# Objective
- The `#[deprecated]` attributes supports a `since` field, which
documents in which version an item was deprecated. This field is visible
in `rustdoc`.
- We inconsistently use `since` throughout the project.
For an example of what `since` renders as, take a look at
`ChildOf::get()`:
```rust
/// The parent entity of this child entity.
#[deprecated(since = "0.16.0", note = "Use child_of.parent() instead")]
#[inline]
pub fn get(&self) -> Entity {
self.0
}
```

## Solution
- Add `since = "0.16.0"` to all `#[deprecated]` attributes that do not
already use it.
- Add an example of deprecating a struct with the `since` field in the
migration guide document.
I would appreciate if this could be included in 0.16's release, as its a
low-risk documentation improvement that is valuable for the release, but
I'd understand if this was cut.
## Testing
You can use `cargo doc` to inspect the rendered form of
`#[deprecated(since = "0.16.0", ...)]`.
# Objective
Newest installment of the #16547 series.
In #18319 we introduced `Entity` defaults to accomodate the most common
use case for these types, however that resulted in the switch of the `T`
and `N` generics of `UniqueEntityArray`.
Swapping generics might be somewhat acceptable for `UniqueEntityArray`,
it is not at all acceptable for map and set types, which we would make
generic over `T: EntityEquivalent` in #18408.
Leaving these defaults in place would result in a glaring inconsistency
between these set collections and the others.
Additionally, the current standard in the engine is for "entity" to mean
`Entity`. APIs could be changed to accept `EntityEquivalent`, however
that is a separate and contentious discussion.
## Solution
Name these set collections `UniqueEntityEquivalent*`, and retain the
`UniqueEntity*` name for an alias of the `Entity` case.
While more verbose, this allows for all generics to be in proper order,
full consistency between all set types*, and the "entity" name to be
restricted to `Entity`.
On top of that, `UniqueEntity*` now always have 1 generic less, when
previously this was not enforced for the default case.
*`UniqueEntityIter<I: Iterator<T: EntityEquivalent>>` is the sole
exception to this. Aliases are unable to enforce bounds
(`lazy_type_alias` is needed for this), so for this type, doing this
split would be a mere suggestion, and in no way enforced.
Iterator types are rarely ever named, and this specific one is intended
to be aliased when it sees more use, like we do for the corresponding
set collection iterators.
Furthermore, the `EntityEquivalent` precursor `Borrow<Entity>` was used
exactly because of such iterator bounds!
Because of that, we leave it as is.
While no migration guide for 0.15 users, for those that upgrade from
main:
`UniqueEntityVec<T>` -> `UniqueEntityEquivalentVec<T>`
`UniqueEntitySlice<T>` -> `UniqueEntityEquivalentSlice<T>`
`UniqueEntityArray<N, T>` -> `UniqueEntityEquivalentArray<T, N>`
#18555 improved syntax for required components.
However some code was a bit redundant after the new parsing and struct
initializing would not give proper errors.
This PR fixes that.
---------
Co-authored-by: Tim Overbeek <oorbecktim@Tims-MacBook-Pro.local>
# Objective
Improve the parameter validation error message for
`Event(Reader|Writer|Mutator)`.
System parameters defined using `#[derive(SystemParam)]`, including the
parameters for events, currently propagate the validation errors from
their subparameters. The error includes the type of the failing
parameter, so the resulting error includes the type of the failing
subparameter instead of the derived parameter.
In particular, `EventReader<T>` will report an error from a
`Res<Events<T>>`, even though the user has no parameter of that type!
This is a follow-up to #18593.
## Solution
Have `#[derive]`d system parameters map errors during propagation so
that they report the outer parameter type.
To continue to provide context, add a field to
`SystemParamValidationError` that identifies the subparameter by name,
and is empty for non-`#[derive]`d parameters.
Allow them to override the failure message for individual parameters.
Use this to convert "Resource does not exist" to "Event not initialized"
for `Event(Reader|Writer|Mutator)`.
## Showcase
The validation error for a `EventReader<SomeEvent>` parameter when
`add_event` has not been called changes from:
Before:
```
Parameter `Res<Events<SomeEvent>>` failed validation: Resource does not exist
```
After
```
Parameter `EventReader<SomeEvent>::events` failed validation: Event not initialized
```
Extension of #18409.
I was updating a migration guide for hierarchy commands and realized
`insert_children` wasn't added to `EntityCommands`, only
`EntityWorldMut`.
This adds that and `insert_related` (basically just some
copy-and-pasting).
# Objective
In #17905 we swapped to a named field on `ChildOf` to help resolve
variable naming ambiguity of child vs parent (ex: `child_of.parent`
clearly reads as "I am accessing the parent of the child_of
relationship", whereas `child_of.0` is less clear).
Unfortunately this has the side effect of making initialization less
ideal. `ChildOf { parent }` reads just as well as `ChildOf(parent)`, but
`ChildOf { parent: root }` doesn't read nearly as well as
`ChildOf(root)`.
## Solution
Move back to `ChildOf(pub Entity)` but add a `child_of.parent()`
function and use it for all accesses. The downside here is that users
are no longer "forced" to access the parent field with `parent`
nomenclature, but I think this strikes the right balance.
Take a look at the diff. I think the results provide strong evidence for
this change. Initialization has the benefit of reading much better _and_
of taking up significantly less space, as many lines go from 3 to 1, and
we're cutting out a bunch of syntax in some cases.
Sadly I do think this should land in 0.16 as the cost of doing this
_after_ the relationships migration is high.
# Objective
The `visited: Local<HashSet<Entity>>` system param is meant to track
which entities `update_contexts_recursively` has visited and updated but
when the reparent_nodes_query isn't ordered descending from parent to
child nodes can get marked as visited even though their camera target is
unset and if the camera target is unset then the node won't be rendered.
Fixes#18616
## Solution
Remove the `visited` system param from `update_ui_context_system` and
the associated visited check from `update_contexts_recursively`. It was
redundant anyway since the set_if_neq check is sufficient to track
already updated nodes.
## Testing
The example from #18616 can be used for testing.
# Objective
Provide more useful errors when `World::run_system` and related methods
fail parameter validation.
Let callers determine whether the validation failure would have skipped
or failed the system.
Follow-up to #18541.
## Solution
Add a `SystemParamValidationError` value to the
`RunSystemError::InvalidParams` and
`RegisteredSystemError::InvalidParams` variants. That includes the
complete context of the parameter validation error, including the
`skipped` flag.
fixes#17478
# Objective
- Complete #17558.
- the `insert_children` method was previously removed, and as #17478
points out, needs to be added back.
## Solution
- Add a `OrderedRelationshipSourceCollection`, which allows sorting,
ordering, rearranging, etc of a `RelationshipSourceCollection`.
- Implement `insert_related`
- Implement `insert_children`
- Tidy up some docs while I'm here.
## Testing
@bjoernp116 set up a unit test, and I added a doc test to
`OrderedRelationshipSourceCollection`.
---------
Co-authored-by: bjoernp116 <bjoernpollen@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Dmytro Banin <banind@cs.washington.edu>
Co-authored-by: Talin <viridia@gmail.com>
# Objective
#18173 allows components to be queued without being fully registered.
But much of bevy's debug logging contained
`components.get_name(id).unwrap()`. However, this panics when the id is
queued. This PR fixes this, allowing names to be retrieved for debugging
purposes, etc, even while they're still queued.
## Solution
We change `ComponentInfo::descriptor` to be `Arc<ComponentDescriptor>`
instead of not arc'd. This lets us pass the descriptor around (as a name
or otherwise) as needed. The alternative would require some form of
`MappedRwLockReadGuard`, which is unstable, and would be terribly
blocking. Putting it in an arc also signifies that it doesn't change,
which is a nice signal to users. This does mean there's an extra pointer
dereference, but I don't think that's an issue here, as almost all paths
that use this are for debugging purposes or one-time set ups.
## Testing
Existing tests.
## Migration Guide
`Components::get_name` now returns `Option<Cow<'_, str>` instead of
`Option<&str>`. This is because it now returns results for queued
components. If that behavior is not desired, or you know the component
is not queued, you can use
`components.get_info().map(ComponentInfo::name)` instead.
Similarly, `ScheduleGraph::conflicts_to_string` now returns `impl
Iterator<Item = (String, String, Vec<Cow<str>>)>` instead of `impl
Iterator<Item = (String, String, Vec<&str>)>`. Because `Cow<str>` derefs
to `&str`, most use cases can remain unchanged.
---------
Co-authored-by: Chris Russell <8494645+chescock@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
- Fixes#18617
## Solution
- Added `thread::sleep` to `bevy_platform_support` using a spin-based
fallback.
- Fixed bug in `bevy_platform_support::time::Instant::elapsed`
(comparison was backwards)
- Switched `ScheduleRunnerPlugin` to use
`bevy_platform_support:🧵:sleep` on `std` and `no_std` platforms
(WASM + Browser excluded)
## Testing
- Ran reproduction code from @mockersf in linked issue and confirmed a
consistent 60 counts per `println!`.
---
## Notes
- I chose to add `bevy_platform_support:🧵:sleep` instead of
putting the fix in-line within `ScheduleRunnerPlugin` to keep the
separation of concerns clean. `sleep` is only used in one other location
in Bevy, `bevy_asset`, but I have decided to leave that as-is since
`bevy_asset` isn't `no_std` compatible anyway.
- The bug in `bevy_platform_support::time::Instant::elapsed` wasn't the
cause of this issue, but it did prevent this fix from working so I have
included the it in this PR.
- Lots of nits, formatting, and rephrasing, with the goal of making
things more consistent.
- Fix outdated error handler explanation in `Commands` and
`EntityCommands` docs.
- Expand docs for system-related commands.
- Remove panic notes if the command only panics with the default error
handler.
- Update error handling notes for `try_` variants.
- Hide `prelude` import in most doctest examples, unless the example
uses something that people might not realize is in the prelude (like
`Name`).
- Remove a couple doctest examples that (in my opinion) didn't make
sense.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Chris Russell <8494645+chescock@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
The `NoIndirectDrawing` wasn't working and was causing the scene not to
be rendered.
## Solution
Check the configured preprocessing mode when adding new batch sets and
mark them as batchable instead of muli-drawable if indirect rendering
has been disabled.
## Testing
`cargo run --example many_cubes -- --no-indirect-drawing`
# Objective
- Fixes#18397
- Supersedes #18474
- Simplifies 0.16 migration
## Solution
- Upgrade to Glam 0.29.3, which has backported the `nostd-libm` feature.
- Expose a similar feature in `bevy_math` and enable it in
`bevy_internal`, allowing `bevy_math`, `bevy_input`, and
`bevy_transform` to be unconditional dependencies again.
## Testing
- CI
---
## Notes
- This includes `libm` as a dependency, but this was already the case in
the common scenario where `rand` or many other features were enabled.
Considering `libm` is an official Rust crate, it's a very low-risk
dependency to unconditionally include.
- For users who do not want `libm` included, simply import Bevy's
subcrates directly, since `bevy_math/nostd-libm` will not be enabled.
- I know we are _very_ late in the RC cycle for 0.16, but this has a
substantial impact on the usability of `bevy` that I consider worth
including.
# Objective
- Fixes#18081
- Enable use-cases like getting UVs or texture colors for the hit point
(which are currently not possible due to this bug).
## Solution
- Return the triangle index instead of the first vertex index of the
triangle.
