qzdoom/docs
Randy Heit 1acc3d00c4 - Discovered that Shader Model 1.4 clamps my constants, so I can't use
palettes smaller than 256 entries with the shader I wrote for it. Is there
  a list of gotchas like this listed some where? I'd really like to see it.
  
  Well, when compiled with SM2.0, the PalTex shader seems to be every-so-
  slightly faster on my GF7950GT than the SM1.4 version, so I guess it's a
  minor win for cards that support it.
- Fixed: ST_Endoom() failed to free the bitmap it used.
- Added the DTA_ColorOverlay attribute to blend a color with the texture
  being drawn. For software, this (currently) only works with black. For
  hardware, it works with any color. The motiviation for this was so I could
  rewrite the status bar calls that passed DIM_MAP to DTA_Translation to
  draw darker icons into something that didn't require making a whole new
  remap table.
- After having an "OMG! How could I have been so stupid?" moment, I have
  removed the off-by-one check from D3DFB. I had thought the off-by-one error
  was caused by rounding errors by the shader hardware. Not so. Rather, I
  wasn't sampling what I thought I was sampling. A texture that uses palette
  index 255 passes the value 1.0 to the shader. The shader needs to adjust the
  range of its palette indexes, or it will end up trying to read color 256
  from the palette texture when it should be reading color 255. Doh!
- The TranslationToTable() function has been added to map from translation
  numbers used by actors to the tables those numbers represent. This function
  performs validation for the input and returns NULL if the input value
  is invalid.
- Major changes to the way translation tables work: No longer are they each a
  256-byte array. Instead, the FRemapTable structure is used to represent each
  one. It includes a remap array for the software renderer, a palette array
  for a hardware renderer, and a native texture pointer for D3DFB. The
  translationtables array itself is now an array of TArrays that point to the
  real tables. The DTA_Translation attribute must also be passed a pointer
  to a FRemapTable, not a byte array as previously.
- Modified DFrameBuffer::DrawRateStuff() so that it can do its thing properly
  for D3DFB's 2D mode. Before, any fullscreen graphics (like help images)
  covered it up.


SVN r640 (trunk)
2007-12-26 04:42:15 +00:00
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rh-log.txt - Discovered that Shader Model 1.4 clamps my constants, so I can't use 2007-12-26 04:42:15 +00:00
zdoom.txt Directory restructuring to make it easier to version projects that don't build zdoom.exe. 2006-02-24 04:48:15 +00:00

README: glDOOM

I never got around to do anything with respect to
a Linux glDOOM port except for assembling a Linux3Dfx
HOWTO (which, at that time, was a prerequisite
to get permission to publicly distribute the
already finished LinuxGlide port by Daryll Strauss).

Linux q2test (and soon LinuxQuake2) demonstrate that
Mesa with the MesaVoodoo driver is quite up to the
requirements for a glDOOM port. If anybody wants to
get into Linux glDOOM, please drop me a line.

There is a Win32 GLDOOM port in the works, by Jim Dose.
Quoting a recent posting by him:

"I haven't had as much time lately to really work on
the conversion. I currently have the renderer drawing
the walls and floors as texture spans as the are in
the software renderer. There's lighting on the walls,
but not the floors, and sprites are being drawn, but
not with the right texture. I figure that this is one
nights work to get the game looking "normal". I haven't
tested the game on less than a p200, so I'm not sure
how it will perform under the average machine, but I
don't expect it to be blindingly fast because of the
number of spans that have to be drawn each frame.
Rendering as polys is definitely the way to go.

The reason I chose to do spans first was because it
left the base renderer intact and I could concentrate
on ironing out any Windows compatibility problems.
Actually, the first version I had running was simply
a blit of the 320x200 game screen through Open GL.
Surprisingly, this actually was very playable, but
certainly wasn't taking any advantage of 3D acceleration.
Once the game was running, I started converting all
the span routines over."

Comment: for merging Linuxdoom with Win32, this is
probably the best source for getting the Win32
environment done - before more significant changes
occur.

