14 +00:00
surface-related refresh code
Copyright (C) 1996-1997 Id Software, Inc.
Copyright (C) 2000 Joseph Carter <knghtbrd@debian.org>
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2
of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to:
Free Software Foundation, Inc.
59 Temple Place - Suite 330
Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA
$Id$
*/
2000-05-22 06:58:14 +00:00
2000-05-17 10:03:19 +00:00
#ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H
# include "config.h"
2000-05-17 10:03:19 +00:00
#endif
#include <stdio.h>
2000-05-14 18:08:53 +00:00
#include <string.h>
#include <math.h>
#include "bothdefs.h" // needed by: common.h, net.h, client.h
#include "qargs.h"
#include "bspfile.h" // needed by: glquake.h
#include "vid.h"
#include "sys.h"
#include "zone.h" // needed by: client.h, gl_model.h
#include "mathlib.h" // needed by: protocol.h, render.h, client.h,
// modelgen.h, glmodel.h
#include "wad.h"
#include "draw.h"
#include "cvar.h"
#include "net.h" // needed by: client.h
#include "protocol.h" // needed by: client.h
#include "cmd.h"
#include "sbar.h"
#include "render.h" // needed by: client.h, gl_model.h, glquake.h
#include "client.h" // need cls in this file
2000-05-13 20:47:01 +00:00
#include "model.h" // needed by: glquake.h
#include "console.h"
#include "glquake.h"
extern double realtime;
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
int skytexturenum;
#ifndef GL_RGBA4
#define GL_RGBA4 0
#endif
int lightmap_bytes; // 1 or 4
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
int lightmap_textures;
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
unsigned blocklights[18*18*3];
cvar_t *gl_colorlights;
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
#define BLOCK_WIDTH 128
#define BLOCK_HEIGHT 128
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
#define MAX_LIGHTMAPS 256
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
int active_lightmaps;
typedef struct glRect_s {
unsigned char l,t,w,h;
} glRect_t;
glpoly_t *lightmap_polys[MAX_LIGHTMAPS];
qboolean lightmap_modified[MAX_LIGHTMAPS];
glRect_t lightmap_rectchange[MAX_LIGHTMAPS];
int allocated[MAX_LIGHTMAPS][BLOCK_WIDTH];
// the lightmap texture data needs to be kept in
// main memory so texsubimage can update properly
byte lightmaps[4*MAX_LIGHTMAPS*BLOCK_WIDTH*BLOCK_HEIGHT];
// For gl_texsort 0
msurface_t *skychain = NULL;
msurface_t *waterchain = NULL;
void R_RenderDynamicLightmaps (msurface_t *fa);
/*
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
R_AddDynamicLights
LordHavoc's redesigned this function completely
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
*/
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
void
R_AddDynamicLights (msurface_t *surf)
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
{
int lnum;
int sd, td;
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
float dist, rada, radb;
float red, green, blue, brightness;
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
vec3_t impact, local;
int s, t;
int i;
int smax, tmax;
mtexinfo_t *tex;
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
unsigned *bl;
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
smax = (surf->extents[0]>>4)+1;
tmax = (surf->extents[1]>>4)+1;
tex = surf->texinfo;
for (lnum=0 ; lnum<MAX_DLIGHTS ; lnum++)
{
if ( !(surf->dlightbits & (1<<lnum) ) )
continue; // not lit by this light
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
dist = DotProduct (cl_dlights[lnum].origin, surf->plane->normal)
- surf->plane->dist;
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
for (i=0 ; i<3 ; i++)
impact[i] = cl_dlights[lnum].origin[i] -
surf->plane->normal[i]*dist;
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
local[0] = DotProduct (impact, tex->vecs[0]) + tex->vecs[0][3]
- surf->texturemins[0];
local[1] = DotProduct (impact, tex->vecs[1]) + tex->vecs[1][3]
- surf->texturemins[1];
s = bound (0, local[0]+0.5, (smax-1)*16);
t = bound (0, local[1]+0.5, (tmax-1)*16);
sd = local[0] - s;
td = local[1] - t;
dist *= dist;
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
// get brightest color's value
red = cl_dlights[lnum].color[0];
green = cl_dlights[lnum].color[1];
blue = cl_dlights[lnum].color[2];
brightness = max(red, max(green, blue));
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
rada = cl_dlights[lnum].radius * cl_dlights[lnum].radius
* (4.0/16.0); // comparison to min acceptable light
if (rada*brightness >= (sd*sd + td*td + dist))
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
{
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
radb = cl_dlights[lnum].radius
* cl_dlights[lnum].radius * (256.0*4.0);
bl = blocklights;
for (t = 0; t < tmax; t++)
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
{
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
td = local[1] - t*16;
td = td*td + dist;
if (rada >= td) // any visible this line?
