Commit Graph

56 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Zachary Harrold
5241e09671
Upgrade to Rust Edition 2024 (#17967)
# Objective

- Fixes #17960

## Solution

- Followed the [edition upgrade
guide](https://doc.rust-lang.org/edition-guide/editions/transitioning-an-existing-project-to-a-new-edition.html)

## Testing

- CI

---

## Summary of Changes

### Documentation Indentation

When using lists in documentation, proper indentation is now linted for.
This means subsequent lines within the same list item must start at the
same indentation level as the item.

```rust
/* Valid */
/// - Item 1
///   Run-on sentence.
/// - Item 2
struct Foo;

/* Invalid */
/// - Item 1
///     Run-on sentence.
/// - Item 2
struct Foo;
```

### Implicit `!` to `()` Conversion

`!` (the never return type, returned by `panic!`, etc.) no longer
implicitly converts to `()`. This is particularly painful for systems
with `todo!` or `panic!` statements, as they will no longer be functions
returning `()` (or `Result<()>`), making them invalid systems for
functions like `add_systems`. The ideal fix would be to accept functions
returning `!` (or rather, _not_ returning), but this is blocked on the
[stabilisation of the `!` type
itself](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/primitive.never.html), which is
not done.

The "simple" fix would be to add an explicit `-> ()` to system
signatures (e.g., `|| { todo!() }` becomes `|| -> () { todo!() }`).
However, this is _also_ banned, as there is an existing lint which (IMO,
incorrectly) marks this as an unnecessary annotation.

So, the "fix" (read: workaround) is to put these kinds of `|| -> ! { ...
}` closuers into variables and give the variable an explicit type (e.g.,
`fn()`).

```rust
// Valid
let system: fn() = || todo!("Not implemented yet!");
app.add_systems(..., system);

// Invalid
app.add_systems(..., || todo!("Not implemented yet!"));
```

### Temporary Variable Lifetimes

The order in which temporary variables are dropped has changed. The
simple fix here is _usually_ to just assign temporaries to a named
variable before use.

### `gen` is a keyword

We can no longer use the name `gen` as it is reserved for a future
generator syntax. This involved replacing uses of the name `gen` with
`r#gen` (the raw-identifier syntax).

### Formatting has changed

Use statements have had the order of imports changed, causing a
substantial +/-3,000 diff when applied. For now, I have opted-out of
this change by amending `rustfmt.toml`

```toml
style_edition = "2021"
```

This preserves the original formatting for now, reducing the size of
this PR. It would be a simple followup to update this to 2024 and run
`cargo fmt`.

### New `use<>` Opt-Out Syntax

Lifetimes are now implicitly included in RPIT types. There was a handful
of instances where it needed to be added to satisfy the borrow checker,
but there may be more cases where it _should_ be added to avoid
breakages in user code.

### `MyUnitStruct { .. }` is an invalid pattern

Previously, you could match against unit structs (and unit enum
variants) with a `{ .. }` destructuring. This is no longer valid.

### Pretty much every use of `ref` and `mut` are gone

Pattern binding has changed to the point where these terms are largely
unused now. They still serve a purpose, but it is far more niche now.

### `iter::repeat(...).take(...)` is bad

New lint recommends using the more explicit `iter::repeat_n(..., ...)`
instead.

## Migration Guide

The lifetimes of functions using return-position impl-trait (RPIT) are
likely _more_ conservative than they had been previously. If you
encounter lifetime issues with such a function, please create an issue
to investigate the addition of `+ use<...>`.

## Notes

- Check the individual commits for a clearer breakdown for what
_actually_ changed.

---------

Co-authored-by: François Mockers <francois.mockers@vleue.com>
2025-02-24 03:54:47 +00:00
BD103
63e0f794d1
Enable nonstandard_macro_braces and enforce [] for children! (#17974)
# Objective

-
[`nonstandard_macro_braces`](https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#nonstandard_macro_braces)
is a Clippy lint that enforces what braces certain known macros are
allowed to use.
  - For instance, requiring `println!()` instead of `println!{}`.
- I started working on this after seeing
https://github.com/TheBevyFlock/bevy_cli/issues/277.

## Solution

- Enable `nonstandard_macro_braces` in the workspace.
- Configure Clippy so it enforces `[]` braces for `children!`.

## Testing

1. Create `examples/clippy_test.rs`.
2. Paste the following code:

```rust
//! Some docs woooooooo

use bevy::prelude::*;

fn main() {
    let _ = children!(Name::new("Foo"));
}
```

3. Run `cargo clippy --example clippy_test`.
4. Ensure the following warning is emitted:

```sh
warning: use of irregular braces for `children!` macro
 --> examples/clippy_test.rs:6:13
  |
6 |     let _ = children!(Name::new("Foo"));
  |             ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ help: consider writing: `children![Name::new("Foo")]`
  |
  = help: for further information visit https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-clippy/master/index.html#nonstandard_macro_braces
  = note: requested on the command line with `-W clippy::nonstandard-macro-braces`

warning: `bevy` (example "clippy_test") generated 1 warning (run `cargo clippy --fix --example "clippy_test"` to apply 1 suggestion)
```
2025-02-22 01:54:49 +00:00
Zachary Harrold
9bc0ae33c3
Move hashbrown and foldhash out of bevy_utils (#17460)
# Objective

- Contributes to #16877

## Solution

- Moved `hashbrown`, `foldhash`, and related types out of `bevy_utils`
and into `bevy_platform_support`
- Refactored the above to match the layout of these types in `std`.
- Updated crates as required.

## Testing

- CI

---

## Migration Guide

- The following items were moved out of `bevy_utils` and into
`bevy_platform_support::hash`:
  - `FixedState`
  - `DefaultHasher`
  - `RandomState`
  - `FixedHasher`
  - `Hashed`
  - `PassHash`
  - `PassHasher`
  - `NoOpHash`
- The following items were moved out of `bevy_utils` and into
`bevy_platform_support::collections`:
  - `HashMap`
  - `HashSet`
- `bevy_utils::hashbrown` has been removed. Instead, import from
`bevy_platform_support::collections` _or_ take a dependency on
`hashbrown` directly.
- `bevy_utils::Entry` has been removed. Instead, import from
`bevy_platform_support::collections::hash_map` or
`bevy_platform_support::collections::hash_set` as appropriate.
- All of the above equally apply to `bevy::utils` and
`bevy::platform_support`.

## Notes

- I left `PreHashMap`, `PreHashMapExt`, and `TypeIdMap` in `bevy_utils`
as they might be candidates for micro-crating. They can always be moved
into `bevy_platform_support` at a later date if desired.
2025-01-23 16:46:08 +00:00
Carter Anderson
21f1e3045c
Relationships (non-fragmenting, one-to-many) (#17398)
This adds support for one-to-many non-fragmenting relationships (with
planned paths for fragmenting and non-fragmenting many-to-many
relationships). "Non-fragmenting" means that entities with the same
relationship type, but different relationship targets, are not forced
into separate tables (which would cause "table fragmentation").

Functionally, this fills a similar niche as the current Parent/Children
system. The biggest differences are:

1. Relationships have simpler internals and significantly improved
performance and UX. Commands and specialized APIs are no longer
necessary to keep everything in sync. Just spawn entities with the
relationship components you want and everything "just works".
2. Relationships are generalized. Bevy can provide additional built in
relationships, and users can define their own.

**REQUEST TO REVIEWERS**: _please don't leave top level comments and
instead comment on specific lines of code. That way we can take
advantage of threaded discussions. Also dont leave comments simply
pointing out CI failures as I can read those just fine._

## Built on top of what we have

Relationships are implemented on top of the Bevy ECS features we already
have: components, immutability, and hooks. This makes them immediately
compatible with all of our existing (and future) APIs for querying,
spawning, removing, scenes, reflection, etc. The fewer specialized APIs
we need to build, maintain, and teach, the better.

## Why focus on one-to-many non-fragmenting first?

1. This allows us to improve Parent/Children relationships immediately,
in a way that is reasonably uncontroversial. Switching our hierarchy to
fragmenting relationships would have significant performance
implications. ~~Flecs is heavily considering a switch to non-fragmenting
relations after careful considerations of the performance tradeoffs.~~
_(Correction from @SanderMertens: Flecs is implementing non-fragmenting
storage specialized for asset hierarchies, where asset hierarchies are
many instances of small trees that have a well defined structure)_
2. Adding generalized one-to-many relationships is currently a priority
for the [Next Generation Scene / UI
effort](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/discussions/14437).
Specifically, we're interested in building reactions and observers on
top.

## The changes

This PR does the following:

1. Adds a generic one-to-many Relationship system
3. Ports the existing Parent/Children system to Relationships, which now
lives in `bevy_ecs::hierarchy`. The old `bevy_hierarchy` crate has been
removed.
4. Adds on_despawn component hooks
5. Relationships can opt-in to "despawn descendants" behavior, meaning
that the entire relationship hierarchy is despawned when
`entity.despawn()` is called. The built in Parent/Children hierarchies
enable this behavior, and `entity.despawn_recursive()` has been removed.
6. `world.spawn` now applies commands after spawning. This ensures that
relationship bookkeeping happens immediately and removes the need to
manually flush. This is in line with the equivalent behaviors recently
added to the other APIs (ex: insert).
7. Removes the ValidParentCheckPlugin (system-driven / poll based) in
favor of a `validate_parent_has_component` hook.

