newtree/source/gl_rmain.c

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/*
gl_rmain.c
(description)
Copyright (C) 1996-1997 Id Software, Inc.
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"
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#endif
#include <math.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include "qargs.h"
#include "bothdefs.h"
#include "commdef.h"
#include "console.h"
#include "glquake.h"
#include "model.h"
#include "render.h"
#include "sys.h"
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
entity_t r_worldentity;
qboolean r_cache_thrash; // compatability
vec3_t modelorg, r_entorigin;
entity_t *currententity;
int r_visframecount; // bumped when going to a new PVS
int r_framecount; // used for dlight push checking
mplane_t frustum[4];
int c_brush_polys, c_alias_polys;
qboolean envmap; // true during envmap command capture
int particletexture; // little dot for particles
int playertextures; // up to 16 color translated skins
int mirrortexturenum; // quake texturenum, not gltexturenum
qboolean mirror;
mplane_t *mirror_plane;
//
// view origin
//
vec3_t vup;
vec3_t vpn;
vec3_t vright;
vec3_t r_origin;
float r_world_matrix[16];
float r_base_world_matrix[16];
//
// screen size info
//
refdef_t r_refdef;
mleaf_t *r_viewleaf, *r_oldviewleaf;
int d_lightstylevalue[256]; // 8.8 fraction of base light value
void R_MarkLeaves (void);
cvar_t *r_norefresh;
cvar_t *r_drawentities;
cvar_t *r_drawviewmodel;
cvar_t *r_speeds;
cvar_t *r_fullbright;
cvar_t *r_lightmap;
cvar_t *r_shadows;
cvar_t *r_mirroralpha;
cvar_t *r_wateralpha;
cvar_t *r_dynamic;
cvar_t *r_novis;
cvar_t *r_netgraph;
cvar_t *gl_clear;
cvar_t *gl_cull;
cvar_t *gl_texsort;
cvar_t *gl_smoothmodels;
cvar_t *gl_affinemodels;
cvar_t *gl_polyblend;
cvar_t *gl_flashblend;
cvar_t *gl_playermip;
cvar_t *gl_nocolors;
cvar_t *gl_keeptjunctions;
cvar_t *gl_reporttjunctions;
cvar_t *gl_finish;
cvar_t *r_skyname;
extern cvar_t *gl_ztrick;
extern cvar_t *scr_fov;
extern byte gammatable[256];
static float vid_gamma = 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
/*
GL_CheckGamma
More or less redesigned by LordHavoc
*/
void
GL_CheckGamma (unsigned char *pal)
{
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 inf;
int i;
if ((i = COM_CheckParm("-gamma")) == 0) {
if ((gl_renderer && strstr(gl_renderer, "Voodoo")) ||
(gl_vendor && strstr(gl_vendor, "3Dfx")))
vid_gamma = 1;
else
vid_gamma = 0.7; // default to 0.7 on non-3dfx hardware
} else
vid_gamma = atof(com_argv[i+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
// build the gamma table
if (vid_gamma == 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
// screw the math
for (i = 0; i < 256; i++)
gammatable[i] = i;
} else {
for (i = 0; i < 256; i++)
{
inf = pow((i+1)/256.0, vid_gamma)*255 + 0.5;
inf = bound(0, inf, 255);
gammatable[i] = inf;
}
}
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
// correct the palette
for (i = 0; i < 768; i++)
pal[i] = gammatable[pal[i]];
}
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
/*
=================
R_CullBox
Returns true if the box is completely outside the frustom
=================
*/
qboolean R_CullBox (vec3_t mins, vec3_t maxs)
{
int i;
for (i=0 ; i<4 ; i++)
if (BoxOnPlaneSide (mins, maxs, &frustum[i]) == 2)
return true;
return false;
}
void R_RotateForEntity (entity_t *e)
{
glTranslatef (e->origin[0], e->origin[1], e->origin[2]);
glRotatef (e->angles[1], 0, 0, 1);
glRotatef (-e->angles[0], 0, 1, 0);
//ZOID: fixed z angle
glRotatef (e->angles[2], 1, 0, 0);
}
/*
=============================================================