{
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
for (s = 0; s < smax; s++)
{
sd = local[0] - s*16;
if (rada >= (sd*sd+td)) // minimum light
{
brightness = radb / (sd*sd+td);
*bl++ += brightness * red;
*bl++ += brightness * green;
*bl++ += brightness * blue;
} else
bl+=3; // skip pixel
}
} else
bl+=smax*3; // skip line
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
}
}
}
}
/*
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
R_BuildLightMap
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
Combine and scale multiple lightmaps
After talking it over with LordHavoc, I've decided to switch to using
GL_RGB for colored lights and averaging them out for plain white
lighting if needed. Much cleaner that way. --KB
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
*/
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
void
R_BuildLightMap (msurface_t *surf, byte *dest, int stride)
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
{
int smax, tmax;
int t;
int i, j, size;
byte *lightmap;
unsigned scale;
int maps;
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
float t2;
unsigned *bl;
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
surf->cached_dlight = (surf->dlightframe == r_framecount);
smax = (surf->extents[0]>>4)+1;
tmax = (surf->extents[1]>>4)+1;
size = smax*tmax;
lightmap = surf->samples;
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
// set to full bright if no light data
if (/*r_fullbright->value ||*/ !cl.worldmodel->lightdata)
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
{
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
bl = blocklights;
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
for (i=0 ; i<size ; i++)
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
{
*bl++ = 255*256;
*bl++ = 255*256;
*bl++ = 255*256;
}
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
goto store;
}
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
// clear to no light
bl = blocklights;
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
for (i=0 ; i<size ; i++)
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
{
*bl++ = 0;
*bl++ = 0;
*bl++ = 0;
}
bl = blocklights;
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
// add all the lightmaps
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
if (lightmap)
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
for (maps = 0;
maps < MAXLIGHTMAPS && surf->styles[maps] != 255;
maps++)
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
{
scale = d_lightstylevalue[surf->styles[maps]];
surf->cached_light[maps] = scale; // 8.8 fraction
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
bl = blocklights;
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
for (i=0 ; i<size ; i++)
{
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
*bl++ += *lightmap++ * scale;
*bl++ += *lightmap++ * scale;
*bl++ += *lightmap++ * scale;
}
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
}
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
// add all the dynamic lights
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
if (surf->dlightframe == r_framecount)
R_AddDynamicLights (surf);
store:
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
// bound and shift
if (gl_colorlights->value)
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
{
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
stride -= smax * 3;
bl = blocklights;
for (i = 0; i < tmax; i++, dest += stride)
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
for (j=0 ; j<smax ; j++)
{
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
t = (int) *bl++ >> 8;
*dest++ = bound(0, t, 255);
t = (int) *bl++ >> 8;
*dest++ = bound(0, t, 255);
t = (int) *bl++ >> 8;
*dest++ = bound(0, t, 255);
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
}
} else {
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
stride -= smax;
bl = blocklights;
for (i = 0; i < tmax; i++, dest += stride)
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
for (j=0 ; j<smax ; j++)
{
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
t = (int) *bl++ >> 8;
t2 = bound(0, t, 255);
t = (int) *bl++ >> 8;
t2 += bound(0, t, 255);
t = (int) *bl++ >> 8;
t2 += bound(0, t, 255);
t2 *= (1.0/3.0);
*dest++ = t2;
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
}
}
}
/*
===============
R_TextureAnimation
Returns the proper texture for a given time and base texture
===============
*/
texture_t *R_TextureAnimation (texture_t *base)
{
int reletive;
int count;
if (currententity->frame)
{
if (base->alternate_anims)
base = base->alternate_anims;
}
if (!base->anim_total)
return base;
reletive = (int)(cl.time*10) % base->anim_total;
count = 0;
while (base->anim_min > reletive || base->anim_max <= reletive)
{
base = base->anim_next;
if (!base)
Sys_Error ("R_TextureAnimation: broken cycle");
if (++count > 100)
Sys_Error ("R_TextureAnimation: infinite cycle");
}
return base;
}
/*
=============================================================
BRUSH MODELS
=============================================================
*/
extern int solidskytexture;
extern int alphaskytexture;
extern float speedscale; // for top sky and bottom sky
void DrawGLWaterPoly (glpoly_t *p);
void DrawGLWaterPolyLightmap (glpoly_t *p);