## Using Relationships

The `Relationship` trait looks like this:

```rust
pub trait Relationship: Component + Sized {
    type RelationshipSources: RelationshipSources<Relationship = Self>;
    fn get(&self) -> Entity;
    fn from(entity: Entity) -> Self;
}
```

A relationship is a component that:

1. Is a simple wrapper over a "target" Entity.
2. Has a corresponding `RelationshipSources` component, which is a
simple wrapper over a collection of entities. Every "target entity"
targeted by a "source entity" with a `Relationship` has a
`RelationshipSources` component, which contains every "source entity"
that targets it.

For example, the `Parent` component (as it currently exists in Bevy) is
the `Relationship` component and the entity containing the Parent is the
"source entity". The entity _inside_ the `Parent(Entity)` component is
the "target entity". And that target entity has a `Children` component
(which implements `RelationshipSources`).

In practice, the Parent/Children relationship looks like this:

```rust
#[derive(Relationship)]
#[relationship(relationship_sources = Children)]
pub struct Parent(pub Entity);

#[derive(RelationshipSources)]
#[relationship_sources(relationship = Parent)]
pub struct Children(Vec<Entity>);
```

The Relationship and RelationshipSources derives automatically implement
Component with the relevant configuration (namely, the hooks necessary
to keep everything in sync).

The most direct way to add relationships is to spawn entities with
relationship components:

```rust
let a = world.spawn_empty().id();
let b = world.spawn(Parent(a)).id();

assert_eq!(world.entity(a).get::<Children>().unwrap(), &[b]);
```

There are also convenience APIs for spawning more than one entity with
the same relationship:

```rust
world.spawn_empty().with_related::<Children>(|s| {
    s.spawn_empty();
    s.spawn_empty();
})
```

The existing `with_children` API is now a simpler wrapper over
`with_related`. This makes this change largely non-breaking for existing
spawn patterns.

```rust
world.spawn_empty().with_children(|s| {
    s.spawn_empty();
    s.spawn_empty();
})
```

There are also other relationship APIs, such as `add_related` and
`despawn_related`.

## Automatic recursive despawn via the new on_despawn hook

`RelationshipSources` can opt-in to "despawn descendants" behavior,
which will despawn all related entities in the relationship hierarchy:

```rust
#[derive(RelationshipSources)]
#[relationship_sources(relationship = Parent, despawn_descendants)]
pub struct Children(Vec<Entity>);
```

This means that `entity.despawn_recursive()` is no longer required.
Instead, just use `entity.despawn()` and the relevant related entities
will also be despawned.

To despawn an entity _without_ despawning its parent/child descendants,
you should remove the `Children` component first, which will also remove
the related `Parent` components:

```rust
entity
    .remove::<Children>()
    .despawn()
```

This builds on the on_despawn hook introduced in this PR, which is fired
when an entity is despawned (before other hooks).

## Relationships are the source of truth

`Relationship` is the _single_ source of truth component.
`RelationshipSources` is merely a reflection of what all the
`Relationship` components say. By embracing this, we are able to
significantly improve the performance of the system as a whole. We can
rely on component lifecycles to protect us against duplicates, rather
than needing to scan at runtime to ensure entities don't already exist
(which results in quadratic runtime). A single source of truth gives us
constant-time inserts. This does mean that we cannot directly spawn
populated `Children` components (or directly add or remove entities from
those components). I personally think this is a worthwhile tradeoff,
both because it makes the performance much better _and_ because it means
theres exactly one way to do things (which is a philosophy we try to
employ for Bevy APIs).

As an aside: treating both sides of the relationship as "equivalent
source of truth relations" does enable building simple and flexible
many-to-many relationships. But this introduces an _inherent_ need to
scan (or hash) to protect against duplicates.
[`evergreen_relations`](https://github.com/EvergreenNest/evergreen_relations)
has a very nice implementation of the "symmetrical many-to-many"
approach. Unfortunately I think the performance issues inherent to that
approach make it a poor choice for Bevy's default relationship system.

## Followup Work

* Discuss renaming `Parent` to `ChildOf`. I refrained from doing that in
this PR to keep the diff reasonable, but I'm personally biased toward
this change (and using that naming pattern generally for relationships).
* [Improved spawning
ergonomics](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/discussions/16920)
* Consider adding relationship observers/triggers for "relationship
targets" whenever a source is added or removed. This would replace the
current "hierarchy events" system, which is unused upstream but may have
existing users downstream. I think triggers are the better fit for this
than a buffered event queue, and would prefer not to add that back.
* Fragmenting relations: My current idea hinges on the introduction of
"value components" (aka: components whose type _and_ value determines
their ComponentId, via something like Hashing / PartialEq). By labeling
a Relationship component such as `ChildOf(Entity)` as a "value
component", `ChildOf(e1)` and `ChildOf(e2)` would be considered
"different components". This makes the transition between fragmenting
and non-fragmenting a single flag, and everything else continues to work
as expected.
* Many-to-many support
* Non-fragmenting: We can expand Relationship to be a list of entities
instead of a single entity. I have largely already written the code for
this.
* Fragmenting: With the "value component" impl mentioned above, we get
many-to-many support "for free", as it would allow inserting multiple
copies of a Relationship component with different target entities.

Fixes #3742 (If this PR is merged, I think we should open more targeted
followup issues for the work above, with a fresh tracking issue free of
the large amount of less-directed historical context)
Fixes #17301
Fixes #12235 
Fixes #15299
Fixes #15308 

## Migration Guide

* Replace `ChildBuilder` with `ChildSpawnerCommands`.
* Replace calls to `.set_parent(parent_id)` with
`.insert(Parent(parent_id))`.
* Replace calls to `.replace_children()` with `.remove::<Children>()`
followed by `.add_children()`. Note that you'll need to manually despawn
any children that are not carried over.
* Replace calls to `.despawn_recursive()` with `.despawn()`.
* Replace calls to `.despawn_descendants()` with
`.despawn_related::<Children>()`.
* If you have any calls to `.despawn()` which depend on the children
being preserved, you'll need to remove the `Children` component first.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2025-01-18 22:20:30 +00:00
MichiRecRoom
26bb0b40d2
Move #![warn(clippy::allow_attributes, clippy::allow_attributes_without_reason)] to the workspace Cargo.toml (#17374)
# Objective
Fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/17111

## Solution
Move `#![warn(clippy::allow_attributes,
clippy::allow_attributes_without_reason)]` to the workspace `Cargo.toml`

## Testing
Lots of CI testing, and local testing too.

---------

Co-authored-by: Benjamin Brienen <benjamin.brienen@outlook.com>
2025-01-15 01:14:58 +00:00
MichiRecRoom
3742e621ef
Allow clippy::too_many_arguments to lint without warnings (#17249)
# Objective
Many instances of `clippy::too_many_arguments` linting happen to be on
systems - functions which we don't call manually, and thus there's not
much reason to worry about the argument count.

## Solution
Allow `clippy::too_many_arguments` globally, and remove all lint
attributes related to it.
2025-01-09 07:26:15 +00:00
BD103
020d082617
Fix "Unrecognized Option" error when using Criterion-specific arguments in benchmarks (#17222)
# Objective

- Commands like `cargo bench -- --save-baseline before` do not work
because the default `libtest` is intercepting Criterion-specific CLI
arguments.
- Fixes #17200.

## Solution

- Disable the default `libtest` benchmark harness for the library crate,
as per [the Criterion
book](https://bheisler.github.io/criterion.rs/book/faq.html#cargo-bench-gives-unrecognized-option-errors-for-valid-command-line-options).

## Testing

- `cargo bench -p benches -- --save-baseline before`
- You don't need to run the entire benchmarks, just make sure that they
start without any errors. :)
2025-01-08 00:09:31 +00:00
BD103
765166b727
Update entity cloning benchmarks (#17084)
# Objective

- `entity_cloning` was separated from the rest of the ECS benchmarks.
- There was some room for improvement in the benchmarks themselves.
- Part of #16647.

## Solution

- Merge `entity_cloning` into the rest of the ECS benchmarks.
- Apply the `bench!` macro to all benchmark names.\
- Reorganize benchmarks and their helper functions, with more comments
than before.
- Remove all the extra component definitions (`C2`, `C3`, etc.), and
just leave one. Now all entities have exactly one component.

## Testing

```sh
# List all entity cloning benchmarks, to verify their names have updated.
cargo bench -p benches --bench ecs entity_cloning -- --list

# Test benchmarks by running them once.
cargo test -p benches --bench ecs entity_cloning

# Run all benchmarks (takes about a minute).
cargo bench -p benches --bench ecs entity_cloning
```

---

## Showcase


![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/4e3d7d98-015a-4974-ae16-363cf1b9423c)

Interestingly, using `Clone` instead of `Reflect` appears to be 2-2.5
times faster. Furthermore, there were noticeable jumps in time when
running the benchmarks:


![image](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/bd8513de-3922-432f-b3dd-1b1b7750bdb5)


I theorize this is because the `World` is allocating more space for all
the entities, but I don't know for certain. Neat!
2025-01-02 19:55:35 +00:00
BD103
c03e494a26
Migrate reflection benchmarks to new naming system (#16986)
# Objective

- Please see #16647 for the full reasoning behind this change.