SPRITE MODELS
=============================================================
*/
/*
================
R_GetSpriteFrame
================
*/
mspriteframe_t *R_GetSpriteFrame (entity_t *currententity)
{
msprite_t *psprite;
mspritegroup_t *pspritegroup;
mspriteframe_t *pspriteframe;
int i, numframes, frame;
float *pintervals, fullinterval, targettime, time;
psprite = currententity->model->cache.data;
frame = currententity->frame;
if ((frame >= psprite->numframes) || (frame < 0))
{
Con_Printf ("R_DrawSprite: no such frame %d\n", frame);
frame = 0;
}
if (psprite->frames[frame].type == SPR_SINGLE)
{
pspriteframe = psprite->frames[frame].frameptr;
}
else
{
pspritegroup = (mspritegroup_t *)psprite->frames[frame].frameptr;
pintervals = pspritegroup->intervals;
numframes = pspritegroup->numframes;
fullinterval = pintervals[numframes-1];
time = cl.time + currententity->syncbase;
// when loading in Mod_LoadSpriteGroup, we guaranteed all interval values
// are positive, so we don't have to worry about division by 0
targettime = time - ((int)(time / fullinterval)) * fullinterval;
for (i=0 ; i<(numframes-1) ; i++)
{
if (pintervals[i] > targettime)
break;
}
pspriteframe = pspritegroup->frames[i];
}
return pspriteframe;
}
/*
=================
R_DrawSpriteModel
=================
*/
void R_DrawSpriteModel (entity_t *e)
{
vec3_t point;
mspriteframe_t *frame;
float *up, *right;
vec3_t v_forward, v_right, v_up;
msprite_t *psprite;
// don't even bother culling, because it's just a single
// polygon without a surface cache
frame = R_GetSpriteFrame (e);
psprite = currententity->model->cache.data;
if (psprite->type == SPR_ORIENTED)
{ // bullet marks on walls
AngleVectors (currententity->angles, v_forward, v_right, v_up);
up = v_up;
right = v_right;
}
else
{ // normal sprite
up = vup;
right = vright;
}
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);
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
GL_DisableMultitexture();
glBindTexture (GL_TEXTURE_2D, frame->gl_texturenum);
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
glEnable (GL_ALPHA_TEST);
glBegin (GL_QUADS);
glEnable (GL_ALPHA_TEST);
glBegin (GL_QUADS);
glTexCoord2f (0, 1);
VectorMA (e->origin, frame->down, up, point);
VectorMA (point, frame->left, right, point);
glVertex3fv (point);
glTexCoord2f (0, 0);
VectorMA (e->origin, frame->up, up, point);
VectorMA (point, frame->left, right, point);
glVertex3fv (point);
glTexCoord2f (1, 0);
VectorMA (e->origin, frame->up, up, point);
VectorMA (point, frame->right, right, point);
glVertex3fv (point);
glTexCoord2f (1, 1);
VectorMA (e->origin, frame->down, up, point);
VectorMA (point, frame->right, right, point);
glVertex3fv (point);
glEnd ();
glDisable (GL_ALPHA_TEST);
}
/*
=============================================================
ALIAS MODELS
=============================================================
*/
#define NUMVERTEXNORMALS 162
float r_avertexnormals[NUMVERTEXNORMALS][3] = {
#include "anorms.h"
};
vec3_t shadevector;
float shadelight, ambientlight;
// precalculated dot products for quantized angles
#define SHADEDOT_QUANT 16
float r_avertexnormal_dots[SHADEDOT_QUANT][256] =
#include "anorm_dots.h"
;
float *shadedots = r_avertexnormal_dots[0];
int lastposenum;
/*
=============
GL_DrawAliasFrame
=============
*/
void GL_DrawAliasFrame (aliashdr_t *paliashdr, int posenum)
{
float l;
trivertx_t *verts;
int *order;
int count;
lastposenum = posenum;
verts = (trivertx_t *)((byte *)paliashdr + paliashdr->posedata);
verts += posenum * paliashdr->poseverts;
order = (int *)((byte *)paliashdr + paliashdr->commands);
