commit | 264ab56f2e70431e8310f9353952acd3b22b466f | [log] [tgz] |
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author | Corentin Wallez <cwallez@chromium.org> | Wed Aug 12 12:39:52 2015 -0700 |
committer | Corentin Wallez <cwallez@chromium.org> | Tue Aug 18 20:39:57 2015 +0000 |
tree | 1adc9683d3a34401abb895e629bc93d08160f95f | |
parent | ccdf74b8bed923443425a3d56496b04dd98bd8ef [diff] |
Make the default framebuffer owned by Surface Reland with a fix for SurfaceTest in angle_unittests and fixes for signed-unsigned warnings In CGL there is no notion of default Framebuffer and MakeCurrent only makes a context current but not a drawable. Instead, everything is done via render to texture. For that reason, different surfaces will have different FBOs as default framebuffers, which causes that change. BUG=angleproject:891 Change-Id: I0664896bc335b1a757226aaa212536b8f9d0f08f Reviewed-on: https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/293752 Reviewed-by: Corentin Wallez <cwallez@chromium.org> Tested-by: Corentin Wallez <cwallez@chromium.org>
#ANGLE The goal of ANGLE is to allow Windows users to seamlessly run WebGL and other OpenGL ES content by translating OpenGL ES API calls to DirectX 9 or DirectX 11 API calls.
ANGLE is a conformant implementation of the OpenGL ES 2.0 specification that is hardware‐accelerated via Direct3D. ANGLE v1.0.772 was certified compliant by passing the ES 2.0.3 conformance tests in October 2011. ANGLE also provides an implementation of the EGL 1.4 specification. Work on ANGLE's OpenGL ES 3.0 implementation is currently in progress, but should not be considered stable.
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, Direct3D HLSL, and even ESSL for native GLES2 platforms.
##Building View the Dev setup instructions.
##Contributing