Each render backend keeps track of a stack of BlenModes,
which are pushed and popped by 'core' as we render objects
in the displaay tree. For now, I've just implemented BlendMode.ADD,
which maps directly onto blend mode supported by each backend.
All other blend modes (besides 'NORMAL') will produce a warning
when we try to render using them. This may produce a very large amount
of log output, but it's simpler than emitting each warning only once,
and will help to point developers in the right direction when they
get otherwise inexplicable rendering issues (due to a blend mode
not being implemented).
The wgpu implementation is by far the most complicated, as we need
to construct a `RenderPipeline` for each possible
`(BlendMode, MaskState)`. I haven't been able to find any documentation
about the maximum supported number of (simultaneous) WebGPU render
pipelines - if this becomes an issue, we may need to register them
on-demand when a particular blend mode is requested.
This PR implements the 'DisplayObject.transform' getters/setters,
and most of the getters/setters in the `Transform` class
From testing in FP, it appears that each call to the
'DisplayObject.transform' property produces a new
'Transform' instance, which is permanently tied to the
owner 'DisplayObject'. All of the getters/setters in
`Transform` operate directly on owner `DisplayObject`.
However, note that the `Matrix` and `ColorTransform`
valuse *produced* the getter are plain ActionScript objects,
and have no further tie to the `DisplayObject`.
Using the `DisplayObject.transform` setter results in
values being *copied* from the input `Transform` object.
The input object retains its original owner `DisplayObject`.
Not implemented:
* Transform.concatenatedColorTransform
* Transform.pixelBounds
When a DisplayObject is not a descendant of the stage,
the `concatenatedMatrix` property produces a bizarre matrix:
a scale matrix that the depends on the global state quality.
Any DisplayObject that *is* a descendant of the stage has
a `concatenatedMatrix` that does not depend on the stage quality.
I'm not sure why the behavior occurs - for now, I just manually
mimic the values prdduced by FP. However, these values may indicate
that we need to do some internal scaling based on stage quality values,
and then 'undo' this in certain circumstances when constructing
an ActionScript matrix.
Unfortunately, some of the computed 'concatenatedMatrix' values
are off by f32::EPSILON. This is likely due to us storing some
internal values in pixels rather than twips (the rounding introduced
by round-trip twips conversions could cause this slight difference0.
For now, I've opted to mark these tests as 'approximate'.
To support this, I've extended our test framework to support providing
a regex that matches floating-point values in the output. This allows
us to print out 'Matrix.toString()' and still perform approximate
comparisons between strings of the format
'(a=0, b=0, c=0, d=0, tx=0, ty=0)'
This is the last stub needed for Wonderputt to reach the
main game screen.
As far as I know, ActionScript cannot observe a frame being rendered,
so implementing this method isn't actually necessary for correctness.
The benefit of implementing this would be to make certain animations
appear smoother, since we'll render changes to the scene without
needing to wait for the next frame. However, actually rendering
*immediately* after the event would require some refactoring -
we have a `&mut UpdateContext` while running timers, but we'd need
to bail out and obtain a `&mut Player`.
Many of the class property defintiions were wrong -
instance methods were defined as class properties,
and class properties were defined as instance properties.
This allows Wonderputt to get further (it deliberately assigns
'null' to 'URLRequest.data'). We throw an exception for any other
value, to prevent confusing errors caused by attempting an
unexpected request to a web server with a missig body.
We currently lack the ability to preserve the original
`Value<'gc>` in the error, so we're forced to stringify the error.
This means that only typeless 'catch' blocks will work properly -
however, they're the only kind of 'catch' block that we currently
implement. Implementing support for typed 'catch' blocks will naturally
allow us to preserve the original 'Value<'gc>' in the 'throw'
implementation, since we'll need to switch to a custom `Error<'gc>`
type.
* avm2: Include class name in ScriptObject debug
Currently, the `ScriptObject` debug impl is almost useless -
while you determine if two printed objects are the same
by comparing the pointer value, you'll have no idea what
kind of object it actually is.
This PR now formats the `ScriptObject` output as a struct,
printing a (fake) "class" field containing the class name.