while (1)
{
// get the vertex count and primitive type
count = *order++;
if (!count)
break; // done
if (count < 0)
{
count = -count;
glBegin (GL_TRIANGLE_FAN);
}
else
glBegin (GL_TRIANGLE_STRIP);
do
{
// texture coordinates come from the draw list
glTexCoord2f (((float *)order)[0], ((float *)order)[1]);
order += 2;
// normals and vertexes come from the frame list
l = shadedots[verts->lightnormalindex] * shadelight;
glColor3f (l, l, l);
glVertex3f (verts->v[0], verts->v[1], verts->v[2]);
verts++;
} while (--count);
glEnd ();
}
}
/*
=============
GL_DrawAliasShadow
=============
*/
extern vec3_t lightspot;
void GL_DrawAliasShadow (aliashdr_t *paliashdr, int posenum)
{
trivertx_t *verts;
int *order;
vec3_t point;
float height, lheight;
int count;
lheight = currententity->origin[2] - lightspot[2];
height = 0;
verts = (trivertx_t *)((byte *)paliashdr + paliashdr->posedata);
verts += posenum * paliashdr->poseverts;
order = (int *)((byte *)paliashdr + paliashdr->commands);
height = -lheight + 1.0;
while (1)
{
// get the vertex count and primitive type
count = *order++;
if (!count)
break; // done
if (count < 0)
{
count = -count;
glBegin (GL_TRIANGLE_FAN);
}
else
glBegin (GL_TRIANGLE_STRIP);
do
{
// texture coordinates come from the draw list
// (skipped for shadows) glTexCoord2fv ((float *)order);
order += 2;
// normals and vertexes come from the frame list
point[0] = verts->v[0] * paliashdr->scale[0] + paliashdr->scale_origin[0];
point[1] = verts->v[1] * paliashdr->scale[1] + paliashdr->scale_origin[1];
point[2] = verts->v[2] * paliashdr->scale[2] + paliashdr->scale_origin[2];
point[0] -= shadevector[0]*(point[2]+lheight);
point[1] -= shadevector[1]*(point[2]+lheight);
point[2] = height;
// height -= 0.001;
glVertex3fv (point);
verts++;
} while (--count);
glEnd ();
}
}
/*
=================
R_SetupAliasFrame
=================
*/
void R_SetupAliasFrame (int frame, aliashdr_t *paliashdr)
{
int pose, numposes;
float interval;
if ((frame >= paliashdr->numframes) || (frame < 0))
{
Con_DPrintf ("R_AliasSetupFrame: no such frame %d\n", frame);
frame = 0;
}
pose = paliashdr->frames[frame].firstpose;
numposes = paliashdr->frames[frame].numposes;
if (numposes > 1)
{
interval = paliashdr->frames[frame].interval;
pose += (int)(cl.time / interval) % numposes;
}
GL_DrawAliasFrame (paliashdr, pose);
}
/*
=================
R_DrawAliasModel
=================
*/
void R_DrawAliasModel (entity_t *e)
{
int i;
int lnum;
vec3_t dist;
float add;
model_t *clmodel;
vec3_t mins, maxs;
aliashdr_t *paliashdr;
float an;
int anim;
clmodel = currententity->model;
VectorAdd (currententity->origin, clmodel->mins, mins);
VectorAdd (currententity->origin, clmodel->maxs, maxs);
if (R_CullBox (mins, maxs))
return;
VectorCopy (currententity->origin, r_entorigin);
VectorSubtract (r_origin, r_entorigin, modelorg);
//
// get lighting information
//
ambientlight = shadelight = R_LightPoint (currententity->origin);
// allways give the gun some light
if (e == &cl.viewent && ambientlight < 24)
ambientlight = shadelight = 24;
for (lnum=0 ; lnum<MAX_DLIGHTS ; lnum++)
{
if (cl_dlights[lnum].die >= cl.time)
{
VectorSubtract (currententity->origin,
cl_dlights[lnum].origin,
dist);
add = (cl_dlights[lnum].radius * cl_dlights[lnum].radius * 8) / (Length(dist) * Length(dist)); // FIXME Deek
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
if (add > 0) {
ambientlight += add;
//ZOID models should be affected by dlights as well
shadelight += add;
}
}
}
// clamp lighting so it doesn't overbright as much
if (ambientlight > 128)
ambientlight = 128;
if (ambientlight + shadelight > 192)