#ifdef _WIN32
lpMTexFUNC qglMTexCoord2fSGIS = NULL;
lpSelTexFUNC qglSelectTextureSGIS = NULL;
#endif
qboolean mtexenabled = false;
void GL_SelectTexture (GLenum target);
void GL_DisableMultitexture(void)
{
if (mtexenabled) {
glDisable(GL_TEXTURE_2D);
GL_SelectTexture(TEXTURE0_SGIS);
mtexenabled = false;
}
}
void GL_EnableMultitexture(void)
{
if (gl_mtexable) {
GL_SelectTexture(TEXTURE1_SGIS);
glEnable(GL_TEXTURE_2D);
mtexenabled = true;
}
}
/*
================
R_DrawSequentialPoly
Systems that have fast state and texture changes can
just do everything as it passes with no need to sort
================
*/
void R_DrawSequentialPoly (msurface_t *s)
{
glpoly_t *p;
float *v;
int i;
texture_t *t;
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
// vec3_t nv;
// glRect_t *theRect;
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
//
// normal lightmaped poly
//
if (! (s->flags & (SURF_DRAWSKY|SURF_DRAWTURB|SURF_UNDERWATER) ) )
{
R_RenderDynamicLightmaps (s);
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
if (0) //gl_mtexable)
{
/* p = s->polys;
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
t = R_TextureAnimation (s->texinfo->texture);
// Binds world to texture env 0
GL_SelectTexture(TEXTURE0_SGIS);
GL_Bind (t->gl_texturenum);
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
// glTexEnvf(GL_TEXTURE_ENV, GL_TEXTURE_ENV_MODE, GL_REPLACE);
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
// Binds lightmap to texenv 1
GL_EnableMultitexture(); // Same as SelectTexture (TEXTURE1)
GL_Bind (lightmap_textures + s->lightmaptexturenum);
i = s->lightmaptexturenum;
if (lightmap_modified[i])
{
lightmap_modified[i] = false;
theRect = &lightmap_rectchange[i];
glTexSubImage2D(GL_TEXTURE_2D, 0, 0, theRect->t,
BLOCK_WIDTH, theRect->h, gl_lightmap_format, GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE,
lightmaps+(i* BLOCK_HEIGHT + theRect->t) *BLOCK_WIDTH*lightmap_bytes);
theRect->l = BLOCK_WIDTH;
theRect->t = BLOCK_HEIGHT;
theRect->h = 0;
theRect->w = 0;
}
glTexEnvf(GL_TEXTURE_ENV, GL_TEXTURE_ENV_MODE, GL_BLEND);
glBegin(GL_POLYGON);
v = p->verts[0];
for (i=0 ; i<p->numverts ; i++, v+= VERTEXSIZE)
{
qglMTexCoord2fSGIS (TEXTURE0_SGIS, v[3], v[4]);
qglMTexCoord2fSGIS (TEXTURE1_SGIS, v[5], v[6]);
glVertex3fv (v);
}
glEnd ();
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
return; */
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
} else {
p = s->polys;
t = R_TextureAnimation (s->texinfo->texture);
GL_Bind (t->gl_texturenum);
glBegin (GL_POLYGON);
v = p->verts[0];
for (i=0 ; i<p->numverts ; i++, v+= VERTEXSIZE)
{
glTexCoord2f (v[3], v[4]);
glVertex3fv (v);
}
glEnd ();
GL_Bind (lightmap_textures + s->lightmaptexturenum);
glBegin (GL_POLYGON);
v = p->verts[0];
for (i=0 ; i<p->numverts ; i++, v+= VERTEXSIZE)
{
glTexCoord2f (v[5], v[6]);
glVertex3fv (v);
}
glEnd ();
}
return;
}
//
// subdivided water surface warp
//
if (s->flags & SURF_DRAWTURB)
{
GL_DisableMultitexture();
GL_Bind (s->texinfo->texture->gl_texturenum);
EmitWaterPolys (s);
return;
}
//
// subdivided sky warp
//
if (s->flags & SURF_DRAWSKY)
{
GL_DisableMultitexture();
GL_Bind (solidskytexture);
speedscale = realtime*8;
speedscale -= (int)speedscale & ~127;
EmitSkyPolys (s);
GL_Bind (alphaskytexture);
speedscale = realtime*16;
speedscale -= (int)speedscale & ~127;
EmitSkyPolys (s);
return;
}
//
// underwater warped with lightmap
//
R_RenderDynamicLightmaps (s);
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
if (0) //gl_mtexable)
{
/* p = s->polys;
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
t = R_TextureAnimation (s->texinfo->texture);
GL_SelectTexture(TEXTURE0_SGIS);
GL_Bind (t->gl_texturenum);
GL_EnableMultitexture();
GL_Bind (lightmap_textures + s->lightmaptexturenum);
i = s->lightmaptexturenum;
if (lightmap_modified[i])
{
lightmap_modified[i] = false;
theRect = &lightmap_rectchange[i];
glTexSubImage2D(GL_TEXTURE_2D, 0, 0, theRect->t,
BLOCK_WIDTH, theRect->h, gl_lightmap_format, GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE,
lightmaps+(i* BLOCK_HEIGHT + theRect->t) *BLOCK_WIDTH*lightmap_bytes);
theRect->l = BLOCK_WIDTH;
theRect->t = BLOCK_HEIGHT;
theRect->h = 0;
theRect->w = 0;
}
glTexEnvf(GL_TEXTURE_ENV, GL_TEXTURE_ENV_MODE, GL_BLEND);
glBegin (GL_TRIANGLE_FAN);
v = p->verts[0];
for (i=0 ; i<p->numverts ; i++, v+= VERTEXSIZE)
{
qglMTexCoord2fSGIS (TEXTURE0_SGIS, v[3], v[4]);
qglMTexCoord2fSGIS (TEXTURE1_SGIS, v[5], v[6]);
nv[0] = v[0] + 8*sin(v[1]*0.05+realtime)*sin(v[2]*0.05+realtime);
nv[1] = v[1] + 8*sin(v[0]*0.05+realtime)*sin(v[2]*0.05+realtime);
nv[2] = v[2];
glVertex3fv (nv);
}
glEnd ();
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
*/
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
} else {
p = s->polys;
t = R_TextureAnimation (s->texinfo->texture);
GL_Bind (t->gl_texturenum);
DrawGLWaterPoly (p);
GL_Bind (lightmap_textures + s->lightmaptexturenum);
DrawGLWaterPolyLightmap (p);
}
}
/*
================
DrawGLWaterPoly
Warp the vertex coordinates
================
*/
void DrawGLWaterPoly (glpoly_t *p)
{
int i;
float *v;
vec3_t nv;
GL_DisableMultitexture();
glBegin (GL_TRIANGLE_FAN);
v = p->verts[0];
for (i=0 ; i<p->numverts ; i++, v+= VERTEXSIZE)
{
glTexCoord2f (v[3], v[4]);