Before/after:
```
[ERROR ruffle_core::avm2::activation] AVM2 error: Cannot coerce Object(ScriptObject(ScriptObject(GcCell(Gc { ptr: 0x55f863936db8 })))) to an QName { ns: Private("Test.as$38"), name: "Second" }
[ERROR ruffle_core::avm2::activation] AVM2 error: Cannot coerce Object(ScriptObject(ScriptObject { class: "Object", ptr: 0x55ee0ad161e0 })) to an QName { ns: Private("Test.as$38"), name: "Second" }
```
Getting access to the class name from a `Debug` impl is tricky:
Developers can (and should be able to) insert logging statements
whereever they want, so any `GcCell` may be mutably borrowed.
Panics in debug impls are extremely frustrating to deal with,
so I've ensured that we only use `try_borrow` at each step.
If any of the attempted borrows fail, we print out an error message
in the "class_name" field, but we're still able to print the
rest of the `ScriptObject`.
Additionally, we have no access to a `MutationContext`, so we
cannot allocate a new `AvmString`. To get around this,
I've created a new method `QName::to_qualified_name_no_mc`,
which uses an `Either` to return a `WString` instead of allocating
an `AvmString`. This is more cumbersome to work with than the
nrmal `QName::to_qualified_name`, so we'll only want to use
it when we have no other choice.
An exception thrown by one event handler shoud not prevent other event
handlers from running on this same event. Some SWFs like Wonderputt
depend on this behavior, as they have buggy event handlers that throw
errors.
Calling `get_trait` copies the returned `Property`, so the caching
we performed in `PropertyClass` was never actually getting used.
Instead, we now store our `PropertyClass` values in a `Vec`
indexed by slot id. `set_property` and `init_property` now perform
coercions by going through the `VTable,` which writes the updated
`PropertyClass` back into the array.
FP allows code like
`class Foo { static var INSTANCE: Foo = new Foo(); }`
However, this breaks our current property type coercion setup -
we cannot resolve the type `Foo` when setting the property `INSTANCE`,
since `Foo` is still being constructed.
Fortunately, we can perform this 'coercion' by just checking if
the object's class name and domain match the type name and domain
of the property.
This returns the approximate interval that the audio backend
updates the sound position information. This is used for syncing
animation to embedded "stream" audio tracks, and fixes some
stuttering in cases where the syncing was being too strict.
Previously, we would create a fresh `LoaderInfo` object each
time the `loaderInfo` property was accessed. However, users can
add event handlers to a `LoaderInfo`, so we need to create and
store exactly one `LoaderInfo` object per movie (and stage).
To verify that we're correctly handling the storage of `LoaderInfo`,
I've implemented firing the "init" event. This required a new
`on_frame_exit` hook, so that we can properly fire the "init"
event after the "exitFrame" for the initial frame but before
the "enterFrame" of the next frame.
The current 'setInterval/setTimeout' implementation is
moved to 'core/src/timers.rs', and now works with both
AVM1 and AVM2 objects. The `flash.utils.Timer` class is implemented
mostly in ActionScript, with minimal modifications to the actual
Ruffle timer code.
* avm2: implement string replace where pattern is string and replacement is a function
* * removed unnecessary vec!
* fixed "no newline at the end of file"
This commit adds support for combining instance allocators with
ActionScript playerglobal class definitions. This is activated
by defining the metadata `[Ruffle(InstanceAllocator = "true")]`
on the ActionScript class definition.
The implementation of this feature is very similar to native methods:
`build_playerglobal` checks for the metadata described above,
and defines a const `NATIVE_INSTANCE_ALLOCATOR_TABLE` mapping
class ids to function pointers.
To demonstrate this feature, I've converted `Event` to ActionScript
(keeping the existing instance allocator function).
I've also converted `ActivityEvent` and `ContextMenuEvent` to
`ActionScript`, to demonstrate how this simplifies inheritance.
In a future PR, we can convert the remaining events to ActionScript,
and remove the `EventData` enum entirely.
Unfortunately, `flex-sdk`'s `asc.jar` compiler strips out all metadata
when the `-optimize` option is passed. As a result, I forked
`flex-sdk` and disabled this behavior:
https://github.com/ruffle-rs/flex-sdk/releases/tag/ruffle-1.0.0
The modified `asc.jar` (built from the forked repository)
is included in this PR, and replaces the our previous 'asc.jar'
downloaded from the official Flex SDK release.
* Change metadata to `[Ruffle(InstanceAllocator)]`
* Strip out metadata before saving bytecode
* avm2: implement string.replace(...) with fn, for now regex only.