shadelight = 192 - ambientlight;
// ZOID: never allow players to go totally black
if (!strcmp(clmodel->name, "progs/player.mdl")) {
if (ambientlight < 8)
ambientlight = shadelight = 8;
} else if (!strcmp (clmodel->name, "progs/flame2.mdl")
|| !strcmp (clmodel->name, "progs/flame.mdl") )
// HACK HACK HACK -- no fullbright colors, so make torches full light
ambientlight = shadelight = 256;
shadedots = r_avertexnormal_dots[((int)(e->angles[1] * (SHADEDOT_QUANT / 360.0))) & (SHADEDOT_QUANT - 1)];
shadelight = shadelight / 200.0;
an = e->angles[1]/180*M_PI;
shadevector[0] = cos(-an);
shadevector[1] = sin(-an);
shadevector[2] = 1;
VectorNormalize (shadevector);
//
// locate the proper data
//
paliashdr = (aliashdr_t *)Mod_Extradata (currententity->model);
c_alias_polys += paliashdr->numtris;
//
// draw all the triangles
//
GL_DisableMultitexture();
glPushMatrix ();
R_RotateForEntity (e);
if (!strcmp (clmodel->name, "progs/eyes.mdl") ) {
glTranslatef (paliashdr->scale_origin[0], paliashdr->scale_origin[1], paliashdr->scale_origin[2] - (22 + 8));
// double size of eyes, since they are really hard to see in gl
glScalef (paliashdr->scale[0]*2, paliashdr->scale[1]*2, paliashdr->scale[2]*2);
} else {
glTranslatef (paliashdr->scale_origin[0], paliashdr->scale_origin[1], paliashdr->scale_origin[2]);
glScalef (paliashdr->scale[0], paliashdr->scale[1], paliashdr->scale[2]);
}
anim = (int)(cl.time*10) & 3;
glBindTexture (GL_TEXTURE_2D, paliashdr->gl_texturenum[currententity->skinnum][anim]);
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
// we can't dynamically colormap textures, so they are cached
// seperately for the players. Heads are just uncolored.
if (currententity->scoreboard && !gl_nocolors->value)
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
{
i = currententity->scoreboard - cl.players;
if (!currententity->scoreboard->skin) {
Skin_Find(currententity->scoreboard);
R_TranslatePlayerSkin(i);
}
if (i >= 0 && i<MAX_CLIENTS)
glBindTexture (GL_TEXTURE_2D, playertextures + i);
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}
if (gl_smoothmodels->value)
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glShadeModel (GL_SMOOTH);
if (gl_affinemodels->value)
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glHint (GL_PERSPECTIVE_CORRECTION_HINT, GL_FASTEST);
R_SetupAliasFrame (currententity->frame, paliashdr);
glShadeModel (GL_FLAT);
if (gl_affinemodels->value)
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glHint (GL_PERSPECTIVE_CORRECTION_HINT, GL_NICEST);
glPopMatrix ();
if (r_shadows->value)
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
{
glPushMatrix ();
R_RotateForEntity (e);
glDisable (GL_TEXTURE_2D);
glColor4f (0,0,0,0.5);
GL_DrawAliasShadow (paliashdr, lastposenum);
glEnable (GL_TEXTURE_2D);
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);
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glPopMatrix ();
}
}
//==================================================================================
/*
=============
R_DrawEntitiesOnList
=============
*/
void R_DrawEntitiesOnList (void)
{
int i;
if (!r_drawentities->value)
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
return;
// draw sprites seperately, because of alpha blending
for (i=0 ; i<cl_numvisedicts ; i++)
{
currententity = &cl_visedicts[i];
switch (currententity->model->type)
{
case mod_alias:
R_DrawAliasModel (currententity);
break;
case mod_brush:
R_DrawBrushModel (currententity);
break;
default:
break;
}
}
for (i=0 ; i<cl_numvisedicts ; i++)
{
currententity = &cl_visedicts[i];
switch (currententity->model->type)
{