## Testing
Tested successfully with my project which does a raycast to get the UV
coordinates of the hit. My code:
```rust
fn get_uv(
mesh: &Mesh,
attribute: &MeshVertexAttribute,
hit: &RayMeshHit,
_gizmos: &mut Gizmos,
) -> Result<Vec2> {
let (a, b, c) = get_indices(mesh, hit)?;
let attrs = mesh
.attribute(*attribute)
.ok_or_eyre(format!("Attribute {:?} not found", &attribute))?;
let all_uvs: &Vec<[f32; 2]> = match &attrs {
VertexAttributeValues::Float32x2(positions) => positions,
_ => bail!("Unexpected types in {:?}", Mesh::ATTRIBUTE_UV_0),
};
let bary = hit.barycentric_coords;
Ok(Vec2::from_array(all_uvs[a]) * bary.x
+ Vec2::from_array(all_uvs[b]) * bary.y
+ Vec2::from_array(all_uvs[c]) * bary.z)
}
fn get_indices(mesh: &Mesh, hit: &RayMeshHit) -> Result<(usize, usize, usize)> {
let i = hit
.triangle_index
.ok_or_eyre("Intersection Index not found")?;
Ok(mesh.indices().map_or_else(
|| (i, i + 1, i + 2),
|indices| match indices {
Indices::U16(indices) => (
indices[i * 3] as usize,
indices[i * 3 + 1] as usize,
indices[i * 3 + 2] as usize,
),
Indices::U32(indices) => (
indices[i * 3] as usize,
indices[i * 3 + 1] as usize,
indices[i * 3 + 2] as usize,
),
},
))
}
```
PS: created a new PR because the old one was coming from and targeting
the wrong branches
# Objective
Make all feature gated bindings consistent with each other
## Solution
Make the bindings of fields gated by `pbr_specular_textures` feature
consistent with the other gated bindings
# Objective
- In the latest released version (15.3) I am able to obtain this
information by getting the actual `EventLoop` via `non_send_resource`.
Now that this object has (probably rightfully so) been replaced by the
`EventLoopProxy`, I can no longer maintain my custom render backend:
https://github.com/HugoPeters1024/bevy_vulkan. I also need the display
handle for a custom winit integration, for which I've made patches to
bevy before: XREF: https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/15884
## Solution
- Luckily, all that is required is exposing the `OwnedDisplayHandle` in
its own wrapper resource.
## Testing
- Aforementioned custom rendering backend works on this commit.
---------
Co-authored-by: HugoPeters1024 <hugopeters1024@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Cleanup
## Solution
- Remove completely unused weak_handle
(`MESH_PREPROCESS_TYPES_SHADER_HANDLE`). This value is not used
directly, and is never populated.
- Delete multiple loads of `BUILD_INDIRECT_PARAMS_SHADER_HANDLE`. We
load it three times right after one another. This looks to be a
copy-paste error.
## Testing
- None.
# Objective
Improve error messages for missing resources.
The default error handler currently prints the `Debug` representation of
the error type instead of `Display`. Most error types use
`#[derive(Debug)]`, resulting in a dump of the structure, but will have
a user-friendly message for `Display`.
Follow-up to #18593
## Solution
Change the default error handler to use `Display` instead of `Debug`.
Change `BevyError` to include the backtrace in the `Display` format in
addition to `Debug` so that it is still included.
## Showcase
Before:
```
Encountered an error in system `system_name`: SystemParamValidationError { skipped: false, message: "Resource does not exist", param: "bevy_ecs::change_detection::Res<app_name::ResourceType>" }
Encountered an error in system `other_system_name`: "String message with\nmultiple lines."
```
After
```
Encountered an error in system `system_name`: Parameter `Res<ResourceType>` failed validation: Resource does not exist
Encountered an error in system `other_system_name`: String message with
multiple lines.
```
# Objective
My ecosystem crate, bevy_mod_outline, currently uses `SetMeshBindGroup`
as part of its custom rendering pipeline. I would like to allow for
possibility that, due to changes in 0.16, I need to customise the
behaviour of `SetMeshBindGroup` in order to make it work. However, not
all of the symbol needed to implement this render command are public
outside of Bevy.
## Solution
- Include `MorphIndices` in re-export list. I feel this is morally
equivalent to `SkinUniforms` already being exported.
- Change `MorphIndex::index` field to be public. I feel this is morally
equivalent to the `SkinByteOffset::byte_offset` field already being
public.
- Change `RenderMeshIntances::mesh_asset_id()` to be public (although
since all the fields of `RenderMeshInstances` are public it's possible
to work around this one by reimplementing).
These changes exclude:
- Making any change to the `RenderLightmaps` type as I don't need to
bind the light-maps for my use-case and I wanted to keep these changes
minimal. It has a private field which would need to be public or have
access methods.
- The changes already included in #18612.
## Testing
Confirmed that a copy of `SetMeshBindGroup` can be compiled outside of
Bevy with these changes, provided that the light-map code is removed.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
Fixes#17872
## Solution
This should have basically no impact on static scenes. We can optimize
more later if anything comes up. Needing to iterate the two level bin is
a bit unfortunate but shouldn't matter for apps that use a single
camera.
# Objective
- There's been several changes to `Query` for this release cycle, and
`Query`'s top-level documentation has gotten slightly out-of-date.
- Alternative to #18615.
## Solution
- Edit `Query`'s docs for consistency, clarity, and correctness.
- Make sure to group `get()` and `get_many()` together instead of
`single()` and `get_many()`, to enforce the distinction from
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/18615#issuecomment-2764355672.
- Reformat doc tests so they would be readable if extracted into their
own file. (Which mainly involves adding more spacing.)
- Move link definitions to be nearer where they are used.
- Fix the tables so they are up-to-date and correctly escape square
brackets `\[ \]`.
## Testing
I ran `cargo doc -p bevy_ecs --no-deps` to view the docs and `cargo test
-p bevy_ecs --doc` to test the doc comments.
## Reviewing
The diff is difficult to read, so I don't recommend _just_ looking at
that. Instead, run `cargo doc -p bevy_ecs --no-deps` locally and read
through the new version. It should theoretically read smoother with less
super-technical jargon. :)
## Follow-up
I want to go through some of `Query`'s methods, such as `single()`,
`get()`, and `get_many()`, but I'll leave that for another PR.
---------
Co-authored-by: Chris Russell <8494645+chescock@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
Fixes#17986Fixes#18608
## Solution
Guard against situations where an extracted mesh does not have an
associated material. The way that mesh is dependent on the material api
(although decoupled) here is a bit unfortunate and we might consider
ways in the future to support these material features without this
indirect dependency.
# Objective
- the bevy workspace fails to publish
```
Packaging bevy_asset v0.16.0-dev (/home/runner/work/bevy-releasability/bevy-releasability/crates/bevy_asset)
Updating crates.io index
Updating `kellnr` index
error: failed to prepare local package for uploading
Caused by:
no matching package named `bevy_log` found
location searched: `kellnr` index
required by package `bevy_asset v0.16.0-dev (/home/runner/work/bevy-releasability/bevy-releasability/crates/bevy_asset)`
```
-
https://github.com/TheBevyFlock/bevy-releasability/actions/runs/14153238476/job/39649160443
## Solution
- Remove bevy_log dev-dependency from bevy_asset
- Not sure of why this is a problem, but the dev-dependency is not
really needed so... 🤷
# Objective
Fixes#9367.
Yet another follow-up to #16547.
These traits were initially based on `Borrow<Entity>` because that trait
was what they were replacing, and it felt close enough in meaning.
However, they ultimately don't quite match: `borrow` always returns
references, whereas `EntityBorrow` always returns a plain `Entity`.
Additionally, `EntityBorrow` can imply that we are borrowing an `Entity`
from the ECS, which is not what it does.
Due to its safety contract, `TrustedEntityBorrow` is important an
important and widely used trait for `EntitySet` functionality.
In contrast, the safe `EntityBorrow` does not see much use, because even
outside of `EntitySet`-related functionality, it is a better idea to
accept `TrustedEntityBorrow` over `EntityBorrow`.
Furthermore, as #9367 points out, abstracting over returning `Entity`
from pointers/structs that contain it can skip some ergonomic friction.
On top of that, there are aspects of #18319 and #18408 that are relevant
to naming:
We've run into the issue that relying on a type default can switch
generic order. This is livable in some contexts, but unacceptable in
others.
To remedy that, we'd need to switch to a type alias approach:
The "defaulted" `Entity` case becomes a
`UniqueEntity*`/`Entity*Map`/`Entity*Set` alias, and the base type
receives a more general name. `TrustedEntityBorrow` does not mesh
clearly with sensible base type names.
## Solution
Replace any `EntityBorrow` bounds with `TrustedEntityBorrow`.
+
Rename them as such:
`EntityBorrow` -> `ContainsEntity`
`TrustedEntityBorrow` -> `EntityEquivalent`
For `EntityBorrow` we produce a change in meaning; We designate it for
types that aren't necessarily strict wrappers around `Entity` or some
pointer to `Entity`, but rather any of the myriad of types that contain
a single associated `Entity`.
This pattern can already be seen in the common `entity`/`id` methods
across the engine.
We do not mean for `ContainsEntity` to be a trait that abstracts input
API (like how `AsRef<T>` is often used, f.e.), because eliding
`entity()` would be too implicit in the general case.
We prefix "Contains" to match the intuition of a struct with an `Entity`
field, like some contain a `length` or `capacity`.
It gives the impression of structure, which avoids the implication of a
relationship to the `ECS`.
`HasEntity` f.e. could be interpreted as "a currently live entity",
As an input trait for APIs like #9367 envisioned, `TrustedEntityBorrow`
is a better fit, because it *does* restrict itself to strict wrappers
and pointers. Which is why we replace any
`EntityBorrow`/`ContainsEntity` bounds with
`TrustedEntityBorrow`/`EntityEquivalent`.
Here, the name `EntityEquivalent` is a lot closer to its actual meaning,
which is "A type that is both equivalent to an `Entity`, and forms the
same total order when compared".
Prior art for this is the
[`Equivalent`](https://docs.rs/hashbrown/latest/hashbrown/trait.Equivalent.html)
trait in `hashbrown`, which utilizes both `Borrow` and `Eq` for its one
blanket impl!
Given that we lose the `Borrow` moniker, and `Equivalent` can carry
various meanings, we expand on the safety comment of `EntityEquivalent`
somewhat. That should help prevent the confusion we saw in
[#18408](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/18408#issuecomment-2742094176).
The new name meshes a lot better with the type aliasing approach in
#18408, by aligning with the base name `EntityEquivalentHashMap`.
For a consistent scheme among all set types, we can use this scheme for
the `UniqueEntity*` wrapper types as well!
This allows us to undo the switched generic order that was introduced to
`UniqueEntityArray` by its `Entity` default.
Even without the type aliases, I think these renames are worth doing!
## Migration Guide
Any use of `EntityBorrow` becomes `ContainsEntity`.
Any use of `TrustedEntityBorrow` becomes `EntityEquivalent`.
# Objective
Unlike for their helper typers, the import paths for
`unique_array::UniqueEntityArray`, `unique_slice::UniqueEntitySlice`,
`unique_vec::UniqueEntityVec`, `hash_set::EntityHashSet`,
`hash_map::EntityHashMap`, `index_set::EntityIndexSet`,
`index_map::EntityIndexMap` are quite redundant.
When looking at the structure of `hashbrown`, we can also see that while
both `HashSet` and `HashMap` have their own modules, the main types
themselves are re-exported to the crate level.
## Solution
Re-export the types in their shared `entity` parent module, and simplify
the imports where they're used.