nv[0] = v[0] + 8*sin(v[1]*0.05+realtime)*sin(v[2]*0.05+realtime);
nv[1] = v[1] + 8*sin(v[0]*0.05+realtime)*sin(v[2]*0.05+realtime);
nv[2] = v[2];
glVertex3fv (nv);
}
glEnd ();
}
void DrawGLWaterPolyLightmap (glpoly_t *p)
{
int i;
float *v;
vec3_t nv;
GL_DisableMultitexture();
glBegin (GL_TRIANGLE_FAN);
v = p->verts[0];
for (i=0 ; i<p->numverts ; i++, v+= VERTEXSIZE)
{
glTexCoord2f (v[5], v[6]);
nv[0] = v[0] + 8*sin(v[1]*0.05+realtime)*sin(v[2]*0.05+realtime);
nv[1] = v[1] + 8*sin(v[0]*0.05+realtime)*sin(v[2]*0.05+realtime);
nv[2] = v[2];
glVertex3fv (nv);
}
glEnd ();
}
/*
================
DrawGLPoly
================
*/
void DrawGLPoly (glpoly_t *p)
{
int i;
float *v;
glBegin (GL_POLYGON);
v = p->verts[0];
for (i=0 ; i<p->numverts ; i++, v+= VERTEXSIZE)
{
glTexCoord2f (v[3], v[4]);
glVertex3fv (v);
}
glEnd ();
}
/*
================
R_BlendLightmaps
================
*/
void R_BlendLightmaps (void)
{
int i, j;
glpoly_t *p;
float *v;
glRect_t *theRect;
if (!gl_texsort->value)
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
return;
glDepthMask (0); // don't bother writing Z
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
glBlendFunc (GL_ZERO, GL_SRC_COLOR);
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
for (i=0 ; i<MAX_LIGHTMAPS ; i++)
{
p = lightmap_polys[i];
if (!p)
continue;
GL_Bind(lightmap_textures+i);
if (lightmap_modified[i])
{
lightmap_modified[i] = false;
theRect = &lightmap_rectchange[i];
// theRect->l = 0;
// theRect->t = 0;
// theRect->w = BLOCK_WIDTH;
// theRect->h = BLOCK_HEIGHT;
// glTexImage2D (GL_TEXTURE_2D, 0, lightmap_bytes
// , BLOCK_WIDTH, BLOCK_HEIGHT, 0,
// gl_lightmap_format, GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE, lightmaps+i*BLOCK_WIDTH*BLOCK_HEIGHT*lightmap_bytes);
// glTexImage2D (GL_TEXTURE_2D, 0, lightmap_bytes
// , BLOCK_WIDTH, theRect->h, 0,
// gl_lightmap_format, GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE, lightmaps+(i*BLOCK_HEIGHT+theRect->t)*BLOCK_WIDTH*lightmap_bytes);
glTexSubImage2D(GL_TEXTURE_2D, 0, 0, theRect->t,
BLOCK_WIDTH, theRect->h, gl_lightmap_format, GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE,
lightmaps+(i* BLOCK_HEIGHT + theRect->t) *BLOCK_WIDTH*lightmap_bytes);
theRect->l = BLOCK_WIDTH;
theRect->t = BLOCK_HEIGHT;
theRect->h = 0;
theRect->w = 0;
}
for ( ; p ; p=p->chain)
{
// if (p->flags & SURF_UNDERWATER)
// DrawGLWaterPolyLightmap (p);
if (((r_viewleaf->contents==CONTENTS_EMPTY && (p->flags & SURF_UNDERWATER)) ||
(r_viewleaf->contents!=CONTENTS_EMPTY && !(p->flags & SURF_UNDERWATER)))
&& !(p->flags & SURF_DONTWARP))
DrawGLWaterPolyLightmap (p);
else
{
glBegin (GL_POLYGON);
v = p->verts[0];
for (j=0 ; j<p->numverts ; j++, v+= VERTEXSIZE)
{
glTexCoord2f (v[5], v[6]);
glVertex3fv (v);
}
glEnd ();
}
}
}
// Return to normal blending --KB
glBlendFunc (GL_SRC_ALPHA, GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA);
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
glDepthMask (1); // back to normal Z buffering
}
/*
================
R_RenderBrushPoly
================
*/
void R_RenderBrushPoly (msurface_t *fa)
{
texture_t *t;
byte *base;
int maps;
glRect_t *theRect;
int smax, tmax;
c_brush_polys++;
if (fa->flags & SURF_DRAWSKY)
{ // warp texture, no lightmaps
EmitBothSkyLayers (fa);
return;
}
t = R_TextureAnimation (fa->texinfo->texture);
GL_Bind (t->gl_texturenum);
if (fa->flags & SURF_DRAWTURB)
{ // warp texture, no lightmaps
EmitWaterPolys (fa);
return;
}
if (((r_viewleaf->contents==CONTENTS_EMPTY && (fa->flags & SURF_UNDERWATER)) ||
(r_viewleaf->contents!=CONTENTS_EMPTY && !(fa->flags & SURF_UNDERWATER)))
&& !(fa->flags & SURF_DONTWARP))
DrawGLWaterPoly (fa->polys);
else
DrawGLPoly (fa->polys);
// add the poly to the proper lightmap chain
fa->polys->chain = lightmap_polys[fa->lightmaptexturenum];
lightmap_polys[fa->lightmaptexturenum] = fa->polys;
// check for lightmap modification
for (maps = 0 ; maps < MAXLIGHTMAPS && fa->styles[maps] != 255 ;
maps++)
if (d_lightstylevalue[fa->styles[maps]] != fa->cached_light[maps])
goto dynamic;
if (fa->dlightframe == r_framecount // dynamic this frame
|| fa->cached_dlight) // dynamic previously
{
dynamic:
if (r_dynamic->value)
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
{
lightmap_modified[fa->lightmaptexturenum] = true;
theRect = &lightmap_rectchange[fa->lightmaptexturenum];
if (fa->light_t < theRect->t) {
if (theRect->h)
theRect->h += theRect->t - fa->light_t;
theRect->t = fa->light_t;
}
if (fa->light_s < theRect->l) {
if (theRect->w)
theRect->w += theRect->l - fa->light_s;
theRect->l = fa->light_s;
}
smax = (fa->extents[0]>>4)+1;
tmax = (fa->extents[1]>>4)+1;
if ((theRect->w + theRect->l) < (fa->light_s + smax))
theRect->w = (fa->light_s-theRect->l)+smax;
if ((theRect->h + theRect->t) < (fa->light_t + tmax))
theRect->h = (fa->light_t-theRect->t)+tmax;
base = lightmaps + fa->lightmaptexturenum*lightmap_bytes*BLOCK_WIDTH*BLOCK_HEIGHT;
base += fa->light_t * BLOCK_WIDTH * lightmap_bytes + fa->light_s * lightmap_bytes;
R_BuildLightMap (fa, base, BLOCK_WIDTH*lightmap_bytes);
}
}
}
/*
================
R_RenderDynamicLightmaps
Multitexture
================
*/
void R_RenderDynamicLightmaps (msurface_t *fa)
{
byte *base;
int maps;
glRect_t *theRect;
int smax, tmax;
