Host_Error and Host_EndGame use setjmp/longjmp to implement an exception
of sorts, but this messes with tracy's state even with cleanup
attributes. However, it turns out that those cleanup attributes are
exactly how gcc implements C++ destructors, and so the standard Unwind
api (part of libgcc) respects them (so long as -fexceptions is enabled
for C). Thus... replace longjmp with an implementation that uses Unwind
to unwind the stack and call the cleanup functions as needed. This is
actually important for more than just tracy as the cleanup attributed
vars can be thread locks.
Tracy is a frame profiler: https://github.com/wolfpld/tracy
This uses Tracy's C API to instrument the code (already added in several
places). It turns out there is something very weird with the fence
behavior between the staging buffers and render commands as the
inter-frame delay occurs in a very strangle place (in the draw code's
packet acquisition rather than the fence waiter that's there for that
purpose). I suspect some tangled dependencies.
Mostly just macro conflicts (and a little white space in passing).
Commits for integrating tracy will come later when I've come up with a
wrapper-api that I like (so non-tracy builds are easy even with tracy
available).
This fixes the weird slug when running nq on windows. It turns out it
was the "friendly neighbor" sleep code activating due to bitrot. In
addition, there are cvars for enabling unfocused sleep (defaults off)
and disabling minimized sleep (defaults on).
A lot is broken, especially direct input, but things are working. Better
yet, it seems the X11 and Windows key bindings are at least mostly
compatible.
The event handling changes take care of VagueLobster's segfaults on
startup for all renderers (vulkan will still be iffy depending on his
hardware: it dies on my GTX 965 M, probably due to memory and QF's
shadows). One nice side effect is it takes care of the broken CD audio
event handling (does anyone even care, though?).
They're not quite working (trail path offset is incorrect) but their
pixels are getting to the screen. Also, lifetimes are off for rocket
trails in that as soon as the entity dies, so does the trail.
Although the model subsystem does this too, it does it too late relative
to the video shutdown, resulting in segfaults for glsl due to the
drivers having been unloaded.
Although the model subsystem does this too, it does it too late relative
to the video shutdown, resulting in segfaults for glsl due to the
drivers having been unloaded.
This gets things *compiling* again, though it's still non-functional and
definitely wrong (don't want trail in renderer_t), but I need to think
about the design for getting trails as components. Also need to think
about integrating trails into the client effects system so trails can be
shared between renderers.
I think I had though it using a constructor init was ok, but it turns
out that was problematic. That, or I missed it in my recent audit. Fixes
a sys syserror during shutdown.
This fixes another segfault on shutdown (not sure just which recent
change caused it, but the listener pointer needed clearing) but while
fixing the listener issue, I noticed that binding and imt shutdown were
in the wrong order with respect to buttons and axes.
Reloading progs (or shutting down) needs to clean up the buttons
otherwise the input system will have issues when it cleans up because
the buttons and axes have ceased to exist.
It turns out that initializing them via constructors led to their
shutdowns happening too late which resulted in problems with button and
axis cleanup.
sincos is just a wrapper around the GNU libc sincos. sincosh is the
equivalent for sinh and cosh, but there doesn't seem to be any such
function, so it's just the two wrapped. They both return their results
in a vec2/vec2d as (sih[h], cos[h]).