# Objective
- bevy_image fails to build without default features:
```
error[E0277]: `image::Image` does not implement `TypePath` so cannot provide static type path information
--> crates/bevy_image/src/image.rs:341:12
|
341 | pub struct Image {
| ^^^^^ the trait `bevy_reflect::type_path::TypePath` is not implemented for `image::Image`
|
= note: consider annotating `image::Image` with `#[derive(Reflect)]` or `#[derive(TypePath)]`
= help: the following other types implement trait `bevy_reflect::type_path::TypePath`:
&'static Location<'static>
&'static T
&'static mut T
()
(P,)
(P1, P0)
(P1, P2, P0)
(P1, P2, P3, P0)
and 146 others
note: required by a bound in `Asset`
--> /home/runner/work/bevy-releasability/bevy-releasability/crates/bevy_asset/src/lib.rs:415:43
|
415 | pub trait Asset: VisitAssetDependencies + TypePath + Send + Sync + 'static {}
| ^^^^^^^^ required by this bound in `Asset`
= note: `Asset` is a "sealed trait", because to implement it you also need to implement `bevy_reflect::type_path::TypePath`, which is not accessible; this is usually done to force you to use one of the provided types that already implement it
= help: the following types implement the trait:
bevy_asset::AssetIndex
bevy_asset::LoadedUntypedAsset
bevy_asset::AssetEvent<A>
bevy_asset::LoadedFolder
bevy_asset::StrongHandle
bevy_asset::Handle<A>
bevy_asset::AssetId<A>
bevy_asset::AssetPath<'a>
and 148 others
error[E0277]: `image::Image` does not implement `TypePath` so cannot provide static type path information
--> crates/bevy_image/src/image_loader.rs:121:18
|
121 | type Asset = Image;
| ^^^^^ the trait `bevy_reflect::type_path::TypePath` is not implemented for `image::Image`
|
= note: consider annotating `image::Image` with `#[derive(Reflect)]` or `#[derive(TypePath)]`
= help: the following other types implement trait `bevy_reflect::type_path::TypePath`:
&'static Location<'static>
&'static T
&'static mut T
()
(P,)
(P1, P0)
(P1, P2, P0)
(P1, P2, P3, P0)
and 146 others
= note: required for `<ImageLoader as AssetLoader>::Asset` to implement `Asset`
note: required by a bound in `bevy_asset::AssetLoader::Asset`
--> /home/runner/work/bevy-releasability/bevy-releasability/crates/bevy_asset/src/loader.rs:33:17
|
33 | type Asset: Asset;
| ^^^^^ required by this bound in `AssetLoader::Asset`
error[E0277]: `texture_atlas::TextureAtlasLayout` does not implement `TypePath` so cannot provide static type path information
--> crates/bevy_image/src/texture_atlas.rs💯12
|
100 | pub struct TextureAtlasLayout {
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ the trait `bevy_reflect::type_path::TypePath` is not implemented for `texture_atlas::TextureAtlasLayout`
|
= note: consider annotating `texture_atlas::TextureAtlasLayout` with `#[derive(Reflect)]` or `#[derive(TypePath)]`
= help: the following other types implement trait `bevy_reflect::type_path::TypePath`:
&'static Location<'static>
&'static T
&'static mut T
()
(P,)
(P1, P0)
(P1, P2, P0)
(P1, P2, P3, P0)
and 146 others
note: required by a bound in `Asset`
--> /home/runner/work/bevy-releasability/bevy-releasability/crates/bevy_asset/src/lib.rs:415:43
|
415 | pub trait Asset: VisitAssetDependencies + TypePath + Send + Sync + 'static {}
| ^^^^^^^^ required by this bound in `Asset`
= note: `Asset` is a "sealed trait", because to implement it you also need to implement `bevy_reflect::type_path::TypePath`, which is not accessible; this is usually done to force you to use one of the provided types that already implement it
= help: the following types implement the trait:
bevy_asset::AssetIndex
bevy_asset::LoadedUntypedAsset
bevy_asset::AssetEvent<A>
bevy_asset::LoadedFolder
bevy_asset::StrongHandle
bevy_asset::Handle<A>
bevy_asset::AssetId<A>
bevy_asset::AssetPath<'a>
and 148 others
```
- `Asset` trait depends on `TypePath` which is in bevy_reflect. it's
usually implemented by the `Reflect` derive
## Solution
- make bevy_reflect not an optional dependency
- when feature `bevy_reflect` is not enabled, derive `TypePath` directly
# Objective
- Optimize static scene performance by marking unchanged subtrees.
-
[bef0209](bef0209de1)
fixes#18255 and #18363.
- Closes#18365
- Includes change from #18321
## Solution
- Mark hierarchy subtrees with dirty bits to avoid transform propagation
where not needed
- This causes a performance regression when spawning many entities, or
when the scene is entirely dynamic.
- This results in massive speedups for largely static scenes.
- In the future we could allow the user to change this behavior, or add
some threshold based on how dynamic the scene is?
## Testing
- Caldera Hotel scene
# Objective
Fixes#18515
After the recent changes to system param validation, the panic message
for a missing resource is currently:
```
Encountered an error in system `missing_resource_error::res_system`: SystemParamValidationError { skipped: false }
```
Add the parameter type name and a descriptive message, improving the
panic message to:
```
Encountered an error in system `missing_resource_error::res_system`: SystemParamValidationError { skipped: false, message: "Resource does not exist", param: "bevy_ecs::change_detection::Res<missing_resource_error::MissingResource>" }
```
## Solution
Add fields to `SystemParamValidationError` for error context. Include
the `type_name` of the param and a message.
Store them as `Cow<'static, str>` and only format them into a friendly
string in the `Display` impl. This lets us create errors using a
`&'static str` with no allocation or formatting, while still supporting
runtime `String` values if necessary.
Add a unit test that verifies the panic message.
## Future Work
If we change the default error handling to use `Display` instead of
`Debug`, and to use `ShortName` for the system name, the panic message
could be further improved to:
```
Encountered an error in system `res_system`: Parameter `Res<MissingResource>` failed validation: Resource does not exist
```
However, `BevyError` currently includes the backtrace in `Debug` but not
`Display`, and I didn't want to try to change that in this PR.
# Objective
This fixes `NonMesh` draw commands not receiving render-world entities
since
- https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/17698
This unbreaks item queries for queued non-mesh entities:
```rust
struct MyDrawCommand {
type ItemQuery = Read<DynamicUniformIndex<SomeUniform>>;
// ...
}
```
### Solution
Pass render entity to `NonMesh` draw commands instead of
`Entity::PLACEHOLDER`. This PR also introduces sorting of the `NonMesh`
bin keys like other types, which I assume is the intended behavior.
@pcwalton
## Testing
- Tested on a local project that extensively uses `NonMesh` items.
# Objective
- Avoid breaking builds for projects that have glam `0.29.0` in their
`Cargo.lock` files.
## Solution
Reflection support for additional `glam` types were added in #17493,
which were only introduced to `glam` in [`0.29.1`][glam-changelog]. If
you have a `Cargo.lock` file that refers to `0.29.0`, then `bevy_derive`
will fail to compile.
The workaround is easy enough once you figure out what's going on, but
specifying the required minimum will avoid the paper cut for others.
`0.29.2` is used here as the required version to include the fix for a
regression that was introduced `0.29.1`.
[glam-changelog]:
<https://github.com/bitshifter/glam-rs/blob/main/CHANGELOG.md#0291---2024-10-30>
# Objective
As of bevy 0.16-dev, the pre-existing public function
`bevy::pbr::setup_morph_and_skinning_defs()` is now passed a boolean
flag called `skins_use_uniform_buffers`. The value of this boolean is
computed by the function
`bevy_pbr::render::skin::skins_use_uniform_buffers()`, but it is not
exported publicly.
Found while porting
[bevy_mod_outline](https://github.com/komadori/bevy_mod_outline) to
0.16.
## Solution
Add `skin::skins_use_uniform_buffers` to the re-export list of
`bevy_pbr::render`.
## Testing
Confirmed test program can access public API.
# Objective
The flags are referenced later outside of the VERTEX_UVS ifdef/endif
block. The current behavior causes the pre-pass shader to fail to
compile when UVs are not present in the mesh, such as when using a
`LineStrip` to render a grid.
Fixes#18600
## Solution
Move the definition of the `flags` outside of the ifdef/endif block.
## Testing
Ran a modified `3d_example` that used a mesh and material with
alpha_mode blend, `LineStrip` topology, and no UVs.
# Objective
Fixes#18606
When a type implements `Add` for `String`, the compiler can get confused
when attempting to add a `&String` to a `String`.
Unfortunately, this seems to be [expected
behavior](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/77143#issuecomment-698369286)
which causes problems for generic types since the current `TypePath`
derive generates code that appends strings in this manner.
## Solution
Explicitly use the `Add<&str>` implementation in the `TypePath` derive
macro.
## Testing
You can test locally by running:
```
cargo check -p bevy_reflect --tests
```
# Objective
For the LogDiagnosticsPlugin, the log target is "bevy diagnostic" with a
space; I think it may (?) be a typo intended to be "bevy_diagnostic"
with an underline.
I couldn't get filtering INFO level logs with work with this plugin,
changing this seems to produce the expected behavior.
# Objective
- feature `shader_format_wesl` doesn't compile in Wasm
- once fixed, example `shader_material_wesl` doesn't work in WebGL2
## Solution
- remove special path handling when loading shaders. this seems like a
way to escape the asset folder which we don't want to allow, and can't
compile on android or wasm, and can't work on iOS (filesystem is rooted
there)
- pad material so that it's 16 bits. I couldn't get conditional
compilation to work in wesl for type declaration, it fails to parse
- the shader renders the color `(0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0)` when it's not a
polka dot. this renders as black on WebGPU/metal/..., and white on
WebGL2. change it to `(0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 1.0)` so that it's black
everywhere
* `submit_graph_commands` was incorrectly timing the command buffer
generation tasks as well, and not only the queue submission. Moved the
span to fix that.
* Added a new `command_buffer_generation_tasks` span as a parent for all
the individual command buffer generation tasks that don't run as part of
the Core3d span.

# Objective
Fixes#18562.
## Solution
- Specified that `StateTransition` is actually run before `PreStartup`.
- Specified consequences of this and how to actually run systems before
any game logic regardless of state.
- Updated docs of `StateTransition` to reflect that it is run before
`PreStartup` in addition to being run after `PreUpdate`.
## Testing
- `cargo doc`
- `cargo test --doc`
# Objective
Per title. I was using the `bevy_gizmos` crate without the `webgl`
feature enabled, and noticed there were other warnings with no features
enabled as well.
## Testing
- `cargo check -p bevy_gizmos --no-default-features`
- `cargo check -p bevy_gizmos --all-features`
- `cargo run -p ci -- test`
- Ran gizmo examples.
# Objective
Fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/16586.
## Solution
- Free meshes before allocating new ones (so hopefully the existing
allocation is used, but it's not guaranteed since it might end up
getting used by a smaller mesh first).
- Keep track of modified render assets, and have the mesh allocator free
their allocations.
- Cleaned up some render asset code to make it more understandable,
since it took me several minutes to reverse engineer/remember how it was
supposed to work.
Long term we'll probably want to explicitly reusing allocations for
modified meshes that haven't grown in size, or do delta uploads using a
compute shader or something, but this is an easy fix for the near term.
## Testing
Ran the example provided in the issue. No crash after a few minutes, and
memory usage remains steady.
## Objective
Fix#18557.
