Wrapper functions were broken on builds that forced -fno-omit-frame-pointer flag.
Change-Id: I5a80f9587fb3db821b4156af56acda59a0b4579b
Signed-off-by: Michal Wajdeczko <michal.wajdeczko@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Yong Yao <yong.yao@intel.com>
There was no explicit support for x86/64 architecture in EGL/GLES wrappers.
This resulted either in failures or sub-optimal implementation of the wrapper functions.
Change-Id: I20d99d7372fbf642ee4b94a05c8cb971cba29988
Signed-off-by: Wajdeczko, Michal <michal.wajdeczko@intel.com>
in the common case this saves one instructions per jump
(which will help with the i-cache).
this change also gets rid of the "use slow tls" option,
which was useless. So at least now architectures that don't have
assembly bindings will perform much better.
Change-Id: I31be6c06ad2136b50ef3a1ac14682d7812ad40d2
this simplify our EGL wrapper implementation a lot.
This wrapping is no longer needed now that we can only
support a single underlaying EGL implementation.
Change-Id: I8213df7ac69daac447f1fe6e37044b78aac4e9a9
This extension is always added to the GL_EXTENSIONS
extension string for the current GL context, regardless
of if it's supported by the h/w driver.
The extension itself will be handled by GLES_trace (eventually),
when GLES_trace is not enabled, it'll result to a no-op.
If the h/w implementation has this extension, we'll call that version
instead of our dummy version.
Change-Id: Ie5dd3387c4d45cd5ed5f03b73bda6045620a96bc
it turns out that we cannot return INVALID_OPERATION from glGetError() because the
GL spec says that it must be called in a loop until it returns GL_NO_ERROR.
now, we always return 0 from GL functions called from a thread with no
context bound. This means that glGetError() will return NO_ERROR in this case,
which is better than returning a random value (which could trap the app in a loop).
if this happens in the main thread of a process, we LOG an error message once.
Change-Id: Id59620e675a890286ef62a257c02b06e0fdcaf69
glEGLImageTargetRenderbufferOES() pass the wrapped EGLImage
to the implementation, rather than the unwrapped one.
Change-Id: I149f9ed73e6ab9089110600e1db4311ba7a8c83a
Adds support for formerly-unimplemented methods:
glCurrentPaletteMatrixOES
glLoadPaletteFromModelViewMatrixOES
glMatrixIndexPointerOES
glWeightPointerOES
The bulk of the changes are related to implementing the two PointerOES
methods, which are implemented pretty much the same way as the existing
Pointer methods were implemented.
This change also changes the way glPointSizePointerOES is implemented,
making it act like all the other Pointer methods. (Previously it was
not handling non-direct-buffer arguments correctly.)
Fixes bug 2308625 "Support matrix palette skinning
in JSR239 and related APIs"
Also updated GLLogWraper to fix two bugs in GLLogWrapper that were
discovered while testing matrix palette skinning support:
a) Handle trying to print the contents of null-but-enabled buffers.
(It's not legal to draw with null-but-enabled buffers, and
in fact some OpenGL drivers will crash if you try to render in this
state, but there's no reason the GLLogWrapper should crash while trying
to debug this situation.
b) Don't read off the end of a vertex buffer with non-zero position when
printing the entire contents of the vertex buffer. Now we only print from
the current position to the end of the buffer.