## Solution

- Create the `bench!` macro, which generates the name of the benchmark
at compile time.

Migrating is a single line change, and it will automatically update if
you move the benchmark to a different module:

  ```diff
  + use benches::bench;

  fn my_benchmark(c: &mut Criterion) {
  -   c.bench_function("my_benchmark", |b| {});
  +   c.bench_function(bench!("my_benchmark"), |b| {});
  }
  ```

- Migrate all reflection benchmarks to use `bench!`.
- Fix a few places where `black_box()` or Criterion is misused.

## Testing

```sh
cd benches

# Will take a long time!
cargo bench --bench reflect

# List out the names of all reflection benchmarks, to ensure I didn't miss anything.
cargo bench --bench reflect -- --list

# Check for linter warnings.
cargo clippy --bench reflect

# Run each benchmark once.
cargo test --bench reflect
```
2024-12-26 22:28:09 +00:00
BD103
20277006ce
Add benchmarks and compile_fail tests back to workspace (#16858)
# Objective

- Our benchmarks and `compile_fail` tests lag behind the rest of the
engine because they are not in the Cargo workspace, so not checked by
CI.
- Fixes #16801, please see it for further context!

## Solution

- Add benchmarks and `compile_fail` tests to the Cargo workspace.
- Fix any leftover formatting issues and documentation.

## Testing

- I think CI should catch most things!

## Questions

<details>
<summary>Outdated issue I was having with function reflection being
optional</summary>

The `reflection_types` example is failing in Rust-Analyzer for me, but
not a normal check.

```rust
error[E0004]: non-exhaustive patterns: `ReflectRef::Function(_)` not covered
   --> examples/reflection/reflection_types.rs:81:11
    |
81  |     match value.reflect_ref() {
    |           ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ pattern `ReflectRef::Function(_)` not covered
    |
note: `ReflectRef<'_>` defined here
   --> /Users/bdeep/dev/bevy/bevy/crates/bevy_reflect/src/kind.rs:178:1
    |
178 | pub enum ReflectRef<'a> {
    | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
...
188 |     Function(&'a dyn Function),
    |     -------- not covered
    = note: the matched value is of type `ReflectRef<'_>`
help: ensure that all possible cases are being handled by adding a match arm with a wildcard pattern or an explicit pattern as shown
    |
126 ~         ReflectRef::Opaque(_) => {},
127 +         ReflectRef::Function(_) => todo!()
    |
```

I think it is because the following line is feature-gated:


cc0f6a8db4/examples/reflection/reflection_types.rs (L117-L122)

My theory for why this is happening is because the benchmarks enabled
`bevy_reflect`'s `function` feature, which gets merged with the rest of
the features when RA checks the workspace, but the `#[cfg(...)]` gate in
the example isn't detecting it:


cc0f6a8db4/benches/Cargo.toml (L19)

Any thoughts on how to fix this? It's not blocking, since the example
still compiles as normal, but it's just RA and the command `cargo check
--workspace --all-targets` appears to fail.

</summary>
2024-12-21 22:30:29 +00:00
eugineerd
20049d4c34
Faster entity cloning (#16717)
# Objective

#16132 introduced entity cloning functionality, and while it works and
is useful, it can be made faster. This is the promised follow-up to
improve performance.

## Solution

**PREFACE**: This is my first time writing `unsafe` in rust and I have
only vague idea about what I'm doing. I would encourage reviewers to
scrutinize `unsafe` parts in particular.

The solution is to clone component data to an intermediate buffer and
use `EntityWorldMut::insert_by_ids` to insert components without
additional archetype moves.

To facilitate this, `EntityCloner::clone_entity` now reads all
components of the source entity and provides clone handlers with the
ability to read component data straight from component storage using
`read_source_component` and write to an intermediate buffer using
`write_target_component`. `ComponentId` is used to check that requested
type corresponds to the type available on source entity.

Reflect-based handler is a little trickier to pull of: we only have
`&dyn Reflect` and no direct access to the underlying data.
`ReflectFromPtr` can be used to get `&dyn Reflect` from concrete
component data, but to write it we need to create a clone of the
underlying data using `Reflect`. For this reason only components that
have `ReflectDefault` or `ReflectFromReflect` or `ReflectFromWorld` can
be cloned, all other components will be skipped. The good news is that
this is actually only a temporary limitation: once #13432 lands we will
be able to clone component without requiring one of these `type data`s.

This PR also introduces `entity_cloning` benchmark to better compare
changes between the PR and main, you can see the results in the
**showcase** section.

## Testing

- All previous tests passing
- Added test for fast reflect clone path (temporary, will be removed
after reflection-based cloning lands)
- Ran miri

## Showcase
Here's a table demonstrating the improvement:

| **benchmark** | **main, avg** | **PR, avg** | **change, avg** |
| ----------------------- | ------------- | ----------- |
--------------- |
| many components reflect | 18.505 µs | 2.1351 µs | -89.095% |
| hierarchy wide reflect* | 22.778 ms | 4.1875 ms | -81.616% |
| hierarchy tall reflect* | 107.24 µs | 26.322 µs | -77.141% |
| hierarchy many reflect | 78.533 ms | 9.7415 ms | -87.596% |
| many components clone | 1.3633 µs | 758.17 ns | -45.937% |
| hierarchy wide clone* | 2.7716 ms | 3.3411 ms | +20.546% |
| hierarchy tall clone* | 17.646 µs | 20.190 µs | +17.379% |
| hierarchy many clone | 5.8779 ms | 4.2650 ms | -27.439% |

*: these benchmarks have entities with only 1 component

## Considerations
Once #10154 is resolved a large part of the functionality in this PR
will probably become obsolete. It might still be a little bit faster
than using command batching, but the complexity might not be worth it.

## Migration Guide
- `&EntityCloner` in component clone handlers is changed to `&mut
ComponentCloneCtx` to better separate data.
- Changed `EntityCloneHandler` from enum to struct and added convenience
functions to add default clone and reflect handler more easily.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Chris Russell <8494645+chescock@users.noreply.github.com>
2024-12-18 20:03:39 +00:00
BD103
6178ce93e8
Fix Clippy lints in benchmarks (#16808)
# Objective

- Closes #16804.
- This copies over our lint configuration to our benchmarks and fixes
any lints.

## Solution

- Copied over our Clippy configuration from the root `Cargo.toml` to
`benches/Cargo.toml`.
- Fixed any warnings that Clippy emitted.

## Testing

- `cd benches && cargo clippy --benches`
2024-12-14 05:53:17 +00:00
BD103
c4a24d5b51
Make benchmark setup consistent (#16733)
# Objective

- Benchmarks are inconsistently setup, there are several that do not
compile, and several others that need to be reformatted.
- Related / precursor to #16647, this is part of my attempt migrating
[`bevy-bencher`](https://github.com/TheBevyFlock/bevy-bencher) to the
official benchmarks.

## Solution

> [!TIP]
>
> I recommend reviewing this PR commit-by-commit, instead of all at
once!

In 5d26f56eb9 I reorganized how benches
were registered. Now this is one `[[bench]]` per Bevy crate. In each
crate benchmark folder, there is a `main.rs` that calls
`criterion_main!`. I also disabled automatic benchmark discovery, which
isn't necessarily required, but may clear up confusion with our custom
setup. I also fixed a few errors that were causing the benchmarks to
fail to compile.

In afc8d33a87 I ran `rustfmt` on all of
the benchmarks.

In d6cdf960ab I fixed all of the Clippy
warnings.

In ee94d48f50 I fixed some of the
benchmarks' usage of `black_box()`. I ended up opening
https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/133942 due to this, which should
help prevent this in the future.

In cbe1688dcd I renamed all of the ECS
benchmark groups to be called `benches`, to be consistent with the other
crate benchmarks.

In e701c212cd and
8815bb78b0 I re-ordered some imports and
module definitions, and uplifted `fragmentation/mod.rs` to
`fragementation.rs`.

Finally, in b0065e0b0b I organized
`Cargo.toml` and bumped Criterion to v0.5.

## Testing

- `cd benches && cargo clippy --benches`
- `cd benches && cargo fmt --all`
2024-12-10 20:39:14 +00:00
andriyDev
b1e4512648
Fix the picking backend features not actually disabling the features (#16470)
# Objective

- Fixes #16469.

## Solution

- Make the picking backend features not enabled by default in each
sub-crate.
- Make features in `bevy_internal` to set the backend features
- Make the root `bevy` crate set the features by default.

## Testing

- The mesh and sprite picking examples still work correctly.
2024-11-22 18:14:16 +00:00
Joona Aalto
0e30b68b20
Add mesh picking backend and MeshRayCast system parameter (#15800)
# Objective

Closes #15545.

`bevy_picking` supports UI and sprite picking, but not mesh picking.
Being able to pick meshes would be extremely useful for various games,
tools, and our own examples, as well as scene editors and inspectors.
So, we need a mesh picking backend!

Luckily,
[`bevy_mod_picking`](https://github.com/aevyrie/bevy_mod_picking) (which
`bevy_picking` is based on) by @aevyrie already has a [backend for
it](74f0c3c0fb/backends/bevy_picking_raycast/src/lib.rs)
using [`bevy_mod_raycast`](https://github.com/aevyrie/bevy_mod_raycast).
As a side product of adding mesh picking, we also get support for
performing ray casts on meshes!

