Steven Noonan 30bd0149fc ANGLETest: fix crashes when switching between GLESDriverTypes
The condition for mLastLoadedDriver was incorrect. We never initialized
it, so it never switched to the correct EGL implementation when
alternating between tests using different GLESDriverTypes.

This was reproducible with:

    angle_end2end_tests.exe --gtest_filter="SimpleOperationTest.DrawSingleSampleWithAlphaToCoverage/ES3_D3D11:SimpleOperationTest.DrawSingleSampleWithAlphaToCoverage/ES3_ANGLE_Vulkan_Secondaries_SwiftShader:SimpleOperationTest.DrawSingleMultiSampleWithAlphaToCoverage/ES3_D3D11"

The above does three tests:

    - D3D11 test (using GLESDriverType::AngleEGL)
    - Vulkan test (using GLESDriverType::AngleVulkanSecondariesEGL)
    - D3D11 test (using GLESDriverType::AngleEGL)

What would happen is this:

    - the first test would initialize a D3D11 EGLDisplay
    - the second test would switch the API entry points to use
      AngleVulkanSecondariesEGL
    - the third test begins reuses the first test's EGLDisplay, but
      fails to notice the GLESDriverType change and uses the
      AngleVulkanSecondariesEGL entry points
    - when eglQueryString is called with the D3D11 EGLDisplay, the
      VulkanSecondaries library has no knowledge of this display and
      fails the call

Bug: angleproject:8286
Change-Id: I1f22060e2c5725dad5e410a76385e2802b627844
Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/angle/angle/+/4749296
Auto-Submit: Steven Noonan <steven@uplinklabs.net>
Reviewed-by: Shahbaz Youssefi <syoussefi@chromium.org>
Reviewed-by: Geoff Lang <geofflang@chromium.org>
Commit-Queue: Geoff Lang <geofflang@chromium.org>
2023-08-07 16:25:06 +00:00
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2020-04-28 14:23:13 +00:00
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2019-10-14 17:57:09 +00:00
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ANGLE - Almost Native Graphics Layer Engine

The goal of ANGLE is to allow users of multiple operating systems to seamlessly run WebGL and other OpenGL ES content by translating OpenGL ES API calls to one of the hardware-supported APIs available for that platform. ANGLE currently provides translation from OpenGL ES 2.0, 3.0 and 3.1 to Vulkan, desktop OpenGL, OpenGL ES, Direct3D 9, and Direct3D 11. Future plans include ES 3.2, translation to Metal and MacOS, Chrome OS, and Fuchsia support.

Level of OpenGL ES support via backing renderers

Direct3D 9 Direct3D 11 Desktop GL GL ES Vulkan Metal
OpenGL ES 2.0 complete complete complete complete complete complete
OpenGL ES 3.0 complete complete complete complete complete
OpenGL ES 3.1 incomplete complete complete complete
OpenGL ES 3.2 in progress in progress in progress

Additionally, OpenGL ES 1.1 is implemented in the front-end using OpenGL ES 3.0 features. This version of the specification is thus supported on all platforms specified above that support OpenGL ES 3.0 with known issues.

Platform support via backing renderers

Direct3D 9 Direct3D 11 Desktop GL GL ES Vulkan Metal
Windows complete complete complete complete complete
Linux complete complete
Mac OS X complete complete [1]
iOS complete [2]
Chrome OS complete planned
Android complete complete
GGP (Stadia) complete
Fuchsia complete

[1] Metal is supported on macOS 10.14+

[2] Metal is supported on iOS 12+

ANGLE v1.0.772 was certified compliant by passing the OpenGL ES 2.0.3 conformance tests in October 2011.

ANGLE has received the following certifications with the Vulkan backend:

  • OpenGL ES 2.0: ANGLE 2.1.0.d46e2fb1e341 (Nov, 2019)
  • OpenGL ES 3.0: ANGLE 2.1.0.f18ff947360d (Feb, 2020)
  • OpenGL ES 3.1: ANGLE 2.1.0.f5dace0f1e57 (Jul, 2020)

ANGLE also provides an implementation of the EGL 1.5 specification.

ANGLE is used as the default WebGL backend for both Google Chrome and Mozilla Firefox on Windows platforms. Chrome uses ANGLE for all graphics rendering on Windows, including the accelerated Canvas2D implementation and the Native Client sandbox environment.

Portions of the ANGLE shader compiler are used as a shader validator and translator by WebGL implementations across multiple platforms. It is used on Mac OS X, Linux, and in mobile variants of the browsers. Having one shader validator helps to ensure that a consistent set of GLSL ES shaders are accepted across browsers and platforms. The shader translator can be used to translate shaders to other shading languages, and to optionally apply shader modifications to work around bugs or quirks in the native graphics drivers. The translator targets Desktop GLSL, Vulkan GLSL, Direct3D HLSL, and even ESSL for native GLES2 platforms.

Sources

ANGLE repository is hosted by Chromium project and can be browsed online or cloned with

git clone https://chromium.googlesource.com/angle/angle

Building

View the Dev setup instructions.

Contributing

Description
A conformant OpenGL ES implementation for Windows, Mac, Linux, iOS and Android (static library config for Godot).
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