bevy/examples/stress_tests/many_lights.rs
Joona Aalto 7b1c9f192e
Adopt consistent FooSystems naming convention for system sets (#18900)
# Objective

Fixes a part of #14274.

Bevy has an incredibly inconsistent naming convention for its system
sets, both internally and across the ecosystem.

<img alt="System sets in Bevy"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/d16e2027-793f-4ba4-9cc9-e780b14a5a1b"
width="450" />

*Names of public system set types in Bevy*

Most Bevy types use a naming of `FooSystem` or just `Foo`, but there are
also a few `FooSystems` and `FooSet` types. In ecosystem crates on the
other hand, `FooSet` is perhaps the most commonly used name in general.
Conventions being so wildly inconsistent can make it harder for users to
pick names for their own types, to search for system sets on docs.rs, or
to even discern which types *are* system sets.

To reign in the inconsistency a bit and help unify the ecosystem, it
would be good to establish a common recommended naming convention for
system sets in Bevy itself, similar to how plugins are commonly suffixed
with `Plugin` (ex: `TimePlugin`). By adopting a consistent naming
convention in first-party Bevy, we can softly nudge ecosystem crates to
follow suit (for types where it makes sense to do so).

Choosing a naming convention is also relevant now, as the [`bevy_cli`
recently adopted
lints](https://github.com/TheBevyFlock/bevy_cli/pull/345) to enforce
naming for plugins and system sets, and the recommended naming used for
system sets is still a bit open.

## Which Name To Use?

Now the contentious part: what naming convention should we actually
adopt?

This was discussed on the Bevy Discord at the end of last year, starting
[here](<https://discord.com/channels/691052431525675048/692572690833473578/1310659954683936789>).
`FooSet` and `FooSystems` were the clear favorites, with `FooSet` very
narrowly winning an unofficial poll. However, it seems to me like the
consensus was broadly moving towards `FooSystems` at the end and after
the poll, with Cart
([source](https://discord.com/channels/691052431525675048/692572690833473578/1311140204974706708))
and later Alice
([source](https://discord.com/channels/691052431525675048/692572690833473578/1311092530732859533))
and also me being in favor of it.

Let's do a quick pros and cons list! Of course these are just what I
thought of, so take it with a grain of salt.

`FooSet`:

- Pro: Nice and short!
- Pro: Used by many ecosystem crates.
- Pro: The `Set` suffix comes directly from the trait name `SystemSet`.
- Pro: Pairs nicely with existing APIs like `in_set` and
`configure_sets`.
- Con: `Set` by itself doesn't actually indicate that it's related to
systems *at all*, apart from the implemented trait. A set of what?
- Con: Is `FooSet` a set of `Foo`s or a system set related to `Foo`? Ex:
`ContactSet`, `MeshSet`, `EnemySet`...

`FooSystems`:

- Pro: Very clearly indicates that the type represents a collection of
systems. The actual core concept, system(s), is in the name.
- Pro: Parallels nicely with `FooPlugins` for plugin groups.
- Pro: Low risk of conflicts with other names or misunderstandings about
what the type is.
- Pro: In most cases, reads *very* nicely and clearly. Ex:
`PhysicsSystems` and `AnimationSystems` as opposed to `PhysicsSet` and
`AnimationSet`.
- Pro: Easy to search for on docs.rs.
- Con: Usually results in longer names.
- Con: Not yet as widely used.

Really the big problem with `FooSet` is that it doesn't actually
describe what it is. It describes what *kind of thing* it is (a set of
something), but not *what it is a set of*, unless you know the type or
check its docs or implemented traits. `FooSystems` on the other hand is
much more self-descriptive in this regard, at the cost of being a bit
longer to type.

Ultimately, in some ways it comes down to preference and how you think
of system sets. Personally, I was originally in favor of `FooSet`, but
have been increasingly on the side of `FooSystems`, especially after
seeing what the new names would actually look like in Avian and now
Bevy. I prefer it because it usually reads better, is much more clearly
related to groups of systems than `FooSet`, and overall *feels* more
correct and natural to me in the long term.

For these reasons, and because Alice and Cart also seemed to share a
preference for it when it was previously being discussed, I propose that
we adopt a `FooSystems` naming convention where applicable.

## Solution

Rename Bevy's system set types to use a consistent `FooSet` naming where
applicable.