case mod_sprite:
R_DrawSpriteModel (currententity);
break;
default :
break;
}
}
}
/*
=============
R_DrawViewModel
=============
*/
void R_DrawViewModel (void)
{
float ambient[4], diffuse[4];
int j;
int lnum;
vec3_t dist;
float add;
dlight_t *dl;
int ambientlight, shadelight;
if (!r_drawviewmodel->value || !Cam_DrawViewModel())
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return;
if (envmap)
return;
if (!r_drawentities->value)
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return;
if (cl.stats[STAT_ITEMS] & IT_INVISIBILITY)
return;
if (cl.stats[STAT_HEALTH] <= 0)
return;
currententity = &cl.viewent;
if (!currententity->model)
return;
j = R_LightPoint (currententity->origin);
if (j < 24)
j = 24; // allways give some light on gun
ambientlight = j;
shadelight = j;
// add dynamic lights
for (lnum=0 ; lnum<MAX_DLIGHTS ; lnum++)
{
dl = &cl_dlights[lnum];
if (!dl->radius)
continue;
if (!dl->radius)
continue;
if (dl->die < cl.time)
continue;
VectorSubtract (currententity->origin, dl->origin, dist);
add = (dl->radius * dl->radius * 8) / (Length(dist) * Length(dist)); // FIXME Deek
// add = dl->radius - Length(dist);
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if (add > 0)
ambientlight += add;
}
ambient[0] = ambient[1] = ambient[2] = ambient[3] = (float)ambientlight / 128;
diffuse[0] = diffuse[1] = diffuse[2] = diffuse[3] = (float)shadelight / 128;
// hack the depth range to prevent view model from poking into walls
glDepthRange (gldepthmin, gldepthmin + 0.3*(gldepthmax-gldepthmin));
R_DrawAliasModel (currententity);
glDepthRange (gldepthmin, gldepthmax);
}
/*
============
R_PolyBlend
============
*/
void R_PolyBlend (void)
{
if (!gl_polyblend->value)
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return;
if (!v_blend[3])
return;
//Con_Printf("R_PolyBlend(): %4.2f %4.2f %4.2f %4.2f\n",v_blend[0], v_blend[1], v_blend[2], v_blend[3]);
GL_DisableMultitexture();
glDisable (GL_DEPTH_TEST);
glDisable (GL_TEXTURE_2D);
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
glLoadIdentity ();
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
glRotatef (-90, 1, 0, 0); // put Z going up
glRotatef (90, 0, 0, 1); // put Z going up
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
glBlendFunc (GL_SRC_ALPHA, GL_ONE);
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
// software alpha is about GL alpha squared --KB
// v_blend[3] = sqrt(v_blend[3]);
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
glColor4fv (v_blend);
glBegin (GL_QUADS);
glVertex3f (10, 100, 100);
glVertex3f (10, -100, 100);
glVertex3f (10, -100, -100);
glVertex3f (10, 100, -100);
glEnd ();
glEnable (GL_TEXTURE_2D);
glBlendFunc (GL_SRC_ALPHA, GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA);
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
}
int SignbitsForPlane (mplane_t *out)
{
int bits, j;
// for fast box on planeside test
bits = 0;
for (j=0 ; j<3 ; j++)
{
if (out->normal[j] < 0)
bits |= 1<<j;
}
return bits;
}
void R_SetFrustum (void)
{
int i;
if (r_refdef.fov_x == 90)
{
// front side is visible
VectorAdd (vpn, vright, frustum[0].normal);
VectorSubtract (vpn, vright, frustum[1].normal);
VectorAdd (vpn, vup, frustum[2].normal);
VectorSubtract (vpn, vup, frustum[3].normal);
}
else
{
// rotate VPN right by FOV_X/2 degrees
RotatePointAroundVector( frustum[0].normal, vup, vpn, -(90-r_refdef.fov_x / 2 ) );
// rotate VPN left by FOV_X/2 degrees
RotatePointAroundVector( frustum[1].normal, vup, vpn, 90-r_refdef.fov_x / 2 );
// rotate VPN up by FOV_X/2 degrees
RotatePointAroundVector( frustum[2].normal, vright, vpn, 90-r_refdef.fov_y / 2 );