## Solution
As described in the bug, `remaining_weight` should have been inside the
loop.
## Testing
Locally changed the `animated_mesh_control` example to spawn multiple
meshes and play different transitions.
# Objective
- Fixes#18010.
## Solution
- Revert the offending PRs! These are #15481 and #18013. We now no
longer get an error if there are duplicate subassets.
- In theory we could untangle #18013 from #15481, but that may be
tricky, and may still introduce regressions. To avoid this worry (since
we're already in RC mode), I am just reverting both.
## Testing
- This is just a revert.
---
## Migration Guide
<Remove the migration guides for #15481 and #18013>
I will make a PR to the bevy_website repo after this is merged.
# Objective
#18555 added improved require syntax, but inline structs didn't support
`..Default::default()` syntax (for technical reasons we can't parse the
struct directly, so there is manual logic that missed this case).
## Solution
When a `{}` or `()` section is encountered for a required component,
rather than trying to parse the fields directly, just pass _all_ of the
tokens through. This ensures no tokens are dropped, protects us against
any future syntax changes, and optimizes our parsing logic (as we're
dropping the field parsing logic entirely).
# Objective
Requires are currently more verbose than they need to be. People would
like to define inline component values. Additionally, the current
`#[require(Foo(custom_constructor))]` and `#[require(Foo(|| Foo(10))]`
syntax doesn't really make sense within the context of the Rust type
system. #18309 was an attempt to improve ergonomics for some cases, but
it came at the cost of even more weirdness / unintuitive behavior. Our
approach as a whole needs a rethink.
## Solution
Rework the `#[require()]` syntax to make more sense. This is a breaking
change, but I think it will make the system easier to learn, while also
improving ergonomics substantially:
```rust
#[derive(Component)]
#[require(
A, // this will use A::default()
B(1), // inline tuple-struct value
C { value: 1 }, // inline named-struct value
D::Variant, // inline enum variant
E::SOME_CONST, // inline associated const
F::new(1), // inline constructor
G = returns_g(), // an expression that returns G
H = SomethingElse::new(), // expression returns SomethingElse, where SomethingElse: Into<H>
)]
struct Foo;
```
## Migration Guide
Custom-constructor requires should use the new expression-style syntax:
```rust
// before
#[derive(Component)]
#[require(A(returns_a))]
struct Foo;
// after
#[derive(Component)]
#[require(A = returns_a())]
struct Foo;
```
Inline-closure-constructor requires should use the inline value syntax
where possible:
```rust
// before
#[derive(Component)]
#[require(A(|| A(10))]
struct Foo;
// after
#[derive(Component)]
#[require(A(10)]
struct Foo;
```
In cases where that is not possible, use the expression-style syntax:
```rust
// before
#[derive(Component)]
#[require(A(|| A(10))]
struct Foo;
// after
#[derive(Component)]
#[require(A = A(10)]
struct Foo;
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: François Mockers <mockersf@gmail.com>
This variable was cruelly abandoned in #15589.
Seems fairly safe to remove as it's private. I'm assuming something
could have used it via reflection, but that seems unlikely
## Testing
```
cargo run --example animated_mesh
cargo run --example animation_graph
```
# Objective
- We currently default to "App" for the window title, it would be nice
if examples had more descriptive names
## Solution
- Use `std::env::current_exe` to try to figure out a default title. If
it's not present. Use "App".
## Testing
- I tested that examples that set a custom title still use the custom
title and that examples without a custom title use the example name
---
### Showcase
Here's the 3d_scene example:

### Notes
Here's a previous attempt at this from a few years ago
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/3404
There's some relevant discussion in there, but cart's decision was to
default to "App" when no name was found.
---------
Co-authored-by: Zachary Harrold <zac@harrold.com.au>
## Objective
- Remove the second to last `bevy_animation` dependency on
`bevy_render`.
- Update some older documentation to reflect later changes to the crate.
## Narrative
I'm trying to make `bevy_animation` independent of `bevy_render`. The
documentation for `bevy_animation::AnimatableProperty` is one of the
last few dependencies. It uses `bevy_render::Projection` to demonstrate
animating an arbitrary value, but I thought that could be easily swapped
for something else.
I then realised that the rest of the documentation was a bit out of
date. Originally `AnimatableProperty` was the only way to animate a
property and so the documentation was quite detailed. But over time the
crate has gained more documentation and other ways to hook up
properties, leaving parts of the docs stale or covered elsewhere. So
I've slimmed down the `AnimatableProperty` docs and added a link to the
main alternative (`animated_field`).
I've probably swung too far towards brevity, so I can build them back up
if preferred. Also the example is kinda contrived and doesn't show the
range of `AnimatableProperty`, like being able to choose different
components. And finally the memes might be a bit stale?
## Showcase

## Testing
```
cargo doc -p bevy_animation --no-deps --all-features
cargo test -p bevy_animation --doc --all-features
```
# Objective
Fix panic in `run_system` when running an exclusive system wrapped in a
`PipeSystem` or `AdapterSystem`.
#18076 introduced a `System::run_without_applying_deferred` method. It
normally calls `System::run_unsafe`, but
`ExclusiveFunctionSystem::run_unsafe` panics, so it was overridden for
that type. Unfortunately, `PipeSystem::run_without_applying_deferred`
still calls `PipeSystem::run_unsafe`, which can then call
`ExclusiveFunctionSystem::run_unsafe` and panic.
## Solution
Make `ExclusiveFunctionSystem::run_unsafe` work instead of panicking.
Clarify the safety requirements that make this sound.
The alternative is to override `run_without_applying_deferred` in
`PipeSystem`, `CombinatorSystem`, `AdapterSystem`,
`InfallibleSystemWrapper`, and `InfallibleObserverWrapper`. That seems
like a lot of extra code just to preserve a confusing special case!
Remove some implementations of `System::run` that are no longer
necessary with this change. This slightly changes the behavior of
`PipeSystem` and `CombinatorSystem`: Currently `run` will call
`apply_deferred` on the first system before running the second, but
after this change it will only call it after *both* systems have run.
The new behavior is consistent with `run_unsafe` and
`run_without_applying_deferred`, and restores the behavior prior to
#11823.
The panic was originally necessary because [`run_unsafe` took
`&World`](https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/6083/files#diff-708dfc60ec5eef432b20a6f471357a7ea9bfb254dc2f918d5ed4a66deb0e85baR90).
Now that it takes `UnsafeWorldCell`, it is possible to make it work. See
also Cart's concerns at
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/4166#discussion_r979140356,
although those also predate `UnsafeWorldCell`.
And see #6698 for a previous bug caused by this panic.
# Objective
Make it easier to short-circuit system parameter validation.
Simplify the API surface by combining `ValidationOutcome` with
`SystemParamValidationError`.
## Solution
Replace `ValidationOutcome` with `Result<(),
SystemParamValidationError>`. Move the docs from `ValidationOutcome` to
`SystemParamValidationError`.
Add a `skipped` field to `SystemParamValidationError` to distinguish the
`Skipped` and `Invalid` variants.
Use the `?` operator to short-circuit validation in tuples of system
params.
# Objective
- Fixes#16861
## Solution
- Added:
- `UnsafeEntityCell::get_mut_assume_mutable_by_id`
- `EntityMut::get_mut_assume_mutable_by_id`
- `EntityMut::get_mut_assume_mutable_by_id_unchecked`
- `EntityWorldMut::into_mut_assume_mutable_by_id`
- `EntityWorldMut::into_mut_assume_mutable`
- `EntityWorldMut::get_mut_assume_mutable_by_id`
- `EntityWorldMut::into_mut_assume_mutable_by_id`
- `EntityWorldMut::modify_component_by_id`
- `World::modify_component_by_id`
- `DeferredWorld::modify_component_by_id`
- Added `fetch_mut_assume_mutable` to `DynamicComponentFetch` trait
(this is a breaking change)
## Testing
- CI
---
## Migration Guide
If you had previously implemented `DynamicComponentFetch` you must now
include a definition for `fetch_mut_assume_mutable`. In general this
will be identical to `fetch_mut` using the relevant alternatives for
actually getting a component.
---
## Notes
All of the added methods are minor variations on existing functions and
should therefore be of low risk for inclusion during the RC process.
# Objective
The fix in #17488 forced Windows to always behave as if it were in
`UpdateMode::Continuous`.
CC https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/17991
## Solution
Removed the unconditional `redraw_requested = true` and added a check
for `Reactive` in `about_to_wait`.
## Testing
- Verified that the `low_power` example worked as expected with all
`UpdateMode` options.
- Verified that animation continued in both `eased_motion ` and
`low_power` examples when in `Continuous` update mode while:
- Resizing the Window
- Moving the window via clicking and dragging the title bar
- Verified that `window_settings` example still worked as expected.
- Verified that `monitor_info` example still worked as expected.
# Objective
- Fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/17891
- Cherry-picked from https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/18411
## Solution
The `name` argument could either be made permanent (by removing the
`#[cfg(...)]` condition) or eliminated entirely. I opted to remove it,
as debugging a specific DDS texture edge case in GLTF files doesn't seem
necessary, and there isn't any other foreseeable need to have it.
## Migration Guide
- `Image::from_buffer()` no longer has a `name` argument that's only
present in debug builds when the `"dds"` feature is enabled. If you
happen to pass a name, remove it.
# Objective
fixes#18452.
## Solution
Spawning used to flush commands only, but those commands can reserve
entities. Now, spawning flushes everything, including reserved entities.
I checked, and this was the only place where `flush_commands` is used
instead of `flush` by mistake.
## Testing
I simplified the MRE from #18452 into its own test, which fails on main,
but passes on this branch.
Migration guide:
# Objective
Currently there seems to be no way to enable picking through
render-to-texture cameras
## Solution
This PR allows casting rays from the game code quite easily.
## Testing
- I've tested these in my game and it seems to work
- I haven't tested edge cases
---
## Showcase
<details>
<summary>Click to view showcase</summary>
```rust
fn cast_rays_from_additional_camera(
cameras: Query<(&GlobalTransform, &Camera, Entity), With<RenderToTextureCamera>>,
mut rays: ResMut<RayMap>,
pointers: Query<(&PointerId, &PointerLocation)>,
) {
for (camera_global_transform, camera, camera_entity) in &cameras {
for (pointer_id, pointer_loc) in &pointers {
let Some(viewport_pos) = pointer_loc.location() else {
continue;
};
// if camera result is transformed in any way, the reverse transformation
// should be applied somewhere here
let ray = camera
.viewport_to_world(camera_global_transform, viewport_pos.position)
.ok();
if let Some(r) = ray {
rays.map.insert(RayId::new(camera_entity, *pointer_id), r);
}
}
}
}
```
</details>
## Migration Guide
The `bevy_picking::backend::ray::RayMap::map` method is removed as
redundant,
In systems using `Res<RayMap>` replace `ray_map.map()` with
`&ray_map.map`
# Objective
- The prepass pipeline has a generic bound on the specialize function
but 95% of it doesn't need it
## Solution
- Move most of the fields to an internal struct and use a separate
specialize function for those fields
## Testing
- Ran the 3d_scene and it worked like before
---
## Migration Guide
If you were using a field of the `PrepassPipeline`, most of them have
now been move to `PrepassPipeline::internal`.