## Solution

Upstream a large chunk of the immediate-mode ray casting functionality
from `bevy_mod_raycast`, and add a mesh picking backend based on
`bevy_mod_picking`. Huge thanks to @aevyrie who did all the hard work on
these incredible crates!

All meshes are pickable by default. Picking can be disabled for
individual entities by adding `PickingBehavior::IGNORE`, like normal.
Or, if you want mesh picking to be entirely opt-in, you can set
`MeshPickingBackendSettings::require_markers` to `true` and add a
`RayCastPickable` component to the desired camera and target entities.

You can also use the new `MeshRayCast` system parameter to cast rays
into the world manually:

```rust
fn ray_cast_system(mut ray_cast: MeshRayCast, foo_query: Query<(), With<Foo>>) {
    let ray = Ray3d::new(Vec3::ZERO, Dir3::X);

    // Only ray cast against entities with the `Foo` component.
    let filter = |entity| foo_query.contains(entity);

    // Never early-exit. Note that you can change behavior per-entity.
    let early_exit_test = |_entity| false;

    // Ignore the visibility of entities. This allows ray casting hidden entities.
    let visibility = RayCastVisibility::Any;

    let settings = RayCastSettings::default()
        .with_filter(&filter)
        .with_early_exit_test(&early_exit_test)
        .with_visibility(visibility);

    // Cast the ray with the settings, returning a list of intersections.
    let hits = ray_cast.cast_ray(ray, &settings);
}
```

This is largely a direct port, but I did make several changes to match
our APIs better, remove things we don't need or that I think are
unnecessary, and do some general improvements to code quality and
documentation.

### Changes Relative to `bevy_mod_raycast` and `bevy_mod_picking`

- Every `Raycast` and "raycast" has been renamed to `RayCast` and "ray
cast" (similar reasoning as the "Naming" section in #15724)
- `Raycast` system param has been renamed to `MeshRayCast` to avoid
naming conflicts and to be explicit that it is not for colliders
- `RaycastBackend` has been renamed to `MeshPickingBackend`
- `RayCastVisibility` variants are now `Any`, `Visible`, and
`VisibleInView` instead of `Ignore`, `MustBeVisible`, and
`MustBeVisibleAndInView`
- `NoBackfaceCulling` has been renamed to `RayCastBackfaces`, to avoid
implying that it affects the rendering of backfaces for meshes (it
doesn't)
- `SimplifiedMesh` and `RayCastBackfaces` live near other ray casting
API types, not in their own 10 LoC module
- All intersection logic and types are in the same `intersections`
module, not split across several modules
- Some intersection types have been renamed to be clearer and more
consistent
	- `IntersectionData` -> `RayMeshHit` 
	- `RayHit` -> `RayTriangleHit`
- General documentation and code quality improvements

### Removed / Not Ported

- Removed unused ray helpers and types, like `PrimitiveIntersection`
- Removed getters on intersection types, and made their properties
public
- There is no `2d` feature, and `Raycast::mesh_query` and
`Raycast::mesh2d_query` have been merged into `MeshRayCast::mesh_query`,
which handles both 2D and 3D
- I assume this existed previously because `Mesh2dHandle` used to be in
`bevy_sprite`. Now both the 2D and 3D mesh are in `bevy_render`.
- There is no `debug` feature or ray debug rendering
- There is no deferred API (`RaycastSource`)
- There is no `CursorRayPlugin` (the picking backend handles this)

### Note for Reviewers

In case it's helpful, the [first
commit](281638ef10)
here is essentially a one-to-one port. The rest of the commits are
primarily refactoring and cleaning things up in the ways listed earlier,
as well as changes to the module structure.

It may also be useful to compare the original [picking
backend](74f0c3c0fb/backends/bevy_picking_raycast/src/lib.rs)
and [`bevy_mod_raycast`](https://github.com/aevyrie/bevy_mod_raycast) to
this PR. Feel free to mention if there are any changes that I should
revert or something I should not include in this PR.

## Testing

I tested mesh picking and relevant components in some examples, for both
2D and 3D meshes, and added a new `mesh_picking` example. I also
~~stole~~ ported over the [ray-mesh intersection
benchmark](dbc5ef32fe/benches/ray_mesh_intersection.rs)
from `bevy_mod_raycast`.

---

## Showcase

Below is a version of the `2d_shapes` example modified to demonstrate 2D
mesh picking. This is not included in this PR.


https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/7742528c-8630-4c00-bacd-81576ac432bf

And below is the new `mesh_picking` example:


https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/b65c7a5a-fa3a-4c2d-8bbd-e7a2c772986e

There is also a really cool new `mesh_ray_cast` example ported over from
`bevy_mod_raycast`:


https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/3c5eb6c0-bd94-4fb0-bec6-8a85668a06c9

---------

Co-authored-by: Aevyrie <aevyrie@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Trent <2771466+tbillington@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: François Mockers <mockersf@gmail.com>
2024-10-13 17:24:19 +00:00
targrub
de3c70a8d3
Update `glam to 0.29, encase` to 0.10. (#15249)
# Objective

Updating ``glam`` to 0.29, ``encase`` to 0.10.

## Solution

Update the necessary ``Cargo.toml`` files.

## Testing

Ran ``cargo run -p ci`` on Windows; no issues came up.

---------

Co-authored-by: aecsocket <aecsocket@tutanota.com>
2024-09-23 19:44:02 +00:00
Mike
3d460e98ec
Fix CI bench compile check (#14728)
# Objective

- Fixes #14723 

## Solution

- add the manifest path to the cargo command

## Testing

- ran `cargo run -p ci -- bench-check` locally
2024-08-14 13:23:00 +00:00
Gino Valente
91fa4bb649
bevy_reflect: Function reflection benchmarks (#14647)
# Objective

It would be good to have benchmarks handy for function reflection as it
continues to be worked on.

## Solution

Add some basic benchmarks for function reflection.

## Testing

To test locally, run the following in the `benches` directory:

```
cargo bench --bench reflect_function
```

## Results

Here are a couple of the results (M1 Max MacBook Pro):

<img width="936" alt="Results of benching calling functions vs closures
via reflection. Closures average about 40ns, while functions average
about 55ns"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/b9a6c585-5fbe-43db-9a7b-f57dbd3815e3">
<img width="936" alt="Results of benching converting functions vs
closures into their dynamic representations. Closures average about
34ns, while functions average about 37ns"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/4614560a-7192-4c1e-9ade-7bc5a4ca68e3">

Currently, it seems `DynamicClosure` is just a bit more performant. This
is likely due to the fact that `DynamicFunction` stores its function
object in an `Arc` instead of a `Box` so that it can be `Send + Sync`
(and also `Clone`).

We'll likely need to do the same for `DynamicClosure` so I suspect these
results to change in the near future.
2024-08-11 03:02:06 +00:00
Robert Walter
70a18d26e2
Glam 0.28 update - adopted (#14613)
Basically it's https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/13792 with the
bumped versions of `encase` and `hexasphere`.

---------

Co-authored-by: Robert Swain <robert.swain@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2024-08-06 01:28:00 +00:00
Miles Silberling-Cook
ed2b8e0f35
Minimal Bubbling Observers (#13991)
# Objective

Add basic bubbling to observers, modeled off `bevy_eventlistener`.

## Solution

- Introduce a new `Traversal` trait for components which point to other
entities.
- Provide a default `TraverseNone: Traversal` component which cannot be
constructed.
- Implement `Traversal` for `Parent`.
- The `Event` trait now has an associated `Traversal` which defaults to
`TraverseNone`.
- Added a field `bubbling: &mut bool` to `Trigger` which can be used to
instruct the runner to bubble the event to the entity specified by the
event's traversal type.
- Added an associated constant `SHOULD_BUBBLE` to `Event` which
configures the default bubbling state.
- Added logic to wire this all up correctly.

Introducing the new associated information directly on `Event` (instead
of a new `BubblingEvent` trait) lets us dispatch both bubbling and
non-bubbling events through the same api.

## Testing

I have added several unit tests to cover the common bugs I identified
during development. Running the unit tests should be enough to validate
correctness. The changes effect unsafe portions of the code, but should
not change any of the safety assertions.

## Changelog

Observers can now bubble up the entity hierarchy! To create a bubbling
event, change your `Derive(Event)` to something like the following:

```rust
#[derive(Component)]
struct MyEvent;

impl Event for MyEvent {
    type Traverse = Parent; // This event will propagate up from child to parent.
    const AUTO_PROPAGATE: bool = true; // This event will propagate by default.
}
```

You can dispatch a bubbling event using the normal
`world.trigger_targets(MyEvent, entity)`.

Halting an event mid-bubble can be done using
`trigger.propagate(false)`. Events with `AUTO_PROPAGATE = false` will
not propagate by default, but you can enable it using
`trigger.propagate(true)`.

If there are multiple observers attached to a target, they will all be
triggered by bubbling. They all share a bubbling state, which can be
accessed mutably using `trigger.propagation_mut()` (`trigger.propagate`
is just sugar for this).

You can choose to implement `Traversal` for your own types, if you want
to bubble along a different structure than provided by `bevy_hierarchy`.
Implementers must be careful never to produce loops, because this will
cause bevy to hang.