// rotate VPN down by FOV_X/2 degrees
RotatePointAroundVector( frustum[3].normal, vright, vpn, -( 90 - r_refdef.fov_y / 2 ) );
}
for (i=0 ; i<4 ; i++)
{
frustum[i].type = PLANE_ANYZ;
frustum[i].dist = DotProduct (r_origin, frustum[i].normal);
frustum[i].signbits = SignbitsForPlane (&frustum[i]);
}
}
/*
===============
R_SetupFrame
===============
*/
void R_SetupFrame (void)
{
// don't allow cheats in multiplayer
r_fullbright->value = 0;
r_lightmap->value = 0;
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if (!atoi(Info_ValueForKey(cl.serverinfo, "watervis")))
Cvar_SetValue(r_wateralpha, 1);
2000-05-10 11:29:38 +00:00
R_AnimateLight ();
r_framecount++;
// build the transformation matrix for the given view angles
VectorCopy (r_refdef.vieworg, r_origin);
AngleVectors (r_refdef.viewangles, vpn, vright, vup);
// current viewleaf
r_oldviewleaf = r_viewleaf;
r_viewleaf = Mod_PointInLeaf (r_origin, cl.worldmodel);
V_SetContentsColor (r_viewleaf->contents);
V_CalcBlend ();
r_cache_thrash = false;
c_brush_polys = 0;
c_alias_polys = 0;
}
void MYgluPerspective( GLdouble fovy, GLdouble aspect,
GLdouble zNear, GLdouble zFar )
{
GLdouble xmin, xmax, ymin, ymax;
ymax = zNear * tan( fovy * M_PI / 360.0 );
ymin = -ymax;
xmin = ymin * aspect;
xmax = ymax * aspect;
glFrustum( xmin, xmax, ymin, ymax, zNear, zFar );
}
/*
=============
R_SetupGL
=============
*/
void R_SetupGL (void)
{
float screenaspect;
extern int glwidth, glheight;
int x, x2, y2, y, w, h;
//
// set up viewpoint
//
glMatrixMode(GL_PROJECTION);
glLoadIdentity ();
x = r_refdef.vrect.x * glwidth/vid.width;
x2 = (r_refdef.vrect.x + r_refdef.vrect.width) * glwidth/vid.width;
y = (vid.height-r_refdef.vrect.y) * glheight/vid.height;
y2 = (vid.height - (r_refdef.vrect.y + r_refdef.vrect.height)) * glheight/vid.height;
// fudge around because of frac screen scale
if (x > 0)
x--;
if (x2 < glwidth)
x2++;
if (y2 < 0)
y2--;
if (y < glheight)
y++;
w = x2 - x;
h = y - y2;
if (envmap)
{
x = y2 = 0;
w = h = 256;
}
glViewport (glx + x, gly + y2, w, h);
screenaspect = (float)r_refdef.vrect.width/r_refdef.vrect.height;
// yfov = 2*atan((float)r_refdef.vrect.height/r_refdef.vrect.width)*180/M_PI;
// yfov = (2.0 * tan (scr_fov->value/360*M_PI)) / screenaspect;
// yfov = 2*atan((float)r_refdef.vrect.height/r_refdef.vrect.width)*(scr_fov->value*2)/M_PI;
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// MYgluPerspective (yfov, screenaspect, 4, 4096);
MYgluPerspective (r_refdef.fov_y, screenaspect, 4, 4096);
if (mirror)
{
if (mirror_plane->normal[2])
glScalef (1, -1, 1);
else
glScalef (-1, 1, 1);
glCullFace(GL_BACK);
}
else
glCullFace(GL_FRONT);
glMatrixMode(GL_MODELVIEW);
glLoadIdentity ();
glRotatef (-90, 1, 0, 0); // put Z going up
glRotatef (90, 0, 0, 1); // put Z going up
glRotatef (-r_refdef.viewangles[2], 1, 0, 0);
glRotatef (-r_refdef.viewangles[0], 0, 1, 0);
glRotatef (-r_refdef.viewangles[1], 0, 0, 1);
glTranslatef (-r_refdef.vieworg[0], -r_refdef.vieworg[1], -r_refdef.vieworg[2]);
glGetFloatv (GL_MODELVIEW_MATRIX, r_world_matrix);
//
// set drawing parms
//
if (gl_cull->value)
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glEnable (GL_CULL_FACE);
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else
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glDisable (GL_CULL_FACE);
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glEnable (GL_BLEND);
glDisable (GL_ALPHA_TEST);
glAlphaFunc (GL_GREATER, 0.5);
glEnable (GL_DEPTH_TEST);
glShadeModel (GL_SMOOTH);
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}
/*
================
R_RenderScene