c_brush_polys++;
if (fa->flags & ( SURF_DRAWSKY | SURF_DRAWTURB) )
return;
fa->polys->chain = lightmap_polys[fa->lightmaptexturenum];
lightmap_polys[fa->lightmaptexturenum] = fa->polys;
// check for lightmap modification
for (maps = 0 ; maps < MAXLIGHTMAPS && fa->styles[maps] != 255 ;
maps++)
if (d_lightstylevalue[fa->styles[maps]] != fa->cached_light[maps])
goto dynamic;
if (fa->dlightframe == r_framecount // dynamic this frame
|| fa->cached_dlight) // dynamic previously
{
dynamic:
if (r_dynamic->value)
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
{
lightmap_modified[fa->lightmaptexturenum] = true;
theRect = &lightmap_rectchange[fa->lightmaptexturenum];
if (fa->light_t < theRect->t) {
if (theRect->h)
theRect->h += theRect->t - fa->light_t;
theRect->t = fa->light_t;
}
if (fa->light_s < theRect->l) {
if (theRect->w)
theRect->w += theRect->l - fa->light_s;
theRect->l = fa->light_s;
}
smax = (fa->extents[0]>>4)+1;
tmax = (fa->extents[1]>>4)+1;
if ((theRect->w + theRect->l) < (fa->light_s + smax))
theRect->w = (fa->light_s-theRect->l)+smax;
if ((theRect->h + theRect->t) < (fa->light_t + tmax))
theRect->h = (fa->light_t-theRect->t)+tmax;
base = lightmaps + fa->lightmaptexturenum*lightmap_bytes*BLOCK_WIDTH*BLOCK_HEIGHT;
base += fa->light_t * BLOCK_WIDTH * lightmap_bytes + fa->light_s * lightmap_bytes;
R_BuildLightMap (fa, base, BLOCK_WIDTH*lightmap_bytes);
}
}
}
/*
================
R_MirrorChain
================
*/
void R_MirrorChain (msurface_t *s)
{
if (mirror)
return;
mirror = true;
mirror_plane = s->plane;
}
/*
================
R_DrawWaterSurfaces
================
*/
void R_DrawWaterSurfaces (void)
{
int i;
msurface_t *s;
texture_t *t;
if (r_wateralpha->value == 1.0 && gl_texsort->value)
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
return;
//
// go back to the world matrix
//
glLoadMatrixf (r_world_matrix);
if (r_wateralpha->value < 1.0) {
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
glColor4f (0.5, 0.5, 0.5, r_wateralpha->value);
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
glTexEnvf(GL_TEXTURE_ENV, GL_TEXTURE_ENV_MODE, GL_MODULATE);
}
if (!gl_texsort->value) {
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
if (!waterchain)
return;
for ( s = waterchain ; s ; s=s->texturechain) {
GL_Bind (s->texinfo->texture->gl_texturenum);
EmitWaterPolys (s);
}
waterchain = NULL;
} else {
for (i=0 ; i<cl.worldmodel->numtextures ; i++)
{
t = cl.worldmodel->textures[i];
if (!t)
continue;
s = t->texturechain;
if (!s)
continue;
if ( !(s->flags & SURF_DRAWTURB ) )
continue;
// set modulate mode explicitly
GL_Bind (t->gl_texturenum);
for ( ; s ; s=s->texturechain)
EmitWaterPolys (s);
t->texturechain = NULL;
}
}
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
if (r_wateralpha->value < 1.0)
glColor3f (0.5, 0.5, 0.5);
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
}
/*
================
DrawTextureChains
================
*/
void DrawTextureChains (void)
{
int i;
msurface_t *s;
texture_t *t;
if (!gl_texsort->value) {
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
GL_DisableMultitexture();
if (skychain) {
R_DrawSkyChain(skychain);
skychain = NULL;
}
return;
}
for (i=0 ; i<cl.worldmodel->numtextures ; i++)
{
t = cl.worldmodel->textures[i];
if (!t)
continue;
s = t->texturechain;
if (!s)
continue;
if (i == skytexturenum)
R_DrawSkyChain (s);
else if (i == mirrortexturenum && r_mirroralpha->value != 1.0)
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
{
R_MirrorChain (s);
continue;
}
else
{
if ((s->flags & SURF_DRAWTURB) && r_wateralpha->value != 1.0)
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
continue; // draw translucent water later
for ( ; s ; s=s->texturechain)
R_RenderBrushPoly (s);
}
t->texturechain = NULL;
}
}
/*
=================
R_DrawBrushModel
=================
*/
void R_DrawBrushModel (entity_t *e)
{
int i;
int k;
vec3_t mins, maxs;
msurface_t *psurf;
float dot;
mplane_t *pplane;
model_t *clmodel;
qboolean rotated;
currententity = e;
currenttexture = -1;
clmodel = e->model;
if (e->angles[0] || e->angles[1] || e->angles[2])
{
rotated = true;
for (i=0 ; i<3 ; i++)
{
mins[i] = e->origin[i] - clmodel->radius;
maxs[i] = e->origin[i] + clmodel->radius;
}
}
else
{
rotated = false;
VectorAdd (e->origin, clmodel->mins, mins);
VectorAdd (e->origin, clmodel->maxs, maxs);
}
if (R_CullBox (mins, maxs))
return;
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
glColor3f (1.0, 1.0, 1.0);
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
memset (lightmap_polys, 0, sizeof(lightmap_polys));
VectorSubtract (r_refdef.vieworg, e->origin, modelorg);
if (rotated)
{
vec3_t temp;
vec3_t forward, right, up;
VectorCopy (modelorg, temp);
AngleVectors (e->angles, forward, right, up);
modelorg[0] = DotProduct (temp, forward);
modelorg[1] = -DotProduct (temp, right);
modelorg[2] = DotProduct (temp, up);
}
psurf = &clmodel->surfaces[clmodel->firstmodelsurface];
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
// calculate dynamic lighting for bmodel if it's not an
// instanced model
if (clmodel->firstmodelsurface != 0 && !gl_flashblend->value)
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
{
for (k=0 ; k<MAX_DLIGHTS ; k++)
{
if ((cl_dlights[k].die < cl.time) ||
(!cl_dlights[k].radius))