- `AccessibilitySystem` → `AccessibilitySystems`
- `GizmoRenderSystem` → `GizmoRenderSystems`
- `PickSet` → `PickingSystems`
- `RunFixedMainLoopSystem` → `RunFixedMainLoopSystems`
- `TransformSystem` → `TransformSystems`
- `RemoteSet` → `RemoteSystems`
- `RenderSet` → `RenderSystems`
- `SpriteSystem` → `SpriteSystems`
- `StateTransitionSteps` → `StateTransitionSystems`
- `RenderUiSystem` → `RenderUiSystems`
- `UiSystem` → `UiSystems`
- `Animation` → `AnimationSystems`
- `AssetEvents` → `AssetEventSystems`
- `TrackAssets` → `AssetTrackingSystems`
- `UpdateGizmoMeshes` → `GizmoMeshSystems`
- `InputSystem` → `InputSystems`
- `InputFocusSet` → `InputFocusSystems`
- `ExtractMaterialsSet` → `MaterialExtractionSystems`
- `ExtractMeshesSet` → `MeshExtractionSystems`
- `RumbleSystem` → `RumbleSystems`
- `CameraUpdateSystem` → `CameraUpdateSystems`
- `ExtractAssetsSet` → `AssetExtractionSystems`
- `Update2dText` → `Text2dUpdateSystems`
- `TimeSystem` → `TimeSystems`
- `AudioPlaySet` → `AudioPlaybackSystems`
- `SendEvents` → `EventSenderSystems`
- `EventUpdates` → `EventUpdateSystems`

A lot of the names got slightly longer, but they are also a lot more
consistent, and in my opinion the majority of them read much better. For
a few of the names I took the liberty of rewording things a bit;
definitely open to any further naming improvements.

There are still also cases where the `FooSystems` naming doesn't really
make sense, and those I left alone. This primarily includes system sets
like `Interned<dyn SystemSet>`, `EnterSchedules<S>`, `ExitSchedules<S>`,
or `TransitionSchedules<S>`, where the type has some special purpose and
semantics.

## Todo

- [x] Should I keep all the old names as deprecated type aliases? I can
do this, but to avoid wasting work I'd prefer to first reach consensus
on whether these renames are even desired.
- [x] Migration guide
- [x] Release notes
2025-05-06 15:18:03 +00:00