## Migration Guide
+ Manual implementations of `Event` should add associated type `Traverse
= TraverseNone` and associated constant `AUTO_PROPAGATE = false`;
+ `Trigger::new` has new field `propagation: &mut Propagation` which
provides the bubbling state.
+ `ObserverRunner` now takes the same `&mut Propagation` as a final
parameter.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Torstein Grindvik <52322338+torsteingrindvik@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
2024-07-15 13:39:41 +00:00
andristarr
bb76a2c69c
multi_threaded feature rename (#12997)
# Objective

Fixes #12966

## Solution

Renaming multi_threaded feature to match snake case

## Migration Guide

Bevy feature multi-threaded should be refered to multi_threaded from now
on.
2024-05-06 20:49:32 +00:00
Martín Maita
32cd0c5dc1
Update glam version requirement from 0.25 to 0.27 (#12757)
# Objective

- Update glam version requirement to latest version.

## Solution

- Updated `glam` version requirement from 0.25 to 0.27.
- Updated `encase` and `encase_derive_impl` version requirement from 0.7
to 0.8.
- Updated `hexasphere` version requirement from 10.0 to 12.0.
- Breaking changes from glam changelog:
- [0.26.0] Minimum Supported Rust Version bumped to 1.68.2 for impl
From<bool> for {f32,f64} support.
- [0.27.0] Changed implementation of vector fract method to match the
Rust implementation instead of the GLSL implementation, that is self -
self.trunc() instead of self - self.floor().

---

## Migration Guide

- When using `glam` exports, keep in mind that `vector` `fract()` method
now matches Rust implementation (that is `self - self.trunc()` instead
of `self - self.floor()`). If you want to use the GLSL implementation
you should now use `fract_gl()`.

---------

Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
2024-05-02 18:42:34 +00:00
BD103
9ee02e87d3
Remove version field for non-publish crates and update descriptions (#13100)
# Objective

- The [`version`] field in `Cargo.toml` is optional for crates not
published on <https://crates.io>.
- We have several `publish = false` tools in this repository that still
have a version field, even when it's not useful.

[`version`]:
https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/manifest.html#the-version-field

## Solution

- Remove the [`version`] field for all crates where `publish = false`.
- Update the description on a few crates and remove extra newlines as
well.
2024-04-26 11:55:03 +00:00
W. Black
622f9a35b6
Torus benchmark (#12781)
# Objective

- Primitive meshing is suboptimal
- Improve primitive meshing

## Solution

- Add primitive meshing benchmark
- Allows measuring future improvements

---

First of a few PRs to refactor and improve primitive meshing.
2024-03-29 20:30:26 +00:00
Doonv
1c67e020f7
Move EntityHash related types into bevy_ecs (#11498)
# Objective

Reduce the size of `bevy_utils`
(https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/11478)

## Solution

Move `EntityHash` related types into `bevy_ecs`. This also allows us
access to `Entity`, which means we no longer need `EntityHashMap`'s
first generic argument.

---

## Changelog

- Moved `bevy::utils::{EntityHash, EntityHasher, EntityHashMap,
EntityHashSet}` into `bevy::ecs::entity::hash` .
- Removed `EntityHashMap`'s first generic argument. It is now hardcoded
to always be `Entity`.

## Migration Guide

- Uses of `bevy::utils::{EntityHash, EntityHasher, EntityHashMap,
EntityHashSet}` now have to be imported from `bevy::ecs::entity::hash`.
- Uses of `EntityHashMap` no longer have to specify the first generic
parameter. It is now hardcoded to always be `Entity`.
2024-02-12 15:02:24 +00:00
irate
ec14e946b8
Update glam, encase and hexasphere (#11082)
Update to `glam` 0.25, `encase` 0.7 and `hexasphere` to 10.0

## Changelog
Added the `FloatExt` trait to the `bevy_math` prelude which adds `lerp`,
`inverse_lerp` and `remap` methods to the `f32` and `f64` types.
2024-01-08 22:58:45 +00:00
scottmcm
713b1d8fa4
Optimize Entity::eq (#10519)
(This is my first PR here, so I've probably missed some things. Please
let me know what else I should do to help you as a reviewer!)

# Objective

Due to https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/117800, the `derive`'d
`PartialEq::eq` on `Entity` isn't as good as it could be. Since that's
used in hashtable lookup, let's improve it.

## Solution

The derived `PartialEq::eq` short-circuits if the generation doesn't
match. However, having a branch there is sub-optimal, especially on
64-bit systems like x64 that could just load the whole `Entity` in one
load anyway.

Due to complications around `poison` in LLVM and the exact details of
what unsafe code is allowed to do with reference in Rust
(https://github.com/rust-lang/unsafe-code-guidelines/issues/346), LLVM
isn't allowed to completely remove the short-circuiting. `&Entity` is
marked `dereferencable(8)` so LLVM knows it's allowed to *load* all 8
bytes -- and does so -- but it has to assume that the `index` might be
undef/poison if the `generation` doesn't match, and thus while it finds
a way to do it without needing a branch, it has to do something slightly
more complicated than optimal to combine the results. (LLVM is allowed
to change non-short-circuiting code to use branches, but not the other
way around.)

Here's a link showing the codegen today:
<https://rust.godbolt.org/z/9WzjxrY7c>
```rust
#[no_mangle]
pub fn demo_eq_ref(a: &Entity, b: &Entity) -> bool {
    a == b
}
```
ends up generating the following assembly:
```asm
demo_eq_ref:
        movq    xmm0, qword ptr [rdi]
        movq    xmm1, qword ptr [rsi]
        pcmpeqd xmm1, xmm0
        pshufd  xmm0, xmm1, 80
        movmskpd        eax, xmm0
        cmp     eax, 3
        sete    al
        ret
```
(It's usually not this bad in real uses after inlining and LTO, but it
makes a strong demo.)

This PR manually implements `PartialEq::eq` *without* short-circuiting,
and because that tells LLVM that neither the generations nor the index
can be poison, it doesn't need to be so careful and can generate the
"just compare the two 64-bit values" code you'd have probably already
expected:
```asm
demo_eq_ref:
        mov     rax, qword ptr [rsi]
        cmp     qword ptr [rdi], rax
        sete    al
        ret
```

Since this doesn't change the representation of `Entity`, if it's
instead passed by *value*, then each `Entity` is two `u32` registers,
and the old and the new code do exactly the same thing. (Other
approaches, like changing `Entity` to be `[u32; 2]` or `u64`, affect
this case.)

This should hopefully merge easily with changes like
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/9907 that also want to change
`Entity`.

## Benchmarks

I'm not super-confident that I got my machine fully consistent for
benchmarking, but whether I run the old or the new one first I get
reasonably consistent results.

Here's a fairly typical example of the benchmarks I added in this PR:

![image](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/18526288/24226308-4616-4082-b0ff-88fc06285ef1)

Building the sets seems to be basically the same. It's usually reported
as noise, but sometimes I see a few percent slower or faster.

But lookup hits in particular -- since a hit checks that the key is
equal -- consistently shows around 10% improvement.

`cargo run --example many_cubes --features bevy/trace_tracy --release --
--benchmark` showed as slightly faster with this change, though if I had
to bet I'd probably say it's more noise than meaningful (but at least
it's not worse either):

![image](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/assets/18526288/58bb8c96-9c45-487f-a5ab-544bbfe9fba0)

This is my first PR here -- and my first time running Tracy -- so please
let me know what else I should run, or run things on your own more
reliable machines to double-check.

---

## Changelog

(probably not worth including)

Changed: micro-optimized `Entity::eq` to help LLVM slightly.

## Migration Guide

(I really hope nobody was using this on uninitialized entities where
sufficiently tortured `unsafe` could could technically notice that this
has changed.)
2023-11-14 02:06:21 +00:00
Nicola Papale
ee3cc8ca86
Fix erronenous glam version (#9653)
# Objective

- Fix compilation issue with wrongly specified glam version
- bevy uses `Vec2::INFINITY`, depends on `0.24` (equivalent to `0.24.0`)
yet it was only introduced in version `0.24.1`

Context:
https://discord.com/channels/691052431525675048/692572690833473578/1146586570787397794

## Solution

- Bump glam version.
2023-08-31 12:55:17 +00:00
Nicola Papale
7b0809b532
Add reflect path parsing benchmark (#9364)
# Objective

We want to measure performance on path reflection parsing.

## Solution

Benchmark path-based reflection:
- Add a benchmark for `ParsedPath::parse`

It's fairly noisy, this is why I added the 3% threshold.

Ideally we would fix the noisiness though. Supposedly I'm seeding the
RNG correctly, so there shouldn't be much observable variance. Maybe
someone can help spot the issue.
2023-08-25 14:30:26 +00:00
Mike
ac8f36743e
enable multithreading on benches (#9388)
# Objective

- Enable the new multithreading feature on benches
2023-08-11 22:08:36 +00:00
François
0736195a1e
update syn, encase, glam and hexasphere (#8573)
# Objective

- Fixes #8282 
- Update `syn` to 2.0, `encase` to 0.6, `glam` to 0.24 and `hexasphere`
to 9.0


Blocked ~~on https://github.com/teoxoy/encase/pull/42~~ and ~~on
https://github.com/OptimisticPeach/hexasphere/pull/17~~

---------

Co-authored-by: Nicola Papale <nicopap@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: JoJoJet <21144246+JoJoJet@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-05-16 01:24:17 +00:00
Edgar Geier
cbbf8ac575 Update glam to 0.23 (#7883)
# Objective

- Update `glam` to the latest version.