## Notes
Here's the cargo bloat size comparison (from this tool
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/discussions/14864):
```
before:
(
"<bevy_pbr::prepass::PrepassPipeline<M> as bevy_render::render_resource::pipeline_specializer::SpecializedMeshPipeline>::specialize",
25416,
0.05582993,
),
after:
(
"<bevy_pbr::prepass::PrepassPipeline<M> as bevy_render::render_resource::pipeline_specializer::SpecializedMeshPipeline>::specialize",
2496,
0.005490916,
),
(
"bevy_pbr::prepass::PrepassPipelineInternal::specialize",
11444,
0.025175499,
),
```
The size for the specialize function that is generic is now much
smaller, so users won't need to recompile it for every material.
# Objective
- #18495
## Solution
- The code in the PR #18232 accidentally used a vertex index as a
triangle index, causing the wrong triangle to be used for normal
computation and if the triangle went out of bounds, it would skip the
ray-hit.
- Don't do that.
## Testing
- Run `cargo run --example mesh_picking`
# Objective
Enabling `serialize`, `critical-section`, or `async-executor` would
improperly enable `bevy_math`, `bevy_input`, and/or `bevy_transform`.
This was caused by those crates previously being required but are now
optional (gated behind `std` and/or `libm`).
## Solution
- Added `?` to features not intended to enable those crates
## Testing
- CI
# Objective
- Fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/11682
## Solution
- https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/4086 introduced an
optimization to not do redundant calculations, but did not take into
account changes to the resource `global_lights`. I believe that my patch
includes the optimization benefit but adds the required nuance to fix
said bug.
## Testing
The example originally given by
[@kirillsurkov](https://github.com/kirillsurkov) and then updated by me
to bevy 15.3 here:
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/11682#issuecomment-2746287416
will not have shadows without this patch:
```rust
use bevy::prelude::*;
#[derive(Resource)]
struct State {
x: f32,
}
fn main() {
App::new()
.add_plugins(DefaultPlugins)
.add_systems(Startup, setup)
.add_systems(Update, update)
.insert_resource(State { x: -40.0 })
.run();
}
fn setup(
mut commands: Commands,
mut meshes: ResMut<Assets<Mesh>>,
mut materials: ResMut<Assets<StandardMaterial>>,
) {
commands.spawn((
Mesh3d(meshes.add(Circle::new(4.0))),
MeshMaterial3d(materials.add(Color::WHITE)),
));
commands.spawn((
Mesh3d(meshes.add(Cuboid::new(1.0, 1.0, 1.0))),
MeshMaterial3d(materials.add(Color::linear_rgb(0.0, 1.0, 0.0))),
));
commands.spawn((
PointLight {
shadows_enabled: true,
..default()
},
Transform::from_xyz(4.0, 8.0, 4.0),
));
commands.spawn(Camera3d::default());
}
fn update(mut state: ResMut<State>, mut camera: Query<&mut Transform, With<Camera3d>>) {
let mut camera = camera.single_mut().unwrap();
let t = Vec3::new(state.x, 0.0, 10.0);
camera.translation = t;
camera.look_at(t - Vec3::Z, Vec3::Y);
state.x = 0.0;
}
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: JMS55 <47158642+JMS55@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
When introduced, `Single` was intended to simply be silently skipped,
allowing for graceful and efficient handling of systems during invalid
game states (such as when the player is dead).
However, this also caused missing resources to *also* be silently
skipped, leading to confusing and very hard to debug failures. In
0.15.1, this behavior was reverted to a panic, making missing resources
easier to debug, but largely making `Single` (and `Populated`)
worthless, as they would panic during expected game states.
Ultimately, the consensus is that this behavior should differ on a
per-system-param basis. However, there was no sensible way to *do* that
before this PR.
## Solution
Swap `SystemParam::validate_param` from a `bool` to:
```rust
/// The outcome of system / system param validation,
/// used by system executors to determine what to do with a system.
pub enum ValidationOutcome {
/// All system parameters were validated successfully and the system can be run.
Valid,
/// At least one system parameter failed validation, and an error must be handled.
/// By default, this will result in1 a panic. See [crate::error] for more information.
///
/// This is the default behavior, and is suitable for system params that should *always* be valid,
/// either because sensible fallback behavior exists (like [`Query`] or because
/// failures in validation should be considered a bug in the user's logic that must be immediately addressed (like [`Res`]).
Invalid,
/// At least one system parameter failed validation, but the system should be skipped due to [`ValidationBehavior::Skip`].
/// This is suitable for system params that are intended to only operate in certain application states, such as [`Single`].
Skipped,
}
```
Then, inside of each `SystemParam` implementation, return either Valid,
Invalid or Skipped.
Currently, only `Single`, `Option<Single>` and `Populated` use the
`Skipped` behavior. Other params (like resources) retain their current
failing
## Testing
Messed around with the fallible_params example. Added a pair of tests:
one for panicking when resources are missing, and another for properly
skipping `Single` and `Populated` system params.
## To do
- [x] get https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/18454 merged
- [x] fix the todo!() in the macro-powered tuple implementation (please
help 🥺)
- [x] test
- [x] write a migration guide
- [x] update the example comments
## Migration Guide
Various system and system parameter validation methods
(`SystemParam::validate_param`, `System::validate_param` and
`System::validate_param_unsafe`) now return and accept a
`ValidationOutcome` enum, rather than a `bool`. The previous `true`
values map to `ValidationOutcome::Valid`, while `false` maps to
`ValidationOutcome::Invalid`.
However, if you wrote a custom schedule executor, you should now respect
the new `ValidationOutcome::Skipped` parameter, skipping any systems
whose validation was skipped. By contrast, `ValidationOutcome::Invalid`
systems should also be skipped, but you should call the
`default_error_handler` on them first, which by default will result in a
panic.
If you are implementing a custom `SystemParam`, you should consider
whether failing system param validation is an error or an expected
state, and choose between `Invalid` and `Skipped` accordingly. In Bevy
itself, `Single` and `Populated` now once again skip the system when
their conditions are not met. This is the 0.15.0 behavior, but stands in
contrast to the 0.15.1 behavior, where they would panic.
---------
Co-authored-by: MiniaczQ <xnetroidpl@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Dmytro Banin <banind@cs.washington.edu>
Co-authored-by: Chris Russell <8494645+chescock@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
Fixes#18461
Apparently `RustRover` creates a temporary file with a tilde like
`load_scene_example.scn.ron~` and at the moment of calling
`.canonicalize()` the file does not exists anymore.
## Solution
Not call `.unwrap()` and return `None` fixes the issue.
## Testing
- `cargo ci`: OK
- Tested the `scene` example with `file_watcher` feature and it works as
expected.
Co-authored-by: François Mockers <mockersf@gmail.com>
## Objective
Reduce dependencies on `bevy_render` by preferring `bevy_mesh` imports
over `bevy_render` re-exports.
```diff
- use bevy_render::mesh::Mesh;
+ use bevy_mesh::Mesh;
```
This is intended to help with #18423 (render crate restructure). Affects
`bevy_gltf`, `bevy_animation` and `bevy_picking`.
## But Why?
As part of #18423, I'm assuming there'll be a push to make crates less
dependent on the big render crates. This PR seemed like a small and safe
step along that path - it only changes imports and makes the `bevy_mesh`
crate dependency explicit in `Cargo.toml`. Any remaining dependencies on
`bevy_render` are true dependencies.
## Testing
```
cargo run --example testbed_3d
cargo run --example mesh_picking
```
# Objective
- Fixes#18225
## Solution
- Updated `accesskit` version requirement from 0.17 to 0.18
- Updated `accesskit_winit` version requirement from 0.23 to 0.25
## Testing
- Ran CI checks locally.
---------
Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com>
Co-authored-by: dependabot[bot] <49699333+dependabot[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
Instead of extracting an individual sprite per glyph of a text spawn or
slice of a nine-patched sprite, add a buffer to store the extracted
slice geometry.
Fixes#16972
## Solution
* New struct `ExtractedSlice` to hold sprite slice size, position and
atlas info (for text each glyph is a slice).
* New resource `ExtractedSlices` that wraps the `ExtractedSlice` buffer.
This is a separate resource so it can be used without sprites (with a
text material, for example).
* New enum `ExtractedSpriteKind` with variants `Single` and `Slices`.
`Single` represents a single sprite, `Slices` contains a range into the
`ExtractedSlice` buffer.
* Only queue a single `ExtractedSprite` for sets of glyphs or slices and
push the geometry for each individual slice or glyph into the
`ExtractedSlice` buffer.
* Modify `ComputedTextureSlices` to return an `ExtractedSlice` iterator
instead of `ExtractedSprites`.
* Modify `extract_text2d_sprite` to only queue new `ExtractedSprite`s on
font changes and otherwise push slices.
I don't like the name `ExtractedSpriteKind` much, it's a bit redundant
and too haskellish. But although it's exported, it's not something users
will interact with most of the time so don't want to overthink it.
## Testing
yellow = this pr, red = main
```cargo run --example many_glyphs --release --features "trace_tracy" -- --no-ui```
<img width="454" alt="many-glyphs" src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/711b52c9-2d4d-43c7-b154-e81a69c94dce" />
```cargo run --example many_text2d --release --features "trace_tracy"```
<img width="415" alt="many-text2d"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/5ea2480a-52e0-4cd0-9f12-07405cf6b8fa"
/>
## Migration Guide
* `ExtractedSprite` has a new `kind: ExtractedSpriteKind` field with
variants `Single` and `Slices`.
- `Single` represents a single sprite. `ExtractedSprite`'s `anchor`,
`rect`, `scaling_mode` and `custom_size` fields have been moved into
`Single`.
- `Slices` contains a range that indexes into a new resource
`ExtractedSlices`. Slices are used to draw elements composed from
multiple sprites such as text or nine-patched borders.
* `ComputedTextureSlices::extract_sprites` has been renamed to
`extract_slices`. Its `transform` and `original_entity` parameters have
been removed.
---------
Co-authored-by: Kristoffer Søholm <k.soeholm@gmail.com>
# Objective
Remove `critical-section` from required dependencies, allowing linking
without any features.
## Solution
- Switched from `OnceCell` to `LazyLock`
- Removed `std` feature from `bevy_dylib` (proof that it works)
## Testing
- CI
# Objective
- This variable is unused and never populated. I searched for the
literal text of the const and got no hits.
## Solution
- Delete it!
## Testing
- None.
# Objective
There are two related problems here:
1. Users should be able to change the fallback behavior of *all*
ECS-based errors in their application by setting the
`GLOBAL_ERROR_HANDLER`. See #18351 for earlier work in this vein.
2. The existing solution (#15500) for customizing this behavior is high
on boilerplate, not global and adds a great deal of complexity.
The consensus is that the default behavior when a parameter fails
validation should be set based on the kind of system parameter in
question: `Single` / `Populated` should silently skip the system, but
`Res` should panic. Setting this behavior at the system level is a
bandaid that makes getting to that ideal behavior more painful, and can
mask real failures (if a resource is missing but you've ignored a system
to make the Single stop panicking you're going to have a bad day).
## Solution
I've removed the existing `ParamWarnPolicy`-based configuration, and
wired up the `GLOBAL_ERROR_HANDLER`/`default_error_handler` to the
various schedule executors to properly plumb through errors .
Additionally, I've done a small cleanup pass on the corresponding
example.
## Testing
I've run the `fallible_params` example, with both the default and a
custom global error handler. The former panics (as expected), and the
latter spams the error console with warnings 🥲
## Questions for reviewers
1. Currently, failed system param validation will result in endless
console spam. Do you want me to implement a solution for warn_once-style
debouncing somehow?
2. Currently, the error reporting for failed system param validation is
very limited: all we get is that a system param failed validation and
the name of the system. Do you want me to implement improved error
reporting by bubbling up errors in this PR?