continue;
R_MarkLights (&cl_dlights[k], 1<<k,
clmodel->nodes + clmodel->hulls[0].firstclipnode);
}
}
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
glPushMatrix ();
e->angles[0] = -e->angles[0]; // stupid quake bug
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
R_RotateForEntity (e);
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
e->angles[0] = -e->angles[0]; // stupid quake bug
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
//
// draw texture
//
for (i=0 ; i<clmodel->nummodelsurfaces ; i++, psurf++)
{
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
// find which side of the node we are on
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
pplane = psurf->plane;
dot = DotProduct (modelorg, pplane->normal) - pplane->dist;
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
// draw the polygon
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
if (((psurf->flags & SURF_PLANEBACK) && (dot < -BACKFACE_EPSILON)) ||
(!(psurf->flags & SURF_PLANEBACK) && (dot > BACKFACE_EPSILON)))
{
if (gl_texsort->value)
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
R_RenderBrushPoly (psurf);
else
R_DrawSequentialPoly (psurf);
}
}
R_BlendLightmaps ();
glPopMatrix ();
}
/*
=============================================================
WORLD MODEL
=============================================================
*/
/*
================
R_RecursiveWorldNode
================
*/
void R_RecursiveWorldNode (mnode_t *node)
{
int c, side;
mplane_t *plane;
msurface_t *surf, **mark;
mleaf_t *pleaf;
double dot;
if (node->contents == CONTENTS_SOLID)
return; // solid
if (node->visframe != r_visframecount)
return;
if (R_CullBox (node->minmaxs, node->minmaxs+3))
return;
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
// if a leaf node, draw stuff
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
if (node->contents < 0)
{
pleaf = (mleaf_t *)node;
mark = pleaf->firstmarksurface;
c = pleaf->nummarksurfaces;
if (c)
{
do
{
(*mark)->visframe = r_framecount;
mark++;
} while (--c);
}
// deal with model fragments in this leaf
if (pleaf->efrags)
R_StoreEfrags (&pleaf->efrags);
return;
}
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
// node is just a decision point, so go down the apropriate sides
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
// find which side of the node we are on
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
plane = node->plane;
switch (plane->type)
{
case PLANE_X:
dot = modelorg[0] - plane->dist;
break;
case PLANE_Y:
dot = modelorg[1] - plane->dist;
break;
case PLANE_Z:
dot = modelorg[2] - plane->dist;
break;
default:
dot = DotProduct (modelorg, plane->normal) - plane->dist;
break;
}
if (dot >= 0)
side = 0;
else
side = 1;
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
// recurse down the children, front side first
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
R_RecursiveWorldNode (node->children[side]);
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
// draw stuff
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
c = node->numsurfaces;
if (c)
{
surf = cl.worldmodel->surfaces + node->firstsurface;
if (dot < 0 -BACKFACE_EPSILON)
side = SURF_PLANEBACK;
else if (dot > BACKFACE_EPSILON)
side = 0;
{
for ( ; c ; c--, surf++)
{
if (surf->visframe != r_framecount)
continue;
// don't backface underwater surfaces, because they warp
// if ( !(surf->flags & SURF_UNDERWATER) && ( (dot < 0) ^ !!(surf->flags & SURF_PLANEBACK)) )
// continue; // wrong side
if ( !(((r_viewleaf->contents==CONTENTS_EMPTY && (surf->flags & SURF_UNDERWATER)) ||
(r_viewleaf->contents!=CONTENTS_EMPTY && !(surf->flags & SURF_UNDERWATER)))
&& !(surf->flags & SURF_DONTWARP)) && ( (dot < 0) ^ !!(surf->flags & SURF_PLANEBACK)) )
continue; // wrong side
// if sorting by texture, just store it out
if (gl_texsort->value)
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
{
if (!mirror
|| surf->texinfo->texture != cl.worldmodel->textures[mirrortexturenum])
{
surf->texturechain = surf->texinfo->texture->texturechain;
surf->texinfo->texture->texturechain = surf;
}
} else if (surf->flags & SURF_DRAWSKY) {
surf->texturechain = skychain;
skychain = surf;
} else if (surf->flags & SURF_DRAWTURB) {
surf->texturechain = waterchain;
waterchain = surf;
} else
R_DrawSequentialPoly (surf);
}
}
}
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
// recurse down the back side
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
R_RecursiveWorldNode (node->children[!side]);
}
/*
=============
R_DrawWorld
=============
*/
void R_DrawWorld (void)
{
entity_t ent;
memset (&ent, 0, sizeof(ent));
ent.model = cl.worldmodel;
VectorCopy (r_refdef.vieworg, modelorg);
currententity = &ent;
currenttexture = -1;
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
glColor3f (1.0, 1.0, 1.0);
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
memset (lightmap_polys, 0, sizeof(lightmap_polys));
// Be sure to clear the skybox --KB
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
R_ClearSkyBox ();
R_RecursiveWorldNode (cl.worldmodel->nodes);
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
DrawTextureChains ();
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
R_BlendLightmaps ();
