This code was written when the window wasn't resizable and didn't actually manage to restore it before. With today's changes this design flaw caused totally incorrect results.
Like Linux and macOS this will only support borderless fullscreen in the active desktop resolution now, which is what modern systems need.
The list of discrete resolutions has been removed as it makes no sense anymore with a fixed video mode - all the other scaling options remain active, though.
At least on faster NVidia hardware, setting this to false and gl_finishbeforeswap to true gives a better experience because it reduces screen tearing - but the same setting will reduce frame rate quite dramatically on Intel and can cause bad stalls on some older GPUs when rendering camera textures.
I did not consider that this is an init-only option. So changing the CVAR may not affect game behavior at all. Instead its value must be moved to some globally accessible variable on startup that never gets changed again.
At least one version of Windows SDK (10.0.17134.0) has broken _pgmptr/_get_pgmptr()
It points to an empty string for multi-byte character set applications
GetModuleFileName() is now used instead regardless of compiler/toolchain
Added extra guard against unexpected program paths to avoid crashes
https://forum.zdoom.org/viewtopic.php?t=60598
They were already deactivated because with 5 render modes present this was destructive, having only 2 options available.
Since the render mode can now be changed on the fly this isn't as critical anymore as it once was.
- with renderers freely switchable, some shortcuts in the 3D floor code had to be removed, because now the hardware renderer can get FF_THISINSIDE-flagged 3D floors.
- changed handling of attenuated lights in the legacy renderer to be adjusted when being rendered instead of when being spawned. For the software renderer the light needs to retain its original values.
This does not work with a setup where the same backend is driving both renderers.
Most of this is now routed through 'screen', and the decision between renderers has to be made inside the actual render functions.
The software renderer is still driven by a thin opaque interface to keep it mostly an isolated module.
This was originally invented to fix the sprite offsets for the hardware renderer.
Changed it so that it doesn't override the original offsets but acts as a second set.
A new CVAR has been added to allow controlling the behavior per renderer.
In its current form this is quite useless. What's really needed is to require a lock on the RenderBuffer for the 3D scene, but since this is not needed for the 2D stuff anymore it can be done far simpler.
This was a bad idea from the start and really only made sense with DirectDraw.
These days a FrameBuffer represents an abstract hardware canvas that shares nothing with a software canvas so having these classes linked together makes things needlessly complicated.
The software render buffer is now a canvas object owned by the FrameBuffer.
Note that this commit deactivates a few things in the software renderer, but from the looks of it none of those will be needed anymore if we set OpenGL 2 as minimum target.