"One problem with drawing spans is that the engine
doesn't calculate the texture coordinates with
fractional accuracy, so the bilinear filtering works
vertically, but not horizontally on the walls. I may
try to fix this, but since I plan to use polys for
the final version, it's not really high priority.
Also, spans don't really allow for looking up and
down."

Comment: true looking up/down vs. Heretic-style
y-shearing seems to require either a strange kind
of transofrmation matrix (he probably does not use
the OpenGL transformation at all), or rendering
all the spans as textured rectangular slices
instead of using glDrawBitmap. No, polys are the
way to go.
   
"When I tackle the conversion to polys, one big problem
I'll encounter is drawing floors. Since the world is
stored in a 2D bsp tree, there is no information on
the shape of the floors. In fact the floors can be
concave and may include holes (typically, most renderers
break concave polys down into a collection of convex
polys or triangles). In software, the floors are actually
drawn using an algorithm that's similar to a flood fill
(except that a list of open spans is kept instead of a
buffer of pixels).  This makes drawing the floors as
polys fairly difficult."

A polygon based approach will require significant changes
to the data structures used in the refresh module. I
recommend either separating a libref_soft.so first (a
Quake2 like approach), and creating libref_gl afterwards,
or abandoning the software rendering entirely.

John Carmack wrote once upon a time:
"... the U64 DOOM engine is much more what I would consider
The Right Thing now -- it turns the subsector boundaries
into polygons for the floors and ceilings ahead of time,
then for rendering it walks the BSP front to back, doing
visibility determination of subsectors by the one dimensional
occlusion buffer and clipping sprites into subsectors, then
it goes backwards through the visible subsectors, drawing
floors, ceilings, walls, then sorted internal sprite fragments.
It's a ton simpler and a ton faster, although it does suffer
some overdraw when a high subsector overlooks a low one (but
that is more than made up for by the simplicity of everything
else)."

Well, IMO compiling a separate list of floor/ceiling polygons
after having read the WAD file, and thus introducing this as
a completely separate data structure to the current code base
might be the easiest thing to do. Jim Dose writes:

"One method I may use to draw the floors as polys was suggested
by Billy Zelsnack of Rebel Boat Rocker when we were working
at 3D Realms together a few years ago. Basically, Billy was
designing an engine that dealt with the world in a 2D portal
format similar to the one that Build used, except that it had
true looking up and down (no shearing). Since floors were
basically implicit and could be concave, Billy drew them as
if the walls extended downwards to infinity, but fixed the
texture coordinates to appear that they were on the plane of
the floor. The effect was that you could look up and down and
there were no gaps or overdraw. It's a fairly clever method
and allows you to store the world in a simpler data format.
Had perspective texture mapping been fast enough back then,
both Build and Doom could have done this in software."

Perhaps the above is sufficient to get you started.
Other Issues:

1. Occlusion
DOOM uses a per-column lookup (top/bottom index) to do HLHSR.
This works fine with span based rendering (well, getting
horizontal spans of floors/ceilings into the picture is a
separate story). It isn't really mindboggling with polygon
based rendering. GLDOOM should abandon that.

2. Precalculated Visibility
DOOM has the data used by Quake's PVS - in REJECT.
During Quake development, lots of replacements for the
occlusion buffer were tried, and PVS turned out to be best.
I suggest usind the REJECT as PVS.

There have been special effects using a utility named RMB.
REJECT is a lump meant for enemy AI LoS calculation - a
nonstandard REJECT will not work as a PVS, and introduce
rendering errors. I suggest looking for a PVS lump in the
WAD, and using REJECT if none is found. That way, it might
be feasible to eat the cake and keep it.

3. Mipmaps
DOOM does not have mipmapping. As we have 8bit palettized
textures, OpenGL mipmapping might not give the desired
results. Plus, composing textures from patches at runtime
would require runtime mipmapping. Precalculated mipmaps
in the WAD?

4. Sprites
Partly transparent textures and sprites impose another
problem related to mipmapping. Without alpha channel,
this could give strange results. Precalculated, valid
sprite mipmaps (w/o alpha)?