3. There is broad consensus that the default behavior for failed system
param validation should be set on a per-system param basis. Would you
like me to implement that in this PR?
My gut instinct is that we absolutely want to solve 2 and 3, but it will
be much easier to do that work (and review it) if we split the PRs
apart.
## Migration Guide
`ParamWarnPolicy` and the `WithParamWarnPolicy` have been removed
completely. Failures during system param validation are now handled via
the `GLOBAL_ERROR_HANDLER`: please see the `bevy_ecs::error` module docs
for more information.
---------
Co-authored-by: MiniaczQ <xnetroidpl@gmail.com>
# Objective
- building bevy_winit on linux fails with
```
error: The platform you're compiling for is not supported by winit
--> /home/runner/.cargo/registry/src/index.crates.io-1949cf8c6b5b557f/winit-0.30.9/src/platform_impl/mod.rs:78:1
|
78 | compile_error!("The platform you're compiling for is not supported by winit");
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
```
- this blocks publishing Bevy from linux during the verification step
## Solution
- Enable `x11` by default when building bevy_winit, and disable default
features of bevy_winit in bevy_internal
- This doesn't change anything when depending on Bevy
# Objective
- Some crates don't compile or have clippy warnings when building for
wasm32
## Solution
- bevy_asset: unused lifetime
- bevy_gltf: the error is not too large in wasm32
- bevy_remote: fails to compile as feature http is also gated on wasm32
- bevy_winit: unused import `error`
# Objective
`cargo clippy -p bevy_asset` warns on a pair of lints on my Windows 10
development machine (return from let binding).
## Solution
Addressed them!
## Testing
- CI
# Objective
Bevy 0.15 used to have methods on `Children` for sorting and reordering
them. This is very important, because in certain situations, the order
of children matters. For example, in the context of UI nodes.
These methods are missing/omitted/forgotten in the current version,
after the Relationships rework.
Without them, it is impossible for me to upgrade `iyes_perf_ui` to Bevy
0.16.
## Solution
Reintroduce the methods. This PR simply copy-pastes them from Bevy 0.15.
# Objective
Create new `NonSendMarker` that does not depend on `NonSend`.
Required, in order to accomplish #17682. In that issue, we are trying to
replace `!Send` resources with `thread_local!` in order to unblock the
resources-as-components effort. However, when we remove all the `!Send`
resources from a system, that allows the system to run on a thread other
than the main thread, which is against the design of the system. So this
marker gives us the control to require a system to run on the main
thread without depending on `!Send` resources.
## Solution
Create a new `NonSendMarker` to replace the existing one that does not
depend on `NonSend`.
## Testing
Other than running tests, I ran a few examples:
- `window_resizing`
- `wireframe`
- `volumetric_fog` (looks so cool)
- `rotation`
- `button`
There is a Mac/iOS-specific change and I do not have a Mac or iOS device
to test it. I am doubtful that it would cause any problems for 2
reasons:
1. The change is the same as the non-wasm change which I did test
2. The Pixel Eagle tests run Mac tests
But it wouldn't hurt if someone wanted to spin up an example that
utilizes the `bevy_render` crate, which is where the Mac/iSO change was.
## Migration Guide
If `NonSendMarker` is being used from `bevy_app::prelude::*`, replace it
with `bevy_ecs::system::NonSendMarker` or use it from
`bevy_ecs::prelude::*`. In addition to that, `NonSendMarker` does not
need to be wrapped like so:
```rust
fn my_system(_non_send_marker: Option<NonSend<NonSendMarker>>) {
...
}
```
Instead, it can be used without any wrappers:
```rust
fn my_system(_non_send_marker: NonSendMarker) {
...
}
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Chris Russell <8494645+chescock@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
`queue_uinodes` looks up the `ExtractedView` for every extracted UI
node, but there's no need to look it up again if consecutive nodes have
the same `extracted_camera_entity`.
## Solution
In queue uinodes reuse the previously looked up extracted view if the
`extracted_camera_entity` doesn't change
## Showcase
```
cargo run --example many_buttons --release --features "trace_tracy"
```
<img width="521" alt="queue-ui-improvement"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/2f111837-8c2e-4a6d-94cd-3c3462c58bc9"
/>
yellow is this PR, red is main
# Objective
- `bevy_ecs` has lint errors without some features
## Solution
- Fix `clippy::allow-attributes-without-reason` when `bevy_reflect` is
disabled by adding a reason
- Fix `clippy::needless_return` when `std` is disabled by adding a gated
`expect` attribute and a comment to remove it when the `no_std` stuff is
addressed
## Testing
- `cargo clippy -p bevy_ecs --no-default-features --no-deps -- --D
warnings`
- CI
# Objective
- Compiling `bevy_time` without the `std`-feature results in a
`clippy::unnecessary-literal-unwrap`.
## Solution
- Fix lint error
## Testing
- CI
---
# Objective
- Compiling `bevy_a11y` without default features fails because you need
to select a floating point backed. But you actually don't need it, this
requirement is from an unused linkage to `bevy_input_focus`
## Solution
- Remove link
## Testing
- CI
---------
Co-authored-by: François Mockers <mockersf@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Compile failure with `bevy_anti_aliasing` due to `dds` feature not
enabling `bevy_core_pipeline/dds`, causing a public API desync.
## Solution
- Ensured feature is enabled
## Testing
- CI
# Objective
Noticed that `bevy_remote` fails to compile without default features.
## Solution
Adjusted offending method to avoid reliance on `http` module when it is
disabled.
## Testing
- CI
- `cargo clippy -p bevy_remote --no-default-features`
# Objective
Every time I run `cargo clippy -p bevy_ecs` it pops up and it's
distracting.
## Solution
Removed unnecessary returns. The blocks themselves are necessary or the
`#[cfg(...)]` doesn't apply properly
## Testing
`cargo clippy -p bevy_ecs` + ci build tests
# Objective
The `Anchor` component doesn't need to be a enum. The variants are just
mapped to `Vec2`s so it could be changed to a newtype with associated
const values, saving the space needed for the discriminator by the enum.
Also there was no benefit I think in hiding the underlying `Vec2`
representation of `Anchor`s.
Suggested by @atlv24.
Fixes#18459Fixes#18460
## Solution
Change `Anchor` to a struct newtyping a `Vec2`, and its variants into
associated constants.
## Migration Guide
The anchor component has been changed from an enum to a struct newtyping
a `Vec2`. The `Custom` variant has been removed, instead to construct a
custom `Anchor` use its tuple constructor:
```rust
Sprite {
anchor: Anchor(Vec2::new(0.25, 0.4)),
..default()
}
```
The other enum variants have been replaced with corresponding constants:
* `Anchor::BottomLeft` to `Anchor::BOTTOM_LEFT`
* `Anchor::Center` to `Anchor::CENTER`
* `Anchor::TopRight` to `Anchor::TOP_RIGHT`
* .. and so on for the remaining variants
# Objective
There are currently too many disparate ways to handle entity mapping,
especially after #17687. We now have MapEntities, VisitEntities,
VisitEntitiesMut, Component::visit_entities,
Component::visit_entities_mut.
Our only known use case at the moment for these is entity mapping. This
means we have significant consolidation potential.
Additionally, VisitEntitiesMut cannot be implemented for map-style
collections like HashSets, as you cant "just" mutate a `&mut Entity`.
Our current approach to Component mapping requires VisitEntitiesMut,
meaning this category of entity collection isn't mappable. `MapEntities`
is more generally applicable. Additionally, the _existence_ of the
blanket From impl on VisitEntitiesMut blocks us from implementing
MapEntities for HashSets (or any types we don't own), because the owner
could always add a conflicting impl in the future.
## Solution
Use `MapEntities` everywhere and remove all "visit entities" usages.
* Add `Component::map_entities`
* Remove `Component::visit_entities`, `Component::visit_entities_mut`,
`VisitEntities`, and `VisitEntitiesMut`
* Support deriving `Component::map_entities` in `#[derive(Coomponent)]`
* Add `#[derive(MapEntities)]`, and share logic with the
`Component::map_entities` derive.
* Add `ComponentCloneCtx::queue_deferred`, which is command-like logic
that runs immediately after normal clones. Reframe `FromWorld` fallback
logic in the "reflect clone" impl to use it. This cuts out a lot of
unnecessary work and I think justifies the existence of a pseudo-command
interface (given how niche, yet performance sensitive this is).
Note that we no longer auto-impl entity mapping for ` IntoIterator<Item
= &'a Entity>` types, as this would block our ability to implement cases
like `HashMap`. This means the onus is on us (or type authors) to add
explicit support for types that should be mappable.
Also note that the Component-related changes do not require a migration
guide as there hasn't been a release with them yet.
## Migration Guide
If you were previously implementing `VisitEntities` or
`VisitEntitiesMut` (likely via a derive), instead use `MapEntities`.
Those were almost certainly used in the context of Bevy Scenes or
reflection via `ReflectMapEntities`. If you have a case that uses
`VisitEntities` or `VisitEntitiesMut` directly, where `MapEntities` is
not a viable replacement, please let us know!
```rust
// before
#[derive(VisitEntities, VisitEntitiesMut)]
struct Inventory {
items: Vec<Entity>,
#[visit_entities(ignore)]
label: String,
}
// after
#[derive(MapEntities)]
struct Inventory {
#[entities]
items: Vec<Entity>,
label: String,
}
```
# Objective
Const values should be more ergonomic to insert, since this is too
verbose
``` rust
#[derive(Component)]
#[require(
LockedAxes(||LockedAxes::ROTATION_LOCKED),
)]
pub struct CharacterController;
```
instead, users can now abbreviate that nonsense like this
``` rust
#[derive(Component)]
#[require(
LockedAxes = ROTATION_LOCKED),
)]
pub struct CharacterController;
```
it also works for enum labels.
I chose to omit the type, since were trying to reduce typing here. The
alternative would have been this:
```rust
#[require(
LockedAxes = LockedAxes::ROTATION_LOCKED),
)]
```
This of course has its disadvantages, since the const has to be
associated, but the old closure method is still possible, so I dont
think its a problem.
- Fixes#16720
## Testing
I added one new test in the docs, which also explain the new change. I
also saw that the docs for the required components on line 165 was
missing an assertion, so I added it back in
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
While working on #18058 I realized I could use
`RelationshipTargetCollection::new`, so I added it.
## Solution
- Add `RelationshipTargetCollection::new`
- Add `RelationshipTargetCollection::reserve`. Could generally be useful
when doing micro-optimizations.
- Add `RelationshipTargetCollection::shrink_to_fit`. Rust collections
generally don't shrink when removing elements. Might be a good idea to
call this once in a while.
## Testing
`cargo clippy`
---
## Showcase
`RelationshipSourceCollection` now implements `new`, `reserve` and
`shrink_to_fit` to give greater control over how much memory it
consumes.
## Migration Guide
Any type implementing `RelationshipSourceCollection` now needs to also
implement `new`, `reserve` and `shrink_to_fit`. `reserve` and
`shrink_to_fit` can be made no-ops if they conceptually mean nothing to
a collection.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Chris Russell <8494645+chescock@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
correctly load gltfs without explicit bindposes
## Solution
use identity matrices if bindposes are not found.
note: currently does nothing, as gltfs without explicit bindposes fail
to load, see <https://github.com/gltf-rs/gltf/pull/449>
---------
Co-authored-by: François Mockers <francois.mockers@vleue.com>
# Objective
Add a way to efficiently replace a set of specifically related entities
with a new set.
Closes#18041
## Solution
Add new `replace_(related/children)` to `EntityWorldMut` and friends.