// Adjust the depth range and draw the skybox, ensuring it's behind
// everhting else. This fixes the problem where some things are
// drawn as sky when something else should be drawn. --KB
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
glColor3f (0.5, 0.5, 0.5);
glDepthRange (gldepthmax, gldepthmax);
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
R_DrawSkyBox ();
glDepthRange (gldepthmin, gldepthmax);
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
}
/*
===============
R_MarkLeaves
===============
*/
void R_MarkLeaves (void)
{
byte *vis;
mnode_t *node;
int i;
byte solid[4096];
if (r_oldviewleaf == r_viewleaf && !r_novis->value)
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
return;
if (mirror)
return;
r_visframecount++;
r_oldviewleaf = r_viewleaf;
if (r_novis->value)
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
{
vis = solid;
memset (solid, 0xff, (cl.worldmodel->numleafs+7)>>3);
}
else
vis = Mod_LeafPVS (r_viewleaf, cl.worldmodel);
for (i=0 ; i<cl.worldmodel->numleafs ; i++)
{
if (vis[i>>3] & (1<<(i&7)))
{
node = (mnode_t *)&cl.worldmodel->leafs[i+1];
do
{
if (node->visframe == r_visframecount)
break;
node->visframe = r_visframecount;
node = node->parent;
} while (node);
}
}
}
/*
=============================================================================
LIGHTMAP ALLOCATION
=============================================================================
*/
// returns a texture number and the position inside it
int AllocBlock (int w, int h, int *x, int *y)
{
int i, j;
int best, best2;
int texnum;
for (texnum=0 ; texnum<MAX_LIGHTMAPS ; texnum++)
{
best = BLOCK_HEIGHT;
for (i=0 ; i<BLOCK_WIDTH-w ; i++)
{
best2 = 0;
for (j=0 ; j<w ; j++)
{
if (allocated[texnum][i+j] >= best)
break;
if (allocated[texnum][i+j] > best2)
best2 = allocated[texnum][i+j];
}
if (j == w)
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
{
// this is a valid spot
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
*x = i;
*y = best = best2;
}
}
if (best + h > BLOCK_HEIGHT)
continue;
for (i=0 ; i<w ; i++)
allocated[texnum][*x + i] = best + h;
return texnum;
}
Sys_Error ("AllocBlock: full");
return 0;
}
mvertex_t *r_pcurrentvertbase;
model_t *currentmodel;
int nColinElim;
/*
================
BuildSurfaceDisplayList
================
*/
void BuildSurfaceDisplayList (msurface_t *fa)
{
int i, lindex, lnumverts;
medge_t *pedges, *r_pedge;
int vertpage;
float *vec;
float s, t;
glpoly_t *poly;
// reconstruct the polygon
pedges = currentmodel->edges;
lnumverts = fa->numedges;
vertpage = 0;
//
// draw texture
//
poly = Hunk_Alloc (sizeof(glpoly_t) + (lnumverts-4) * VERTEXSIZE*sizeof(float));
poly->next = fa->polys;
poly->flags = fa->flags;
fa->polys = poly;
poly->numverts = lnumverts;
for (i=0 ; i<lnumverts ; i++)
{
lindex = currentmodel->surfedges[fa->firstedge + i];
if (lindex > 0)
{
r_pedge = &pedges[lindex];
vec = r_pcurrentvertbase[r_pedge->v[0]].position;
}
else
{
r_pedge = &pedges[-lindex];
vec = r_pcurrentvertbase[r_pedge->v[1]].position;
}
s = DotProduct (vec, fa->texinfo->vecs[0]) + fa->texinfo->vecs[0][3];
s /= fa->texinfo->texture->width;
t = DotProduct (vec, fa->texinfo->vecs[1]) + fa->texinfo->vecs[1][3];
t /= fa->texinfo->texture->height;
VectorCopy (vec, poly->verts[i]);
poly->verts[i][3] = s;
poly->verts[i][4] = t;
//
// lightmap texture coordinates
//
s = DotProduct (vec, fa->texinfo->vecs[0]) + fa->texinfo->vecs[0][3];
s -= fa->texturemins[0];
s += fa->light_s*16;
s += 8;
s /= BLOCK_WIDTH*16; //fa->texinfo->texture->width;
t = DotProduct (vec, fa->texinfo->vecs[1]) + fa->texinfo->vecs[1][3];
t -= fa->texturemins[1];
t += fa->light_t*16;
t += 8;
t /= BLOCK_HEIGHT*16; //fa->texinfo->texture->height;
poly->verts[i][5] = s;
poly->verts[i][6] = t;
}
//
// remove co-linear points - Ed
//
if (!gl_keeptjunctions->value && !(fa->flags & SURF_UNDERWATER) )
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
{
for (i = 0 ; i < lnumverts ; ++i)
{
vec3_t v1, v2;
float *prev, *this, *next;
prev = poly->verts[(i + lnumverts - 1) % lnumverts];
this = poly->verts[i];
next = poly->verts[(i + 1) % lnumverts];
VectorSubtract( this, prev, v1 );
VectorNormalize( v1 );
VectorSubtract( next, prev, v2 );
VectorNormalize( v2 );
// skip co-linear points
# define COLINEAR_EPSILON 0.001
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
if ((fabs( v1[0] - v2[0] ) <= COLINEAR_EPSILON) &&
(fabs( v1[1] - v2[1] ) <= COLINEAR_EPSILON) &&
(fabs( v1[2] - v2[2] ) <= COLINEAR_EPSILON))
{
int j;
for (j = i + 1; j < lnumverts; ++j)
{
int k;
for (k = 0; k < VERTEXSIZE; ++k)
poly->verts[j - 1][k] = poly->verts[j][k];
}
--lnumverts;
++nColinElim;
// retry next vertex next time, which is now current vertex
--i;
}
}
}
poly->numverts = lnumverts;
}
/*
========================
GL_CreateSurfaceLightmap
========================
*/
void GL_CreateSurfaceLightmap (msurface_t *surf)
{
int smax, tmax;
byte *base;
if (surf->flags & (SURF_DRAWSKY|SURF_DRAWTURB))
return;
smax = (surf->extents[0]>>4)+1;
tmax = (surf->extents[1]>>4)+1;
surf->lightmaptexturenum = AllocBlock (smax, tmax, &surf->light_s, &surf->light_t);
base = lightmaps + surf->lightmaptexturenum*lightmap_bytes*BLOCK_WIDTH*BLOCK_HEIGHT;
base += (surf->light_t * BLOCK_WIDTH + surf->light_s) * lightmap_bytes;
