When we skip running a frame for a MovieCilp, we skip all
of its children as well. However, this skip 'counts' as
a skip for any children that already wanted to skip their next
frame. For example, say we create three objects in ActionScript,
and arrange them like 'obj1 -> obj2 -> obj3'.
The first 'obj1.enter_frame' call will not run a new frame
for any of the objects, but next time, 'obj1.enter_frame'
will run a new frame for all of the objects.
This fixes jacksmith, which was missing a frame1-framescript
due to 'enter_frame' getting incorrectly run for a deeply
nested child.
If you call 'BitmapData.dispose()', any Bitmap objects using it will
continue to report the original 'width' and 'height' values to
ActionScript. The values only refresh if you explicitly do
'Bitmap.bitmapData = bitmapDataObject' (including with the same
object).
Fancy Pants Adventure World 4 relies on this - it calls
BitmapData.dispose(), and then uses the width and height from
a previously-constructed Bitmap object.
When a DisplayObject is removed from its parent by a RemoveTag, it still runs its framescript for the current frame (but with 'this.parent == null'). It then stops executing entirely, unlike ActionScript-removed orphans, which continue to execute indefinitely.
Additionally, objects created by ActionScript during a frame skip their next 'enterFrame' logic (but still receive an enterFrame event). This results in the currentFrame lagging one frame behind objects that were placed by the timeline during the same frame.
The combination of these two changes lets us greatly simplify frame lifecycle handling for orphan movies. Most of the orphan stages were unencessary, and the remaining ones run in the same phase as the normal Stage-descendant objects.
Webgl doesn't support BGRA textures, so this lets us use
Stage3D textures on the web backend. As a bonus, this speeds up
uploading an BitmapData to a Context3dTextureFormat.BGRA texture,
since we no longer need to change the format before copying.
This makes Solarmax2 playable on the web backend.
The stage alignment settings viewport_scale_factor should *not* be
applied to `Stage.transform.matrix`, which is only ever changed
as a result of explicit modification from ActionScript. Instead,
alignment and scaling are performed a separate step, which is
transparent to ActionScript.
I've implemented this through a new `viewport_matrix` field,
which is used during stage rendering and mouse coordinate
transformation.
This makes Stage3D instances properly scale - previously, they
would render unscaled. The linux standalone Flash Player doesn't
seem to use HiDPI mode, so I didn't realize that this was a bug
until now.
In the process of implementing this, I discovered and fixed a bug
with how we handle changing the viewport size under winit.
Calling `self.window.set_inner_size` does not immediately take
effect (at least on X11) - calling `self.window.inner_size()`
will report the old size until the next resize event.
Since build our Stage matrices from `self.window.inner_size()`
(and start running the SWF) immediately after `RuffleEvent::OnMetadata`,
we would run a few SWF frames with an incorrect viewport size. This
is visible to SWFs that have the scale mode set to "noScale", and
could break SWFs that expect the initial viewport size to be
the movie size. I've fixed this by delaying SWF execution until
we get a Resize event (if `self.window.inner_size()` does not
immediately report the size we set).
This makes #3294 (rollercoaster-creator-2) fully playable.
Missing is any (*) matching for child()/elements() and the existing attributes() method.
Also missing is support for number indexes with child().
When an XML object has simple content, you can call non-XML
methods directly on it - it will internally be stringified,
and the method will be called on the resulting string.
This lets `new XML("<p>Some content</p>".split(' ')` work.
Similarly, an XMLList object with a single XML child will
forward non-XML method calls to that object.
This PR implements this logic (based heavily on avmplus)
I've also renamed these methods to 'avm1_unload' and
'avm1_removed', to make it clear that they don't
apply to AVM2.
This was causing us to incorrectly skip mouse picks,
and remove masks.
I think this might have been broken by
https://github.com/ruffle-rs/ruffle/pull/9506, but we didn't have
proper test coverage.
If we execute a 'coerce' opcode for a class while it's being
initialized (which can happen by running a method from a static
initializer), we'll be unable to resolve the ClassObject using
`resolve_type`.
This is the only case where this can happen - any
superinterfaces/superclass will already be fully initialized
when we're running a class initializer. Therefore, we can
try to lookup the class from the `Domain`, and check if it
directly matches the class of the object we're coercing
(ignoring superclasses and interfaces).
This doesn't perfectly match Flash's behavior - I haven't been
able to reproduce the values produces when the DisplayObject
starts out with certain 'Matrix' values (a non-zero 'b' or 'd').
Howver, when the 'b' and 'd' matrix values are both 0, setting
'dobj.rotation = NaN' has no effect on the matrix, while
'dobj.scaleX = NaN' and 'dobj.scaleY = NaN' both treat 'NaN'
as 0 for the purposes of updating the matrix.
This fixes the tack shooter in Bloons Tower Defense 3, which
tries to set 'rotation = NaN' for spawned tacks.
This is necessary to make Steambirds get past the preloader screen.
All of the previous tests continue to pass with this change.