## Solution

- Update `glam` to version `0.23`.

Since the breaking change in `glam` only affects the `scalar-math` feature, this should cause no issues.
2023-03-04 11:42:27 +00:00
Aevyrie
2a598d3e5a Add Beziers to bevy_math (#7653)
# Objective

- Adds foundational math for Bezier curves, useful for UI/2D/3D animation and smooth paths.

https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2632925/218883143-e138f994-1795-40da-8c59-21d779666991.mp4

## Solution

- Adds the generic `Bezier` type, and a `Point` trait. The `Point` trait allows us to use control points of any dimension, as long as they support vector math. I've implemented it for `f32`(1D), `Vec2`(2D), and `Vec3`/`Vec3A`(3D).
- Adds `CubicBezierEasing` on top of `Bezier` with the addition of an implementation of cubic Bezier easing, which is a foundational tool for UI animation.
  - This involves solving for $t$ in the parametric Bezier function $B(t)$ using the Newton-Raphson method to find a value with error $\leq$ 1e-7, capped at 8 iterations.
- Added type aliases for common Bezier curves: `CubicBezier2d`, `CubicBezier3d`, `QuadraticBezier2d`, and `QuadraticBezier3d`. These types use `Vec3A` to represent control points, as this was found to have an 80-90% speedup over using `Vec3`.
- Benchmarking shows quadratic/cubic Bezier evaluations $B(t)$ take \~1.8/2.4ns respectively. Easing, which requires an iterative solve takes \~50ns for cubic Beziers. 

---

## Changelog

- Added `CubicBezier2d`, `CubicBezier3d`, `QuadraticBezier2d`, and `QuadraticBezier3d` types with methods for sampling position, velocity, and acceleration. The generic `Bezier` type is also available, and generic over any degree of Bezier curve.
- Added `CubicBezierEasing`, with additional methods to allow for smooth easing animations.
2023-02-20 18:34:52 +00:00
François
0aab699a84 Update glam 0.22, hexasphere 8.0, encase 0.4 (#6427)
# Objective

- Update glam to 0.22, hexasphere to 8.0, encase to 0.4

## Solution

- Update glam to 0.22, hexasphere to 8.0, encase to 0.4
- ~~waiting on https://github.com/teoxoy/encase/pull/17 and https://github.com/OptimisticPeach/hexasphere/pull/13~~
2022-11-07 19:44:13 +00:00
Thierry Berger
9dd019bf86 Change Detection Benchmarks (#4972)
# Objective

Fixes #4883.

## Solution

- Add benchmarks for Changed and Added

Disclaimer: I'm not that much familiar with benchmarking.
2022-11-04 17:53:54 +00:00
James Liu
ec8c8fbc8a Remove unnecesary branches/panics from Query accesses (#6461)
# Objective
Supercedes #6452. Upon inspection of the [generated assembly](https://gist.github.com/james7132/c2740c6941b80d7912f1e8888e223cbb#file-original-s) of a [simple Bevy binary](https://gist.github.com/james7132/c2740c6941b80d7912f1e8888e223cbb#file-source-rs) compiled with `cargo rustc --release -- --emit asm`, it's apparent that there are multiple unnecessary branches in the generated assembly:

```assembly
.LBB5_5:
	cmpq	%r10, %r11
	je	.LBB5_15
	movq	(%r11), %rcx
	movq	328(%r15), %rdx
	cmpq	%rdx, %rcx
	jae	.LBB5_14
	movq	312(%r15), %rdi
	leaq	(%rcx,%rcx,2), %rcx
	shlq	$5, %rcx
	movq	336(%r12), %rdx
	movq	64(%rdi,%rcx), %rax
	cmpq	%rdx, %rax
	jbe	.LBB5_4
	leaq	(%rdi,%rcx), %rsi
	movq	48(%rsi), %rbp
	shlq	$4, %rdx
	cmpq	$0, (%rbp,%rdx)
	je	.LBB5_4
	movq	344(%r12), %rbx
	cmpq	%rbx, %rax
	jbe	.LBB5_4
	shlq	$4, %rbx
	cmpq	$0, (%rbp,%rbx)
	je	.LBB5_4
	addq	$8, %r11
	movq	88(%rdi,%rcx), %rcx
	testq	%rcx, %rcx
	je	.LBB5_5
	movq	(%rsi), %rax
	movq	8(%rbp,%rdx), %rdx
	leaq	(%rdx,%rdx,4), %rdi
	shlq	$4, %rdi
	movq	32(%rax,%rdi), %rdx
	movq	56(%rax,%rdi), %r8
	movq	8(%rbp,%rbx), %rbp
	leaq	(%rbp,%rbp,4), %rbp
	shlq	$4, %rbp
	movq	32(%rax,%rbp), %r9
	xorl	%ebp, %ebp
	jmp	.LBB5_13
	.p2align	4, 0x90
```

Almost every one of the instructions starting with `j` is a potential branch, which can significantly slow down accesses. Of these, two labels are both common and never used:

```asm
.LBB5_14:
	leaq	__unnamed_2(%rip), %r8
	callq	_ZN4core9panicking18panic_bounds_check17h70367088e72af65aE
	ud2
.LBB5_4:
	callq	_ZN8bevy_ecs5query25debug_checked_unreachable17h0855ff520ceaea77E
	ud2
	.seh_endproc
```

These correpsond to subprocedure calls to panicking due to out of bounds from indexing `Tables` and `debug_checked_unreadable`. Both of which should be inlined and optimized out, but are not.

## Solution
Make `debug_checked_unreachable` a macro to forcibly inline either `unreachable!()` in debug builds, and `std::hint::unreachable_unchecked()` in release mode. Replace the `Tables` and `Archetype` index access with `get(id).unwrap_or_else(|| debug_checked_unreachable!())` to assume that the table or archetype provided exists.

This has no external breaking change of any kind.

The equivalent section of code with these changes removes most of the conditional jump instructions:

```asm
.LBB5_5:
	movss	(%rbx,%rbp,4), %xmm0
	movl	%r14d, 4(%r8,%rbp,8)
	addss	(%rdi,%rbp,4), %xmm0
	movss	%xmm0, (%rdi,%rbp,4)
	incq	%rbp
.LBB5_1:
	cmpq	%rdx, %rbp
	jne	.LBB5_5
	.p2align	4, 0x90
.LBB5_2:
	cmpq	%rcx, %rax
	je	.LBB5_6
	movq	(%rax), %rdx
	addq	$8, %rax
	movq	312(%rsi), %rbp
	leaq	(%rdx,%rdx,2), %rbx
	shlq	$5, %rbx
	movq	88(%rbp,%rbx), %rdx
	testq	%rdx, %rdx
	je	.LBB5_2
	leaq	(%rbx,%rbp), %r8
	movq	336(%r15), %rdi
	movq	344(%r15), %r9
	movq	48(%rbp,%rbx), %r10
	shlq	$4, %rdi
	movq	(%r8), %rbx
	movq	8(%r10,%rdi), %rdi
	leaq	(%rdi,%rdi,4), %rbp
	shlq	$4, %rbp
	movq	32(%rbx,%rbp), %rdi
	movq	56(%rbx,%rbp), %r8
	shlq	$4, %r9
	movq	8(%r10,%r9), %rbp
	leaq	(%rbp,%rbp,4), %rbp
	shlq	$4, %rbp
	movq	32(%rbx,%rbp), %rbx
	xorl	%ebp, %ebp
	jmp	.LBB5_5
.LBB5_6:
	addq	$40, %rsp
	popq	%rbx
	popq	%rbp
	popq	%rdi
	popq	%rsi
	popq	%r14
	popq	%r15
	retq
	.seh_endproc

```

## Performance

Microbenchmarks results:

<details>

```
group                                                    main                                     no-panic-query
-----                                                    ----                                     --------------
busy_systems/01x_entities_03_systems                     1.20     42.4±2.66µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     35.3±1.68µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/01x_entities_06_systems                     1.32     83.8±3.50µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     63.6±1.72µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/01x_entities_09_systems                     1.15    113.3±8.90µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     98.2±6.15µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/01x_entities_12_systems                     1.27   160.8±32.44µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    126.6±4.70µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/01x_entities_15_systems                     1.12    179.6±3.71µs        ? ?/sec      1.00   160.3±11.03µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/02x_entities_03_systems                     1.18     76.8±3.14µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     65.2±3.17µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/02x_entities_06_systems                     1.16    144.6±6.10µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    124.5±5.14µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/02x_entities_09_systems                     1.19    215.3±9.18µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    181.5±5.67µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/02x_entities_12_systems                     1.20    266.7±8.33µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    222.0±9.53µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/02x_entities_15_systems                     1.23   338.8±10.53µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    276.3±6.94µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/03x_entities_03_systems                     1.43    113.5±5.06µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     79.6±1.49µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/03x_entities_06_systems                     1.38   217.3±12.67µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    157.5±3.07µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/03x_entities_09_systems                     1.23   308.8±24.75µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    251.6±8.93µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/03x_entities_12_systems                     1.05   347.7±12.43µs        ? ?/sec      1.00   330.6±11.43µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/03x_entities_15_systems                     1.13   455.5±13.88µs        ? ?/sec      1.00   401.7±17.29µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/04x_entities_03_systems                     1.24    144.7±5.89µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    116.9±6.29µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/04x_entities_06_systems                     1.24   282.8±21.40µs        ? ?/sec      1.00   228.6±21.31µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/04x_entities_09_systems                     1.35   431.8±14.10µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    319.6±9.83µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/04x_entities_12_systems                     1.16   493.8±22.87µs        ? ?/sec      1.00   424.9±15.24µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/04x_entities_15_systems                     1.10   587.5±23.25µs        ? ?/sec      1.00   531.7±16.32µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/05x_entities_03_systems                     1.14    148.2±9.61µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    129.5±4.32µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/05x_entities_06_systems                     1.31   359.7±17.46µs        ? ?/sec      1.00   273.6±10.55µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/05x_entities_09_systems                     1.22   473.5±23.11µs        ? ?/sec      1.00   389.3±13.62µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/05x_entities_12_systems                     1.05   562.9±20.76µs        ? ?/sec      1.00   536.5±24.35µs        ? ?/sec
busy_systems/05x_entities_15_systems                     1.23   818.5±28.70µs        ? ?/sec      1.00   666.6±45.87µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/01x_entities_03_systems                        1.27     27.5±0.49µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     21.6±1.71µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/01x_entities_06_systems                        1.22     49.9±1.18µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     40.7±2.62µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/01x_entities_09_systems                        1.30     72.3±2.39µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     55.4±2.60µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/01x_entities_12_systems                        1.28     94.3±9.44µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     73.7±3.62µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/01x_entities_15_systems                        1.25    118.0±2.43µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     94.1±3.99µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/02x_entities_03_systems                        1.23     41.6±1.71µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     33.7±2.30µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/02x_entities_06_systems                        1.19     78.6±2.63µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     65.9±2.35µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/02x_entities_09_systems                        1.28    113.6±3.60µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     88.6±3.60µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/02x_entities_12_systems                        1.20    146.4±5.75µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    121.7±3.35µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/02x_entities_15_systems                        1.23    178.5±4.86µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    145.7±4.00µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/03x_entities_03_systems                        1.42     58.3±2.77µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     41.1±1.54µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/03x_entities_06_systems                        1.32    108.5±7.30µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     82.4±4.86µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/03x_entities_09_systems                        1.23    153.7±4.61µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    125.0±4.76µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/03x_entities_12_systems                        1.18    197.5±5.12µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    166.8±8.14µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/03x_entities_15_systems                        1.23    238.8±6.38µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    194.6±4.55µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/04x_entities_03_systems                        1.34     66.4±3.42µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     49.5±1.98µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/04x_entities_06_systems                        1.27    134.3±4.86µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    105.8±3.58µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/04x_entities_09_systems                        1.26    193.2±3.83µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    153.0±5.60µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/04x_entities_12_systems                        1.16    237.1±5.78µs        ? ?/sec      1.00   204.9±18.77µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/04x_entities_15_systems                        1.17    289.2±4.76µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    246.3±8.57µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/05x_entities_03_systems                        1.26     80.4±2.90µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     63.7±3.07µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/05x_entities_06_systems                        1.27   161.6±13.47µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    127.2±5.59µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/05x_entities_09_systems                        1.22    228.0±7.76µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    186.2±7.68µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/05x_entities_12_systems                        1.20    289.5±6.21µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    241.8±7.52µs        ? ?/sec
contrived/05x_entities_15_systems                        1.18   357.3±11.24µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    302.7±7.21µs        ? ?/sec
heavy_compute/base                                       1.01    302.4±3.52µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    300.2±3.40µs        ? ?/sec
iter_fragmented/base                                     1.00    348.1±7.51ns        ? ?/sec      1.01    351.9±8.32ns        ? ?/sec
iter_fragmented/foreach                                  1.03   239.8±23.78ns        ? ?/sec      1.00   233.8±18.12ns        ? ?/sec
iter_fragmented/foreach_wide                             1.00      3.9±0.13µs        ? ?/sec      1.02      4.0±0.22µs        ? ?/sec
iter_fragmented/wide                                     1.18      4.6±0.15µs        ? ?/sec      1.00      3.9±0.10µs        ? ?/sec
iter_fragmented_sparse/base                              1.02      8.1±0.15ns        ? ?/sec      1.00      7.9±0.56ns        ? ?/sec
iter_fragmented_sparse/foreach                           1.00      7.8±0.22ns        ? ?/sec      1.01      7.9±0.62ns        ? ?/sec
iter_fragmented_sparse/foreach_wide                      1.00     37.2±1.17ns        ? ?/sec      1.10     40.9±0.95ns        ? ?/sec
iter_fragmented_sparse/wide                              1.09     48.4±2.13ns        ? ?/sec      1.00    44.5±18.34ns        ? ?/sec
iter_simple/base                                         1.02      8.4±0.10µs        ? ?/sec      1.00      8.2±0.14µs        ? ?/sec
iter_simple/foreach                                      1.01      8.3±0.07µs        ? ?/sec      1.00      8.2±0.09µs        ? ?/sec
iter_simple/foreach_sparse_set                           1.00     25.3±0.32µs        ? ?/sec      1.02     25.7±0.42µs        ? ?/sec
iter_simple/foreach_wide                                 1.03     41.1±0.94µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     39.9±0.41µs        ? ?/sec
iter_simple/foreach_wide_sparse_set                      1.05    123.6±2.05µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    118.1±2.78µs        ? ?/sec
iter_simple/sparse_set                                   1.14     30.5±1.40µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     26.9±0.64µs        ? ?/sec
iter_simple/system                                       1.01      8.4±0.25µs        ? ?/sec      1.00      8.4±0.11µs        ? ?/sec
iter_simple/wide                                         1.18     48.2±0.62µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     40.7±0.38µs        ? ?/sec
iter_simple/wide_sparse_set                              1.12   140.8±21.56µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    126.0±2.30µs        ? ?/sec
query_get/50000_entities_sparse                          1.17    378.6±7.60µs        ? ?/sec      1.00   324.1±23.17µs        ? ?/sec
query_get/50000_entities_table                           1.08   330.9±10.90µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    306.8±4.98µs        ? ?/sec
query_get_component/50000_entities_sparse                1.00   976.7±19.55µs        ? ?/sec      1.00   979.8±35.87µs        ? ?/sec
query_get_component/50000_entities_table                 1.00  1029.0±15.11µs        ? ?/sec      1.05  1080.0±59.18µs        ? ?/sec
query_get_component_simple/system                        1.13   839.7±14.18µs        ? ?/sec      1.00   742.8±10.72µs        ? ?/sec
query_get_component_simple/unchecked                     1.01   909.0±15.17µs        ? ?/sec      1.00   898.0±13.56µs        ? ?/sec
query_get_many_10/50000_calls_sparse                     1.04      5.5±0.54ms        ? ?/sec      1.00      5.3±0.67ms        ? ?/sec
query_get_many_10/50000_calls_table                      1.01      4.9±0.49ms        ? ?/sec      1.00      4.8±0.45ms        ? ?/sec
query_get_many_2/50000_calls_sparse                      1.28  848.4±210.89µs        ? ?/sec      1.00   664.8±47.69µs        ? ?/sec
query_get_many_2/50000_calls_table                       1.05   779.0±73.85µs        ? ?/sec      1.00   739.2±83.02µs        ? ?/sec
query_get_many_5/50000_calls_sparse                      1.05      2.4±0.37ms        ? ?/sec      1.00      2.3±0.33ms        ? ?/sec
query_get_many_5/50000_calls_table                       1.00  1939.9±75.22µs        ? ?/sec      1.04      2.0±0.19ms        ? ?/sec
run_criteria/yes_using_query/001_systems                 1.00      3.7±0.38µs        ? ?/sec      1.30      4.9±0.14µs        ? ?/sec
run_criteria/yes_using_query/006_systems                 1.00      8.9±0.40µs        ? ?/sec      1.17     10.3±0.57µs        ? ?/sec
run_criteria/yes_using_query/011_systems                 1.00     13.9±0.49µs        ? ?/sec      1.08     15.0±0.89µs        ? ?/sec
run_criteria/yes_using_query/016_systems                 1.00     18.8±0.74µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     18.8±1.43µs        ? ?/sec
run_criteria/yes_using_query/021_systems                 1.07     24.1±0.87µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     22.6±1.58µs        ? ?/sec
run_criteria/yes_using_query/026_systems                 1.04     27.9±0.62µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     26.8±1.71µs        ? ?/sec
run_criteria/yes_using_query/031_systems                 1.09     33.3±1.03µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     30.5±2.18µs        ? ?/sec
run_criteria/yes_using_query/036_systems                 1.14     38.7±0.80µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     33.9±1.75µs        ? ?/sec
run_criteria/yes_using_query/041_systems                 1.18     43.7±1.07µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     37.0±2.39µs        ? ?/sec
run_criteria/yes_using_query/046_systems                 1.14     47.6±1.16µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     41.9±2.09µs        ? ?/sec
run_criteria/yes_using_query/051_systems                 1.17     52.9±2.04µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     45.3±1.75µs        ? ?/sec
run_criteria/yes_using_query/056_systems                 1.25     59.2±2.38µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     47.2±2.01µs        ? ?/sec
run_criteria/yes_using_query/061_systems                 1.28    66.1±15.84µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     51.5±2.47µs        ? ?/sec
run_criteria/yes_using_query/066_systems                 1.28     70.2±2.57µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     54.7±2.58µs        ? ?/sec
run_criteria/yes_using_query/071_systems                 1.30     75.5±2.27µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     58.2±3.31µs        ? ?/sec
run_criteria/yes_using_query/076_systems                 1.26     81.5±2.66µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     64.5±3.13µs        ? ?/sec
run_criteria/yes_using_query/081_systems                 1.29     89.7±2.58µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     69.3±3.47µs        ? ?/sec
run_criteria/yes_using_query/086_systems                 1.33     95.6±3.39µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     71.8±3.48µs        ? ?/sec
run_criteria/yes_using_query/091_systems                 1.25    102.0±3.67µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     81.4±4.82µs        ? ?/sec
run_criteria/yes_using_query/096_systems                 1.33    111.7±3.29µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     83.8±4.15µs        ? ?/sec
run_criteria/yes_using_query/101_systems                 1.29   113.2±12.04µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     87.7±5.15µs        ? ?/sec
world_query_for_each/50000_entities_sparse               1.00     47.4±0.51µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     47.3±0.33µs        ? ?/sec
world_query_for_each/50000_entities_table                1.00     27.2±0.50µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     27.2±0.17µs        ? ?/sec
world_query_get/50000_entities_sparse_wide               1.09    210.5±1.78µs        ? ?/sec      1.00    192.5±2.61µs        ? ?/sec
world_query_get/50000_entities_table                     1.00    127.7±2.09µs        ? ?/sec      1.07    136.2±5.95µs        ? ?/sec
world_query_get/50000_entities_table_wide                1.00    209.8±2.37µs        ? ?/sec      1.15    240.6±2.04µs        ? ?/sec
world_query_iter/50000_entities_sparse                   1.00     54.2±0.36µs        ? ?/sec      1.01     54.7±0.61µs        ? ?/sec
world_query_iter/50000_entities_table                    1.00     27.2±0.31µs        ? ?/sec      1.00     27.3±0.64µs        ? ?/sec
```
</details>