193 lines
6.1 KiB
Rust

//! Simple benchmark to test rendering many point lights.
//! Run with `WGPU_SETTINGS_PRIO=webgl2` to restrict to uniform buffers and max 256 lights.
use std::f64::consts::PI;
use bevy::{
color::palettes::css::DEEP_PINK,
diagnostic::{FrameTimeDiagnosticsPlugin, LogDiagnosticsPlugin},
math::{DVec2, DVec3},
pbr::{ExtractedPointLight, GlobalClusterableObjectMeta},
prelude::*,
render::{camera::ScalingMode, Render, RenderApp, RenderSystems},
window::{PresentMode, WindowResolution},
winit::{UpdateMode, WinitSettings},
};
use rand::{thread_rng, Rng};
fn main() {
App::new()
.add_plugins((
DefaultPlugins.set(WindowPlugin {
primary_window: Some(Window {
resolution: WindowResolution::new(1920.0, 1080.0)
.with_scale_factor_override(1.0),
title: "many_lights".into(),
present_mode: PresentMode::AutoNoVsync,
..default()
}),
..default()
}),
FrameTimeDiagnosticsPlugin::default(),
LogDiagnosticsPlugin::default(),
LogVisibleLights,
))
.insert_resource(WinitSettings {
focused_mode: UpdateMode::Continuous,
unfocused_mode: UpdateMode::Continuous,
})
.add_systems(Startup, setup)
.add_systems(Update, (move_camera, print_light_count))
.run();
}
fn setup(
mut commands: Commands,
mut meshes: ResMut<Assets<Mesh>>,
mut materials: ResMut<Assets<StandardMaterial>>,
) {
warn!(include_str!("warning_string.txt"));
const LIGHT_RADIUS: f32 = 0.3;
const LIGHT_INTENSITY: f32 = 1000.0;
const RADIUS: f32 = 50.0;
const N_LIGHTS: usize = 100_000;
commands.spawn((
Mesh3d(meshes.add(Sphere::new(RADIUS).mesh().ico(9).unwrap())),
MeshMaterial3d(materials.add(Color::WHITE)),
Transform::from_scale(Vec3::NEG_ONE),
));
let mesh = meshes.add(Cuboid::default());
let material = materials.add(StandardMaterial {
base_color: DEEP_PINK.into(),
..default()
});
// NOTE: This pattern is good for testing performance of culling as it provides roughly
// the same number of visible meshes regardless of the viewing angle.
// NOTE: f64 is used to avoid precision issues that produce visual artifacts in the distribution
let golden_ratio = 0.5f64 * (1.0f64 + 5.0f64.sqrt());
// Spawn N_LIGHTS many lights
commands.spawn_batch((0..N_LIGHTS).map(move |i| {
let mut rng = thread_rng();
let spherical_polar_theta_phi = fibonacci_spiral_on_sphere(golden_ratio, i, N_LIGHTS);
let unit_sphere_p = spherical_polar_to_cartesian(spherical_polar_theta_phi);
(
PointLight {
range: LIGHT_RADIUS,
intensity: LIGHT_INTENSITY,
color: Color::hsl(rng.gen_range(0.0..360.0), 1.0, 0.5),
..default()
},
Transform::from_translation((RADIUS as f64 * unit_sphere_p).as_vec3()),
)
}));
// camera
match std::env::args().nth(1).as_deref() {
Some("orthographic") => commands.spawn((
Camera3d::default(),
Projection::from(OrthographicProjection {
scaling_mode: ScalingMode::FixedHorizontal {
viewport_width: 20.0,
},
..OrthographicProjection::default_3d()
}),
)),
_ => commands.spawn(Camera3d::default()),
};
// add one cube, the only one with strong handles
// also serves as a reference point during rotation
commands.spawn((
Mesh3d(mesh),
MeshMaterial3d(material),
Transform {
translation: Vec3::new(0.0, RADIUS, 0.0),
scale: Vec3::splat(5.0),
..default()
},
));
}
// NOTE: This epsilon value is apparently optimal for optimizing for the average
// nearest-neighbor distance. See:
// http://extremelearning.com.au/how-to-evenly-distribute-points-on-a-sphere-more-effectively-than-the-canonical-fibonacci-lattice/
// for details.
const EPSILON: f64 = 0.36;
fn fibonacci_spiral_on_sphere(golden_ratio: f64, i: usize, n: usize) -> DVec2 {
DVec2::new(
PI * 2. * (i as f64 / golden_ratio),
ops::acos((1.0 - 2.0 * (i as f64 + EPSILON) / (n as f64 - 1.0 + 2.0 * EPSILON)) as f32)
as f64,
)
}
fn spherical_polar_to_cartesian(p: DVec2) -> DVec3 {
let (sin_theta, cos_theta) = p.x.sin_cos();
let (sin_phi, cos_phi) = p.y.sin_cos();
DVec3::new(cos_theta * sin_phi, sin_theta * sin_phi, cos_phi)
}
// System for rotating the camera
fn move_camera(time: Res<Time>, mut camera_transform: Single<&mut Transform, With<Camera>>) {
let delta = time.delta_secs() * 0.15;
camera_transform.rotate_z(delta);
camera_transform.rotate_x(delta);
}
// System for printing the number of meshes on every tick of the timer
fn print_light_count(time: Res<Time>, mut timer: Local<PrintingTimer>, lights: Query<&PointLight>) {
timer.0.tick(time.delta());
if timer.0.just_finished() {
info!("Lights: {}", lights.iter().len());
}
}
struct LogVisibleLights;
impl Plugin for LogVisibleLights {
fn build(&self, app: &mut App) {
let Some(render_app) = app.get_sub_app_mut(RenderApp) else {
return;
};
render_app.add_systems(
Render,
print_visible_light_count.in_set(RenderSystems::Prepare),
);
}
}
// System for printing the number of meshes on every tick of the timer
fn print_visible_light_count(
time: Res<Time>,
mut timer: Local<PrintingTimer>,
visible: Query<&ExtractedPointLight>,
global_light_meta: Res<GlobalClusterableObjectMeta>,
) {
timer.0.tick(time.delta());
if timer.0.just_finished() {
info!(
"Visible Lights: {}, Rendered Lights: {}",
visible.iter().len(),
global_light_meta.entity_to_index.len()
);
}
}
struct PrintingTimer(Timer);
impl Default for PrintingTimer {
fn default() -> Self {
Self(Timer::from_seconds(1.0, TimerMode::Repeating))
}
}