## Testing
Added a new test to `hierarchy.rs` that specifically check if
`replace_children` actually correctly replaces the children on a entity
while keeping the original one.
---
## Showcase
`EntityWorldMut` and `EntityCommands` can now be used to efficiently
replace the entities a entity is related to.
```rust
/// `parent` has 2 children. `entity_a` and `entity_b`.
assert_eq!([entity_a, entity_b], world.entity(parent).get::<Children>());
/// Replace `parent`s children with `entity_a` and `entity_c`
world.entity_mut(parent).replace_related(&[entity_a, entity_c]);
/// `parent` now has 2 children. `entity_a` and `entity_c`.
///
/// `replace_children` has saved time by not removing and reading
/// the relationship between `entity_a` and `parent`
assert_eq!([entity_a, entity_c], world.entity(parent).get::<Children>());
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
## Objective
Fix `bevy_ecs` doc tests failing when used with `--all-features`.
```
---- crates\bevy_ecs\src\error\handler.rs - error::handler::GLOBAL_ERROR_HANDLER (line 87) stdout ----
error[E0425]: cannot find function `default_error_handler` in this scope
--> crates\bevy_ecs\src\error\handler.rs:92:24
|
8 | let error_handler = default_error_handler();
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ not found in this scope
```
I happened to come across this while testing #12207. I'm not sure it
actually needs fixing but seemed worth a go
## Testing
```
cargo test --doc -p bevy_ecs --all-features
```
## Side Notes
The CI misses this error as it doesn't use `--all-features`. Perhaps it
should?
I tried adding `--all-features` to `ci/src/commands/doc_tests.rs` but
this triggered a linker error:
```
Compiling bevy_dylib v0.16.0-dev (C:\Projects\bevy\crates\bevy_dylib)
error: linking with `link.exe` failed: exit code: 1189
= note: LINK : fatal error LNK1189: library limit of 65535 objects exceeded␍
```
# Objective
- bevy_core_pipeline is getting really big and it's a big bottleneck for
compilation time. A lot of parts of it can be broken up
## Solution
- Add a new bevy_anti_aliasing crate that contains all the anti_aliasing
implementations
- I didn't move any MSAA related code to this new crate because that's a
lot more invasive
## Testing
- Tested the anti_aliasing example to make sure all methods still worked
---
## Showcase
before:

after:

Notice that now bevy_core_pipeline is 1s shorter and bevy_anti_aliasing
now compiles in parallel with bevy_pbr.
## Migration Guide
When using anti aliasing features, you now need to import them from
`bevy::anti_aliasing` instead of `bevy::core_pipeline`
# Objective
- Fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/18332
## Solution
- Move specialize_shadows to ManageViews so that it can run after
prepare_lights, so that shadow views exist for specialization.
- Unfortunately this means that specialize_shadows is no longer in
PrepareMeshes like the rest of the specialization systems.
## Testing
- Ran anti_aliasing example, switched between the different AA options,
observed no glitches.
# Objective
For materials that aren't being used or a visible entity doesn't have an
instance of, we were unnecessarily constantly checking whether they
needed specialization, saying yes (because the material had never been
specialized for that entity), and failing to look up the material
instance.
## Solution
If an entity doesn't have an instance of the material, it can't possibly
need specialization, so exit early before spending time doing the check.
Fixes#18388.
# Objective
- bevy_dylib fails to build:
```
Compiling bevy_dylib v0.16.0-rc.1 (/bevy/crates/bevy_dylib)
error: linking with `cc` failed: exit status: 1
|
= note: some arguments are omitted. use `--verbose` to show all linker arguments
= note: Undefined symbols for architecture arm64:
"__critical_section_1_0_acquire", referenced from:
critical_section::with::h00cfbe529dea9dc9 in libbevy_tasks-53c9db6a3865f250.rlib[58](bevy_tasks-53c9db6a3865f250.evom2xwveqp508omiiqb25xig.rcgu.o)
"__critical_section_1_0_release", referenced from:
core::ptr::drop_in_place$LT$critical_section..with..Guard$GT$::hfa034e0208e1a49d in libbevy_tasks-53c9db6a3865f250.rlib[48](bevy_tasks-53c9db6a3865f250.d9dwgpd0156zfn2h5z5ff94zn.rcgu.o)
ld: symbol(s) not found for architecture arm64
clang: error: linker command failed with exit code 1 (use -v to see invocation)
```
## Solution
- enable `std` when building bevy_dylib
---------
Co-authored-by: Zachary Harrold <zac@harrold.com.au>
# Objective
- `collect_path` is only declared when feature `bevy_animation` is
enabled
- it is imported without checking for the feature, not compiling when
not enabled
## Solution
- Gate the import
# Objective
I was looking over a PR yesterday, and got confused by the docs on
deferred world. I thought I would add a little more detail to the struct
in order to clarify it a little.
## Solution
Document some more about deferred worlds.
# Objective
@cart noticed some issues with my work in
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/17348#discussion_r2001815637,
which I somehow missed before merging the PR.
## Solution
- feature gate the UiPickingPlugin correctly
- don't manually add the picking plugins
## Testing
Ran the debug_picking and sprite_picking examples (for UI and sprites
respectively): both seem to work fine.
# Objective
The resources were converted via `clone_reflect_value` and the cloned
value was mapped. But the value that is inserted is the source of the
clone, which was not mapped.
I ran into this issue while working on #18380. Having non consecutive
entity allocations has caught a lot of bugs.
## Solution
Use the cloned value for insertion if it exists.
# Objective
- ECS error handling is a lovely flagship feature for Bevy 0.16, all in
the name of reducing panics and encouraging better error handling
(#14275).
- Currently though, command and system error handling are completely
disjoint and use different mechanisms.
- Additionally, there's a number of distinct ways to set the
default/fallback/global error handler that have limited value. As far as
I can tell, this will be cfg flagged to toggle between dev and
production builds in 99.9% of cases, with no real value in more granular
settings or helpers.
- Fixes#17272
## Solution
- Standardize error handling on the OnceLock global error mechanisms
ironed out in https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/17215
- As discussed there, there are serious performance concerns there,
especially for commands
- I also think this is a better fit for the use cases, as it's truly
global
- Move from `SystemErrorContext` to a more general purpose
`ErrorContext`, which can handle observers and commands more clearly
- Cut the superfluous setter methods on `App` and `SubApp`
- Rename the limited (and unhelpful) `fallible_systems` example to
`error_handling`, and add an example of command error handling
## Testing
Ran the `error_handling` example.
## Notes for reviewers
- Do you see a clear way to allow commands to retain &mut World access
in the per-command custom error handlers? IMO that's a key feature here
(allowing the ad-hoc creation of custom commands), but I'm not sure how
to get there without exploding complexity.
- I've removed the feature gate on the default_error_handler: contrary
to @cart's opinion in #17215 I think that virtually all apps will want
to use this. Can you think of a category of app that a) is extremely
performance sensitive b) is fine with shipping to production with the
panic error handler? If so, I can try to gather performance numbers
and/or reintroduce the feature flag. UPDATE: see benches at the end of
this message.
- ~~`OnceLock` is in `std`: @bushrat011899 what should we do here?~~
- Do you have ideas for more automated tests for this collection of
features?
## Benchmarks
I checked the impact of the feature flag introduced: benchmarks might
show regressions. This bears more investigation. I'm still skeptical
that there are users who are well-served by a fast always panicking
approach, but I'm going to re-add the feature flag here to avoid
stalling this out.

---------
Co-authored-by: Zachary Harrold <zac@harrold.com.au>
# Objective
Currently, our picking backends are inconsistent:
- Mesh picking and sprite picking both have configurable opt in/out
behavior. UI picking does not.
- Sprite picking uses `SpritePickingCamera` and `Pickable` for control,
but mesh picking uses `RayCastPickable`.
- `MeshPickingPlugin` is not a part of `DefaultPlugins`.
`SpritePickingPlugin` and `UiPickingPlugin` are.
## Solution
- Add configurable opt in/out behavior to UI picking (defaults to opt
out).
- Replace `RayCastPickable` with `MeshPickingCamera` and `Pickable`.
- Remove `SpritePickingPlugin` and `UiPickingPlugin` from
`DefaultPlugins`.
## Testing
Ran some examples.
## Migration Guide
`UiPickingPlugin` and `SpritePickingPlugin` are no longer included in
`DefaultPlugins`. They must be explicitly added.
`RayCastPickable` has been replaced in favor of the `MeshPickingCamera`
and `Pickable` components. You should add them to cameras and entities,
respectively, if you have `MeshPickingSettings::require_markers` set to
`true`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
Fixes https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/18366 which seems to
have a similar underlying cause than the already closed (but not fixed)
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/16185.
## Solution
For Windows with the AMD vulkan driver, there was already a hack to
force serial command encoding, which prevented these issues. The Linux
version of the AMD vulkan driver seems to have similar issues than its
Windows counterpart, so I extended the hack to also cover AMD on Linux.
I also removed the mention of `wgpu` since it was already outdated, and
doesn't seem to be relevant to the core issue (the AMD driver being
buggy).
## Testing
- Did you test these changes? If so, how?
- I ran the `3d_scene` example, which on `main` produced the flickering
shadows on Linux with the amdvlk driver, while it no longer does with
the workaround applied.
- Are there any parts that need more testing?
- Not sure.
- How can other people (reviewers) test your changes? Is there anything
specific they need to know?
- Requires a Linux system with an AMD card and the AMDVLK driver.
- If relevant, what platforms did you test these changes on, and are
there any important ones you can't test?
- My change should only affect Linux, where I did test it.
# Objective
- #17219 introduced a circular dependency between bevy_image and
bevy_sprite for documentation
## Solution
- Remove the circular dependency
- Simplify the doc example
# Objective
Fixes#18357
## Solution
Generalize `RelationshipInsertHookMode` to `RelationshipHookMode`, wire
it up to on_replace execution, and use it in the
`Relationship::on_replace` hook.
# Objective
- https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/pull/17887 introduced a circular
dependency between bevy_image and bevy_core_pipeline
- This makes it impossible to publish Bevy
## Solution
- Remove the circular dependency, reintroduce the compilation failure
- This failure shouldn't be an issue for users of Bevy, only for users
of subcrates, and can be workaround
- Proper fix should be done with
https://github.com/bevyengine/bevy/issues/17891
- Limited compilation failure is better than publish failure
# Objective
Extract sprites into a `Vec` instead of a `HashMap`.
## Solution
Extract UI nodes into a `Vec` instead of an `EntityHashMap`.
Add an index into the `Vec` to `Transparent2d`.
Compare both the index and render entity in prepare so there aren't any
collisions.
## Showcase
yellow this PR, red main
```
cargo run --example many_sprites --release --features "trace_tracy"
```
`extract_sprites`
<img width="452" alt="extract_sprites"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/66c60406-7c2b-4367-907d-4a71d3630296"
/>
`queue_sprites`
<img width="463" alt="queue_sprites"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/54b903bd-4137-4772-9f87-e10e1e050d69"
/>
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
- Fixes#17506
- Fixes#16258
## Solution
- Added a new folder of examples, `no_std`, similar to the `mobile`
folder.
- Added a single example, `no_std_library`, which demonstrates how to
make a `no_std` compatible Bevy library.
- Added a new CI task, `check-compiles-no-std-examples`, which checks
that `no_std` examples compile on `no_std` targets.
- Added `bevy_platform_support::prelude` to `bevy::prelude`.