r_refdef must be set before the first call
================
*/
void R_RenderScene (void)
{
R_SetupFrame ();
R_SetFrustum ();
R_SetupGL ();
R_MarkLeaves (); // done here so we know if we're in water
R_DrawWorld (); // adds static entities to the list
S_ExtraUpdate (); // don't let sound get messed up if going slow
R_DrawEntitiesOnList ();
GL_DisableMultitexture();
R_RenderDlights ();
R_DrawParticles ();
#ifdef GLTEST
Test_Draw ();
#endif
}
/*
=============
R_Clear
=============
*/
void R_Clear (void)
{
if (r_mirroralpha->value != 1.0)
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{
if (gl_clear->value)
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glClear (GL_COLOR_BUFFER_BIT | GL_DEPTH_BUFFER_BIT);
else
glClear (GL_DEPTH_BUFFER_BIT);
gldepthmin = 0;
gldepthmax = 0.5;
glDepthFunc (GL_LEQUAL);
}
else if (gl_ztrick->value)
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{
static int trickframe;
if (gl_clear->value)
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glClear (GL_COLOR_BUFFER_BIT);
trickframe++;
if (trickframe & 1)
{
gldepthmin = 0;
gldepthmax = 0.49999;
glDepthFunc (GL_LEQUAL);
}
else
{
gldepthmin = 1;
gldepthmax = 0.5;
glDepthFunc (GL_GEQUAL);
}
}
else
{
if (gl_clear->value)
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glClear (GL_COLOR_BUFFER_BIT | GL_DEPTH_BUFFER_BIT);
else
glClear (GL_DEPTH_BUFFER_BIT);
gldepthmin = 0;
gldepthmax = 1;
glDepthFunc (GL_LEQUAL);
}
glDepthRange (gldepthmin, gldepthmax);
}
#if 0 //!!! FIXME, Zoid, mirror is disabled for now
/*
=============
R_Mirror
=============
*/
void R_Mirror (void)
{
float d;
msurface_t *s;
entity_t *ent;
if (!mirror)
return;
memcpy (r_base_world_matrix, r_world_matrix, sizeof(r_base_world_matrix));
d = DotProduct (r_refdef.vieworg, mirror_plane->normal) - mirror_plane->dist;
VectorMA (r_refdef.vieworg, -2*d, mirror_plane->normal, r_refdef.vieworg);
d = DotProduct (vpn, mirror_plane->normal);
VectorMA (vpn, -2*d, mirror_plane->normal, vpn);
r_refdef.viewangles[0] = -asin (vpn[2])/M_PI*180;
r_refdef.viewangles[1] = atan2 (vpn[1], vpn[0])/M_PI*180;
r_refdef.viewangles[2] = -r_refdef.viewangles[2];
ent = &cl_entities[cl.viewentity];
if (cl_numvisedicts < MAX_VISEDICTS)
{
cl_visedicts[cl_numvisedicts] = ent;
cl_numvisedicts++;
}
gldepthmin = 0.5;
gldepthmax = 1;
glDepthRange (gldepthmin, gldepthmax);
glDepthFunc (GL_LEQUAL);
R_RenderScene ();
R_DrawWaterSurfaces ();
gldepthmin = 0;
gldepthmax = 0.5;
glDepthRange (gldepthmin, gldepthmax);
glDepthFunc (GL_LEQUAL);
// blend on top
glMatrixMode(GL_PROJECTION);
if (mirror_plane->normal[2])
glScalef (1,-1,1);
else
glScalef (-1,1,1);
glCullFace(GL_FRONT);
glMatrixMode(GL_MODELVIEW);
glLoadMatrixf (r_base_world_matrix);
glColor4f (1,1,1,r_mirroralpha->value);
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s = cl.worldmodel->textures[mirrortexturenum]->texturechain;
for ( ; s ; s=s->texturechain)
R_RenderBrushPoly (s);
cl.worldmodel->textures[mirrortexturenum]->texturechain = NULL;
glColor4f (1,1,1,1);
}
#endif
/*
================
R_RenderView
r_refdef must be set before the first call
================
*/
void R_RenderView (void)
{
if (r_norefresh->value)
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return;
if (!r_worldentity.model || !cl.worldmodel)
Sys_Error ("R_RenderView: NULL worldmodel");
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// glFinish ();
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mirror = false;
R_Clear ();
// render normal view
R_RenderScene ();
R_DrawViewModel ();
R_DrawWaterSurfaces ();
// render mirror view
// R_Mirror ();
R_PolyBlend ();
}