Paul Berry b4c3b833ec i965: Fix vertical alignment for multisampled buffers.
From the Sandy Bridge PRM, Vol 1 Part 1 7.18.3.4 (Alignment Unit
Size):

    j [vertical alignment] = 4 for any render target surface is
    multisampled (4x)

From the Ivy Bridge PRM, Vol 4 Part 1 2.12.2.1 (SURFACE_STATE for most
messages), under the "Surface Vertical Alignment" heading:

    This field is intended to be set to VALIGN_4 if the surface was
    rendered as a depth buffer, for a multisampled (4x) render target,
    or for a multisampled (8x) render target, since these surfaces
    support only alignment of 4.

Back in 2012 when we added multisampling support to the i965 driver,
we forgot to update the logic for computing the vertical alignment, so
we were often using a vertical alignment of 2 for multisampled
buffers, leading to subtle rendering errors.

Note that the specs also require a vertical alignment of 4 for all
Y-tiled render target surfaces; I plan to address that in a separate
patch.

Bugzilla: https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=53077
Cc: mesa-stable@lists.freedesktop.org

Reviewed-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
2013-11-15 08:54:15 -08:00
2013-11-15 08:51:20 -05:00
2013-09-09 14:42:33 -07:00
2013-11-05 09:37:58 -06:00
2013-01-10 22:01:31 +01:00
2013-03-12 22:04:04 +00:00
2013-10-12 08:58:18 -07:00

File: docs/README.WIN32

Last updated: 21 June 2013


Quick Start
----- -----

Windows drivers are build with SCons.  Makefiles or Visual Studio projects are
no longer shipped or supported.

Run

  scons osmesa mesagdi

to build classic mesa Windows GDI drivers; or

  scons libgl-gdi

to build gallium based GDI driver.

This will work both with MSVS or Mingw.


Windows Drivers
------- -------

At this time, only the gallium GDI driver is known to work.

Source code also exists in the tree for other drivers in
src/mesa/drivers/windows, but the status of this code is unknown.

Recipe
------

Building on windows requires several open-source packages. These are
steps that work as of this writing.

1) install python 2.7
2) install scons (latest)
3) install mingw, flex, and bison
4) install libxml2 from here: http://www.lfd.uci.edu/~gohlke/pythonlibs
  get libxml2-python-2.9.1.win-amd64-py2.7.exe
5) install pywin32 from here: http://www.lfd.uci.edu/~gohlke/pythonlibs
  get pywin32-218.4.win-amd64-py2.7.exe
6) install git
7) download mesa from git
  see http://www.mesa3d.org/repository.html
8) run scons

General
-------

After building, you can copy the above DLL files to a place in your
PATH such as $SystemRoot/SYSTEM32.  If you don't like putting things
in a system directory, place them in the same directory as the
executable(s).  Be careful about accidentially overwriting files of
the same name in the SYSTEM32 directory.

The DLL files are built so that the external entry points use the
stdcall calling convention.

Static LIB files are not built.  The LIB files that are built with are
the linker import files associated with the DLL files.

The si-glu sources are used to build the GLU libs.  This was done
mainly to get the better tessellator code.

If you have a Windows-related build problem or question, please post
to the mesa-dev or mesa-users list.
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