## Testing
- CI
---
## Notes
- I've structured the folders here to permit further `no_std` examples
(e.g., GameBoy Games, ESP32 firmware, etc.), but I am starting with the
simplest and least controversial example.
- I've tried to be as clear as possible with the documentation for this
example, catering to an audience who may not have even heard of `no_std`
before.
---------
Co-authored-by: Greeble <166992735+greeble-dev@users.noreply.github.com>
# Objective
I experienced an issue where `HashMap::new` was not returning a value
typed appropriately for a `HashMap<K,V>` declaration that omitted the
Hasher- e.g. the Default Hasher for the type is different than what the
`new` method produces.
After discussion on discord, this appears to be an issue in `hashbrown`,
and working around it would be very nontrivial, requiring a newtype on
top of the `hashbrown` implementation. Rather than doing that, it was
suggested that we add docs to make the issue more visible and provide a
clear workaround.
## Solution
Updated the docs for `bevy_platform_support::collections`. I couldn't
update Struct docs because they're re-exports, so I had to settle for
the module.
Note that the `[HashMap::new]` link wasn't generating properly- I'm not
sure why. I see the method in the docs.rs site,
https://docs.rs/hashbrown/0.15.1/hashbrown/struct.HashMap.html#method.new,
but not on the generated internal documentation. I wonder if `hashbrown`
isn't actually implementing the new or something?
## Testing
n/a although I did generate and open the docs on my Ubuntu machine.
---
## Showcase
before:

after:

---------
Co-authored-by: Zachary Harrold <zac@harrold.com.au>
# Objective
WESL was broken on windows.
## Solution
- Upgrade to `wesl_rs` 1.2.
- Fix path handling on windows.
- Improve example for khronos demo this week.
# Objective
- #17581 broke gizmos
- Fixes#18325
## Solution
- Revert #17581
- Add gizmos to testbed
## Testing
- Run any example with gizmos, it renders correctly
# Objective
On iOS:
- Allow `std` to do its runtime initialization.
- Avoid requiring the user to specify linked libraries and framework in
Xcode.
- Reduce the amount of work that `#[bevy_main]` does
- In the future we may also be able to eliminate the need for it on
Android, cc @daxpedda.
## Solution
We previously:
- Exposed an `extern "C" fn main_rs` entry point.
- Ran Cargo in a separate Xcode target as an external build system.
- Imported that as a dependency of `bevy_mobile_example.app`.
- Compiled a trampoline C file with Xcode that called `main_rs`.
- Linked that via. Xcode.
All of this is unnecessary; `rustc` is well capable of creating iOS
executables, the trick is just to place it at the correct location for
Xcode to understand it, namely `$TARGET_BUILD_DIR/$EXECUTABLE_PATH`
(places it in `bevy_mobile_example.app/bevy_mobile_example`).
Note: We might want to wait with the changes to `#[bevy_main]` until the
problem is resolved on Android too, to make the migration easier.
## Testing
Open the Xcode project, and build for an iOS target.
---
## Migration Guide
**If you have been building your application for iOS:**
Previously, the `#[bevy_main]` attribute created a `main_rs` entry point
that most Xcode templates were using to run your Rust code from C. This
was found to be unnecessary, as you can simply let Rust build your
application as a binary, and run that directly.
You have two options for dealing with this:
If you've added further C code and Xcode customizations, or it makes
sense for your use-case to continue link with Xcode, you can revert to
the old behaviour by adding `#[no_mangle] extern "C" main_rs() { main()
}` to your `main.rs`. Note that the old approach of linking a static
library prevents the Rust standard library from doing runtime
initialization, so certain functionality provided by `std` might be
unavailable (stack overflow handlers, stdout/stderr flushing and other
such functionality provided by the initialization routines).
The other, preferred option is to remove your "compile" and "link" build
phases, and instead replace it with a "run script" phase that invokes
`cargo build --bin ...`, and moves the built binary to the Xcode path
`$TARGET_BUILD_DIR/$EXECUTABLE_PATH`. An example of how to do this can
be viewed at [INSERT LINK TO UPDATED EXAMPLE PROJECT].
To make the debugging experience in Xcode nicer after this, you might
also want to consider either enabling `panic = "abort"` or to set a
breakpoint on the `rust_panic` symbol.
---------
Co-authored-by: François Mockers <mockersf@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: François Mockers <francois.mockers@vleue.com>
# Objective
As pointed out by @cart on
[Discord](https://discord.com/channels/691052431525675048/1002362493634629796/1351279139872571462),
we should be careful when using tuple shorthand to register types. Doing
so incurs some unnecessary penalties such as memory/compile/performance
cost to generate registrations for a tuple type that will never be used.
A better solution would be to create a custom lint for this, but for now
we can at least remove the existing usages of this pattern.
> [!note]
> This pattern of using tuples to register multiple types at once isn't
inherently bad. Users should feel free to use this pattern, knowing the
side effects it may have. What this problem really is about is using
this in _library_ code, where users of Bevy have no choice in whether a
tuple is unnecessarily registered in an internal plugin or not.
## Solution
Replace tuple registrations with single-type registrations.
Note that I left the tuple registrations in test code since I feel like
brevity is more important in those cases. But let me know if I should
change them or leave a comment above them!
## Testing
You can test locally by running:
```
cargo check --workspace --all-features
```
# Objective
FilteredResource::get should return a Result instead of Option
Fixes#17480
---
## Migration Guide
Users will need to handle the different return type on
FilteredResource::get, FilteredResource::get_id,
FilteredResource::get_mut as it is now a Result not an Option.
# Objective
Continuation of #17449.
#17449 implemented the wrapper types around `IndexMap`/`Set` and co.,
however punted on the slice types.
They are needed to support creating `EntitySetIterator`s from their
slices, not just the base maps and sets.
## Solution
Add the wrappers, in the same vein as #17449 and #17589 before.
The `Index`/`IndexMut` implementations take up a lot of space, however
they cannot be merged because we'd then get overlaps.
They are simply named `Slice` to match the `indexmap` naming scheme, but
this means they cannot be differentiated properly until their modules
are made public, which is already a follow-up mentioned in #17954.
# Objective
Now that #13432 has been merged, it's important we update our reflected
types to properly opt into this feature. If we do not, then this could
cause issues for users downstream who want to make use of
reflection-based cloning.
## Solution
This PR is broken into 4 commits:
1. Add `#[reflect(Clone)]` on all types marked `#[reflect(opaque)]` that
are also `Clone`. This is mandatory as these types would otherwise cause
the cloning operation to fail for any type that contains it at any
depth.
2. Update the reflection example to suggest adding `#[reflect(Clone)]`
on opaque types.
3. Add `#[reflect(clone)]` attributes on all fields marked
`#[reflect(ignore)]` that are also `Clone`. This prevents the ignored
field from causing the cloning operation to fail.
Note that some of the types that contain these fields are also `Clone`,
and thus can be marked `#[reflect(Clone)]`. This makes the
`#[reflect(clone)]` attribute redundant. However, I think it's safer to
keep it marked in the case that the `Clone` impl/derive is ever removed.
I'm open to removing them, though, if people disagree.
4. Finally, I added `#[reflect(Clone)]` on all types that are also
`Clone`. While not strictly necessary, it enables us to reduce the
generated output since we can just call `Clone::clone` directly instead
of calling `PartialReflect::reflect_clone` on each variant/field. It
also means we benefit from any optimizations or customizations made in
the `Clone` impl, including directly dereferencing `Copy` values and
increasing reference counters.
Along with that change I also took the liberty of adding any missing
registrations that I saw could be applied to the type as well, such as
`Default`, `PartialEq`, and `Hash`. There were hundreds of these to
edit, though, so it's possible I missed quite a few.
That last commit is **_massive_**. There were nearly 700 types to
update. So it's recommended to review the first three before moving onto
that last one.
Additionally, I can break the last commit off into its own PR or into
smaller PRs, but I figured this would be the easiest way of doing it
(and in a timely manner since I unfortunately don't have as much time as
I used to for code contributions).
## Testing
You can test locally with a `cargo check`:
```
cargo check --workspace --all-features
```
# Objective
Add a `UiRect::AUTO` const which is a `UiRect` with all its edge values
set to `Val::Auto`.
IIRC `UiRect`'s default for its fields a few versions ago was
`Val::Auto` because positions were represented using a `UiRect` and they
required `Val::Auto` as a default. Then when position was split up and
the `UiRect` default was changed, we forgot add a `UiRect::AUTO` const.
Extracted from my DLSS branch.
## Changelog
* Added `source_texture` and `destination_texture` to
`PostProcessWrite`, in addition to the existing texture views.
obtaining a reference to an empty enum is not possible in Rust, so I
just replaced any match on self with an `unreachable!()`
I checked if an enum is empty by checking if the `variant_patterns` vec
of the `EnumVariantOutputData` struct is empty
Fixes#18277
## Testing
I added one new unit test.
``` rust
#[test]
fn should_allow_empty_enums() {
#[derive(Reflect)]
enum Empty {}
assert_impl_all!(Empty: Reflect);
}
```
# Objective
In its existing form, the clamping that's done in `camera_system`
doesn't work well when the `physical_position` of the associated
viewport is nonzero. In such cases, it may produce invalid viewport
rectangles (i.e. not lying inside the render target), which may result
in crashes during the render pass.
The goal of this PR is to eliminate this possibility by making the
clamping behavior always result in a valid viewport rectangle when
possible.
## Solution
Incorporate the `physical_position` information into the clamping
behavior. In particular, always cut off enough so that it's contained in
the render target rather than clamping it to the same dimensions as the
target itself. In weirder situations, still try to produce a valid
viewport rectangle to avoid crashes.
## Testing
Tested these changes on my work branch where I encountered the crash.
# Objective
Currently experimenting with manually implementing
`Relationship`/`RelationshipTarget` to support associated edge data,
which means I need to replace the default hook implementations provided
by those traits. However, copying them over for editing revealed that
`UnsafeWorldCell::get_raw_command_queue` is `pub(crate)`, and I would
like to not have to clone the source collection, like the default impl.
So instead, I've taken to providing a safe abstraction for being able to
access entities and queue commands simultaneously.
## Solution
Added `World::entities_and_commands` and
`DeferredWorld::entities_and_commands`, which can be used like so:
```rust
let eid: Entity = /* ... */;
let (mut fetcher, mut commands) = world.entities_and_commands();
let emut = fetcher.get_mut(eid).unwrap();
commands.entity(eid).despawn();
```
## Testing
- Added a new test for each of the added functions.
---------
Co-authored-by: Alice Cecile <alice.i.cecile@gmail.com>
# Objective
Continuation to #16547 and #17954.
The `get_many` family are the last methods on `Query`/`QueryState` for
which we're still missing a `unique` version.
## Solution
Offer `get_many_unique`/`get_many_unique_mut` and
`get_many_unique_inner`!
Their implementation is the same as `get_many`, the difference lies in
their guaranteed-to-be unique inputs, meaning we never do any aliasing
checks.
To reduce confusion, we also rename `get_many_readonly` into
`get_many_inner` and the current `get_many_inner` into
`get_many_mut_inner` to clarify their purposes.
## Testing
Doc examples.
## Migration Guide
`get_many_inner` is now called `get_many_mut_inner`.
`get_many_readonly` is now called `get_many_inner`.
# Objective
- Fixes#18342.
## Solution
- Canonicalize the root path so that when we try to strip the prefix, it
matches the canonicalized asset path.
- This is basically just a followup to #18023.
## Testing
- Ran the hot_asset_reloading example and it no longer panics.