This commit modifies the existing test to start from within
the symbol_class constructor, instead of a frame script. In
this situation, a freshly-created orphan with a framescript will
run directly after the constructor returns, *before* an enterFrame
handler for the same orphan. I've verified that this modified test
fails without my change.
It's possible to call 'start()' on a timer
that has currentCount >= repeatCount. This will
cause the timer to tick exactly once, and then stop agian.
We were incorrectly reporting 'timer.running' in such a scenario:
'running' should be reported as 'true' up until just before the
'TimerEvent.TIMER_COMPLETE' is fired.
This fixes gaining money from bloon popping / level completion
in BTD5.
Depending on when loading completes, calling
`catchup_display_object_to_frame` might trigger an
`addedToStageEvent` inside the loaded SWF. The event listener
will expect the SWF content to have 'DisplayObject.stage' accessible,
so we need to make sure that we've added our loaded content as
a child of the `Loader` *before* any event handlers run.
I've been unable to come up with a self-contained test for this,
but it's necessary for Bloons Tower Defense 5
Previously, the Vector$ classes were only exported in the internal 'AS3.vec' namespace, which is used by older ActionScript code. However, newer ActionScript code can also access these classes through the public 'AS3.vec' namespace, via 'getDefintionByName'.
We now export these classes in both namespaces. In the public 'AS3.vec' namespace, they are exported like 'Vector.' instead of 'Vector$uint'
We still want to propagate these hits to the parent, which may
be able to handle them. My existing tests missed this case,
since all of the parent objects had content which was
behind the child content. When the only clickable content
comes from a child with 'mouseEnabled=false', we should
still fire an event targeting the parent (when applicable
based on the parent's flags).
This fixes dragging on the background (without any scenery present)
in Steambirds.
When a MovieClip is an 'orphan' (it has no parent),
it still has frames run (including frame scripts). Some SWFS
like SteamBirds and 'This is the Only Level TOO' rely on this behavior,
so we need to implement it.
The overall idea is straightforward - we keep a global list of
orphan movies, which we add to whenever we unset the parent for a movie.
This list stores weak references for consistency with Flash.
When we run a frame, we process entries in the root movie list,
in addition to the normal recursive processing from the `Stage`.
However, exactly matching Flash's output turned out to be quite tricky.
The particular sequence of calls I make in `run_all_phases_avm2` makes Ruffle
pass two complicated test cases, but there could still be lurking bugs.
This is enough to get SteamBirds to the first level (which doesn't
render due to a different error).
We were previously performing a redundant 'self.hit_test_shape'
call in 'avm2_mouse_pick'. All of the logic in that function
is handled in `avm2_mouse_pick.` Additionally, this call happened
before we tested out children, which would result in us targeting
a parent's drawing instead of aa child.
Surprisingly, Flash allows mutliple classes in an inheritance chain
to hav a linked `class_symbol`. When we instantiate a `DisplayObject`,
we need to stop at the first such `class_symbol` we find. This means
that any fields set from named children will *only* be set in the
first class we find, not in any of the parent classes (as their
corresponding library symbol will not be instantiated).
Previously, we would continue looping even after we found a
`class_symbol`, resulting in the furthest ancestor *winning*
the `set_object2` call.
This is a very large diff, but most of it comes from test files and
output.
This PR ads partial support for the following Stage3D shader features:
* Normal (square), rectangle, and cube textures
* Varying and temporary registers
* Lots of opcodes
The combination of these allows us to get a raytracing program
fully working in Ruffle. I've included it as image test.
Currently, this test is very slow (about 90 seconds on my machine),
as the code I'm using (https://github.com/saharan/OGSL) includes
its own shader language and compiler. THe raytracing demo
first compiles its own shader language to AGAL, and then starts
rendering the scene.
Limitations:
* Many opcodes are still unimplemented
* Most non-default texture options (e.g. mipmaps) are not implemented
We were previously calling `get_property` to determine if a `toJSON`
property exists, but that produces an error if the method is missing
on a sealed class.
Additionally, JSON serialization wasn't taking into account properties
from the vtable. All public properties (including fields, const fields,
and getter methods) get serialized.
Unfortunately, our vtable property order currently doesn't match
Flash's. I've hand-edited the test output for now (all of the actual
properties are there, just in a different order), and added a note
This includes all of the XML elements described in 'describeType' docs.
Unfortunately, the order of elements produced by Flash depends on
the iteration order of internal hashtables. As a result, the test
manually stringifies an XML object, sorting the stringified children,
to produce consistent output between Flash and Ruffle.
This requires the ability to do a limited 'set_property',
as well as `get_enumerant_value`.
To prevent modification of XMLLists derived from queries,
I've introduced a `target` field on `XMLList`. This is
`None` for lists created with `new XMLList()`, and `Some`
when the list was derived from a query on an existing `XML`
/`XMLList`. We only allow `set_property` when `target` is `None`:
this is enough for filtering to work, and prevents silent incorrect
execution when trying to modify an existing node.
Previously there were multiple implementations scattered across the
codebase. Unify them to a single place, in a more "Rusty" way (now
it's called via dot notation, rather than as a free function).