R_BuildLightMap (surf, base, BLOCK_WIDTH*lightmap_bytes);
}
/*
==================
GL_BuildLightmaps
Builds the lightmap texture
with all the surfaces from all brush models
==================
*/
void GL_BuildLightmaps (void)
{
int i, j;
model_t *m;
memset (allocated, 0, sizeof(allocated));
r_framecount = 1; // no dlightcache
if (!lightmap_textures)
{
lightmap_textures = texture_extension_number;
texture_extension_number += MAX_LIGHTMAPS;
}
gl_colorlights = Cvar_Get ("gl_colorlights", "1", CVAR_ROM,
"Whether to use RGBA lightmaps or not");
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
if (gl_colorlights->value)
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
{
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
gl_lightmap_format = GL_RGB;
lightmap_bytes = 3;
} else {
gl_lightmap_format = GL_LUMINANCE;
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
lightmap_bytes = 1;
}
for (j=1 ; j<MAX_MODELS ; j++)
{
m = cl.model_precache[j];
if (!m)
break;
if (m->name[0] == '*')
continue;
r_pcurrentvertbase = m->vertexes;
currentmodel = m;
for (i=0 ; i<m->numsurfaces ; i++)
{
GL_CreateSurfaceLightmap (m->surfaces + i);
if ( m->surfaces[i].flags & SURF_DRAWTURB )
continue;
if ( m->surfaces[i].flags & SURF_DRAWSKY )
continue;
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
GL_CreateSurfaceLightmap (m->surfaces + i);
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
BuildSurfaceDisplayList (m->surfaces + i);
}
}
if (!gl_texsort->value)
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
GL_SelectTexture(TEXTURE1_SGIS);
//
// upload all lightmaps that were filled
//
for (i=0 ; i<MAX_LIGHTMAPS ; i++)
{
if (!allocated[i][0])
break; // no more used
lightmap_modified[i] = false;
lightmap_rectchange[i].l = BLOCK_WIDTH;
lightmap_rectchange[i].t = BLOCK_HEIGHT;
lightmap_rectchange[i].w = 0;
lightmap_rectchange[i].h = 0;
GL_Bind(lightmap_textures + i);
glTexParameterf(GL_TEXTURE_2D, GL_TEXTURE_MIN_FILTER, GL_LINEAR);
glTexParameterf(GL_TEXTURE_2D, GL_TEXTURE_MAG_FILTER, GL_LINEAR);
This is a NON-TRIVIAL update which took LordHavoc and I about 3 days to make work properly: Win32 thing.. If you don't free textures explicitly, you can cause a problem with nVidia drivers. Colored lighting is now RGB instead of RGBA. The alpha is kinda pointless on a lightmap and the effect's not all that great. Plus people stuck with 16 bit OpenGL (any other 3dfx people out there?) will be quite pleased with the improvement in image quality. This does include LordHavoc's dynamic light optimization code which takes most of the pain out of having gl_flashblend off. All glColor*'s are now half of what they used to be, except where they aren't. If that doesn't make sense, don't worry. If you see one that's only half what you'd expect, don't worry---it probably is meant to be like that.. (More below) glDisable (GL_BLEND) is now a thing of the GL_PAST. As is GL_REPLACE. Instead, we _always_ use GL_MODULATE and leave GL_BLEND turned on. This seems at first like it might be a performance hit, but I swear it's much more expensive to change blending modes and texture functions 20-30 times every screen frame! Win32 issue.. Even though we check for multitexture, we currently don't use it. Reason is that I am planning to replace SGIS_multitexture with the preferred ARB_multitexture extension which is supported in most GL 1.1 implementations and is a requirement for GL 1.2 anyway. I also wanted to get rid of some duplicated code. Since Linux doesn't support multitexture yet, I just commented out the code keeping me from compiling to get it to work. Win32 should work without it until it's fixed, which shouldn't be long since the differences between SGIS and ARB multitextures as far as Quake is concerned is minimal AT BEST. LordHavoc and I have been working tirelessly (well not quite, we both did manage to sleep sometime during this ordeal) to fix the lighting in the GL renderers! It looks DAMNED CLOSE to software's lighting now, including the ability to overbright a color. You've gotta see this to know what I'm talking about. That's why the glColor*'s are halved in most places. The gamma table code and the general way it works is LordHavoc's design, but over the course of re-implementing it in QF we did come up with a few more small optimizations. A lot of people have noticed that QF's fps count has gone to shit lately. No promises that this undid whatever the problem was. That means there could be a huge optimization lurking somewhere in the shadows, waiting for us to fix it for a massive FPS boost. Even if there's not, the code in this commit DOUBLED MY FPS COUNT. Granted I was getting pathetic FPS as it was (around 30, which is pathetic even for a Voodoo3 in Linux) but still---60 is a big improvement over 30! Please be sure to "test" this code thuroughly.
2000-06-03 19:56:09 +00:00
glTexImage2D (GL_TEXTURE_2D, 0, lightmap_bytes, BLOCK_WIDTH,
BLOCK_HEIGHT, 0, gl_lightmap_format,
GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE, lightmaps +
i*BLOCK_WIDTH*BLOCK_HEIGHT*lightmap_bytes);
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
}
if (!gl_texsort->value)
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
GL_SelectTexture(TEXTURE0_SGIS);
}