* string - added path for replacing regex with fn (replacing string
with fn is still unimplemented)
* regex - factored out common replace logic for when replacement is
a string and when it is a function
* added tests
* Addressed review comments
* removed tinkering cruft; formatting
* addressed review comments
This commit adds support for marking methods as `native`
in ActionScript classes defined in playerglobal. The
`build_playerglobal` now checks for native methods, and
generates Rust code linking them to a corresponding Rust
function definition in the codebase.
To test this functionality, I've reimplemented several
functions as native methods (and moved related code to
pure ActionScript).
* avm2: implement string.split for regex
* Compressed the testing for regexp and unwrapping thereof
* * Moved the split logic into the regex object
* Factored out a method for utf-16 matching
* Added tests
* formatting
* * replaced manual counting with storage.length()
* clippy cleanup
* Address review comments
* fix import path for WString
* remove redundant variable in return statement
* error passing via '?' instead of unwrap()
Though https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/8355 has been
merged, it seems to still report false-positives on nightly channel.
For now just fix the instances reported by stable clippy, and keep
`needless_borrow` allowed.
The register index was not being increment when preloading the
`super` register which would cause issues when multiple registers
were preloaded.
Fixes#7338.
Alongside comment wordings, fix handling of non-`u8` characters by
replacing `as u8` conversions with `u8::try_from()`, that doesn't
wrap around, but rather fails gracefully.
Based on the work in #6717, plus additional adaptions mentioned in
https://github.com/gfx-rs/wgpu/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md#wgpu-013-2022-06-30,
and more not-mentioned but required changes.
Also bump `wasm-bindgen` to `0.2.81` (along with its helper crates), as
required by the new `wgpu` version.
Note that I don't fully understand some of the required changes, notably:
* `wgpu::PresentMode::Mailbox` no longer works on my machine (Windows 11) -
The `wgpu` documentation says that `wgpu::PresentMode::Fifo` is the
only guaranteed to be supported, so I switched over to it instead.
* `self.staging_belt.recall()` doesn't return a `Future` anymore -
I assume it became synchronous so I simply removed the `executor`
from there.
Properties can be declared with a type
(e.g. `var foo:MyClass = new MyClass();`). When
`set_property`/`init_property` is invoked for that property,
the VM will attempt to coerce the value to the provided type,
throwing an error if this fails. This can have observable behavior
consequences - if a property has type `integer`, for example, then
storing a floating point `Number` to that property will cause the
value to be coerced to an integer. Some SWFs (e.g. 'Solarmax') rely
on this behavior in order to implicitly coerce a floating point value
that's later used for array indexing.
This PR implements property type coercions in Ruffle. There are several
important considerations:
* The class lookup for property types needs to be done lazily, since
we can have a cycle between two classes (e.g. `var prop1:Class2;`
and `var prop2:Class1` in two different classes).
* The class lookup uses special rules (different from
`resolve_definition`), and does *not* use `ScopeStack/`ScopeTree`
This means that a private class can specified as a property name -
the lookup will succeed without using a scope, even though
`flash.utils.getDefinitionByName` would fail with the same name
* The specialized 'Vector' classes (e.g "Vector$int") can be used
as property types, even though they cannot be lookup up normally.
Some Ruffle class definitions were previously using nonexistent
classes as property types (e.g. "BareObject") - these are fixed
in this PR.
- Handle the case where both preload aud suppress flags are
set for the same variable;
- Remove `arguments` field in `Activation`; instead use a normal
local definition;
- When `suppress_this` is set, inherit the `this` value from parent
activation. (This isn't entirely correct, as FP's `this` is mutable
and seems to be part of the scope chain, but this would require a
larger refactoring)
Currently, all three render backends hold on texture-related
resources indefinitely (`register_bitmap` pushes to a `Vec`,
and never removes anything). As a result, the resources used
by the render backend (which may include GPU memory) will grow
over time, even if the corresponding `BitmapData` has been deallocated.
This commit adds a new `unregister_bitmap` method, which is called from
`BitmapData.dispose`. All render backs are changed to now use an
`FnvHashMap<BitmapHandle, _>` instead of a `Vec`, allowing us to
remove individual entries.
Currently, we only call `unregister_bitmap in response to
`BitmapData.dispose` - when `BitmapData` is freed by the
garbage collector, `unregister_bitmap` is *not* called.
This will be addressed in a future PR.
I've kept the rust `flash.geom` module, even though it's now empty,
since we'll need to add things like `flash.geom.Transform` native
methods in the future.