NOTE: This PR includes a change to enable LTO on our benchmarks to get a "fully optimized" baseline for our benchmarks. Both the main and the current PR's results were with LTO enabled.
2022-11-04 06:04:55 +00:00
ShadowCurse
179f719553 ECS benchmarks organization (#5189)
## Objective

Fixes: #5110

## Solution

- Moved benches into separate modules according to the part of ECS they are testing.
- Made so all ECS benches are included in one `benches.rs` so they don’t need to be added separately in `Cargo.toml`.
- Renamed a bunch of files to have more coherent names.
- Merged `schedule.rs` and `system_schedule.rs` into one file.
2022-07-04 14:17:45 +00:00
CGMossa
33f9b3940d Updated glam to 0.21. (#5142)
Removed `const_vec2`/`const_vec3`
and replaced with equivalent `.from_array`.

# Objective

Fixes #5112 

## Solution

- `encase` needs to update to `glam` as well. See teoxoy/encase#4 on progress on that. 
- `hexasphere` also needs to be updated, see OptimisticPeach/hexasphere#12.
2022-07-03 19:55:33 +00:00
JoJoJet
92ea730362 Add benchmarks for schedule dependency resolution (#4961)
# Objective

- Add benchmarks to test the performance of `Schedule`'s system dependency resolution.

## Solution

- Do a series of benchmarks while increasing the number of systems in the schedule to see how the run-time scales.
- Split the benchmarks into a group with no dependencies, and a group with many dependencies.
2022-06-20 17:35:54 +00:00
dataphract
0917c49b9b bench: add bevy_reflect::{List, Map, Struct} benchmarks (#3690)
# Objective

Partially addresses #3594.

## Solution

This adds basic benchmarks for `List`, `Map`, and `Struct` implementors, both concrete (`Vec`, `HashMap`, and defined struct types) and dynamic (`DynamicList`, `DynamicMap` and `DynamicStruct`). 

A few insights from the benchmarks (all measurements are local on my machine):
- Applying a list with many elements to a list with no elements is slower than applying to a list of the same length:
  - 3-4x slower when applying to a `Vec`
  - 5-6x slower when applying to a `DynamicList`
  
  I suspect this could be improved by `reserve()`ing the correct length up front, but haven't tested.
- Applying a `DynamicMap` to another `Map` is linear in the number of elements, but applying a `HashMap` seems to be at least quadratic. No intuition on this one.
- Applying like structs (concrete -> concrete, `DynamicStruct` -> `DynamicStruct`) seems to be faster than applying unlike structs.
2022-05-17 04:16:53 +00:00
TheRawMeatball
87991c50f1 Add a random access get_component benchmark (#4607)
# Objective

Add a benchmark to measure the performance of get_component, particularly for cases involving random access.

Enables #2965
2022-04-26 21:20:13 +00:00
Mike
45d2c78949 add benches for simple run criteria (#4196)
# Objective

- Add benches for run criteria. This is in anticipation of run criteria being redone in stageless.

## Solution

- Benches run criteria that don't access anything to test overhead
- Test run criteria that use a query
- Test run criteria that use a resource
2022-04-26 19:59:19 +00:00
Torne Wuff
b1afe2dcca Make System responsible for updating its own archetypes (#4115)
# Objective

- Make it possible to use `System`s outside of the scheduler/executor without having to define logic to track new archetypes and call `System::add_archetype()` for each.

## Solution

- Replace `System::add_archetype(&Archetype)` with `System::update_archetypes(&World)`, making systems responsible for tracking their own most recent archetype generation the way that `SystemState` already does.

This has minimal (or simplifying) effect on most of the code with the exception of `FunctionSystem`, which must now track the latest `ArchetypeGeneration` it saw instead of relying on the executor to do it.

Co-authored-by: Carter Anderson <mcanders1@gmail.com>
2022-04-07 20:50:43 +00:00
Alice Cecile
1b63d949ea Re-add ECS benchmark suite (#4332)
# Objective

- Benchmarks are good.
- Licensing situation appears to be [cleared up](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/4225#issuecomment-1078710209).

## Solution

- Add the benchmark suite back in
- Suggested PR title: "Revert "Revert "Add cart's fork of ecs_bench_suite (#4225)" (#4252)"


Co-authored-by: Daniel McNab <36049421+DJMcNab@users.noreply.github.com>
2022-03-29 22:18:07 +00:00
Daniel McNab
95d3f32b9b Revert "Add cart's fork of ecs_bench_suite (#4225)" (#4252)
This reverts commit 08ef2f0a28.

# Objective

- #4225 was merged without considering the licensing considerations.
- It merges in code taken from https://github.com/cart/ecs_bench_suite/tree/bevy-benches/src/bevy.
- We can safely assume that we do have a license to cart's contributions. However, these build upon 377e96e69a, for which we have no license. 
- This has been verified by looking in the Cargo.toml, the root folder and the readme, none of which mention a license. Additionally, the string "license" [doesn't appear](https://github.com/rust-gamedev/ecs_bench_suite/search?q=license) in the repository.
- This means the code is all rights reserved.
- (The author of these commits also hasn't commented in #2373, though even if they had, it would be legally *dubious* to rely on that to license any code they ever wrote)
- (Note that the latest commit on the head at https://github.com/rust-gamedev/ecs_bench_suite hasn't had a license added either.)
- We are currently incorrectly claiming to be able to give an MIT/Apache 2.0 license to this code.

## Solution

- Revert it
2022-03-19 11:12:24 +00:00
James Liu
08ef2f0a28 Add cart's fork of ecs_bench_suite (#4225)
# Objective
Better benchmarking for ECS. Fix #2062.

## Solution
Port @cart's fork of ecs_bench_suite to the official bench suite for bevy_ecs, replace cgmath with glam, update to latest bevy.
2022-03-19 04:41:30 +00:00
Daniel McNab
1ba9818a78 Significantly reduce the amount of building required for benchmarks (#4067)
# Objective

- Release mode. Many time

## Solution

- Less things, less time
2022-03-01 00:51:07 +00:00
Niklas Eicker
94db0176fe Add readme to errors crate and clean up cargo files (#3125)
# Objective

- Document that the error codes will be rendered on the bevy website (see bevyengine/bevy-website#216)
- Some Cargo.toml files did not include the license or a description field

## Solution

- Readme for the errors crate
- Mark internal/development crates with `publish = false`
- Add missing license/descriptions to some crates

- [x] merge bevyengine/bevy-website#216
2021-11-13 23:06:48 +00:00
Yoh Deadfall
ffde86efa0 Update to edition 2021 on master (#3028)
Objective
During work on #3009 I've found that not all jobs use actions-rs, and therefore, an previous version of Rust is used for them. So while compilation and other stuff can pass, checking markup and Android build may fail with compilation errors.

Solution
This PR adds `action-rs` for any job running cargo, and updates the edition to 2021.
2021-10-27 00:12:14 +00:00
Carter Anderson
a89a954a17 Not me ... us (#2654)
I don't see much of a reason at this point to boost my name over anyone elses. We are all Bevy Contributors.
2021-08-15 20:08:52 +00:00