ES3-CTS.functional.negative_api.buffer.framebuffer_texture2d expects
glFramebufferTexture[123]D to raise GL_INVALID_ENUM when
supplied a completely bogus textarget parameter (i.e. 0xffffffff).
This is at odds with the spec. GLES 3.1 says:
"An INVALID_OPERATION error is generated if texture is not zero and
textarget is not one of TEXTURE_2D, TEXTURE_2D_MULTISAMPLE, or one
of the cube map face targets from table 8.21."
(and GLES 3.0 and GL 4.5 both have similar text). However, GL has a
general guideline that says:
"If a command that requires an enumerated value is passed a symbolic
constant that is not one of those specified as allowable for that
command, an INVALID_ENUM error is generated."
Apparently other vendors reconcile these two rules as follows: GL should
raise INVALID_OPERATION for actual texture target enumeration values
which are not allowed for this particular glFramebufferTexture*D call.
Any value that is not a texture target should result in GL_INVALID_ENUM.
For example, glFramebufferTexture2D with GL_TEXTURE_1D would result in
INVALID_OPERATION because it is a real texture target, but not allowed
for the 2D version of the function. But calling it with GL_FRONT would
result in INVALID_ENUM, as that isn't even a texture target.
Fixes:
- {ES3-CTS,dEQP-GLES3}.functional.negative_api.buffer.framebuffer_texture2d
- {ES31-CTS,ES32-CTS,dEQP-GLES31}.functional.debug.negative_coverage.get_error.buffer.framebuffer_texture2d
References: https://gitlab.khronos.org/opengl/cts/merge_requests/387
Signed-off-by: Kenneth Graunke <kenneth@whitecape.org>
Reviewed-by: Timothy Arceri <timothy.arceri@collabora.com>
err = dims != 3;
break;
default:
- err = true;
- break;
+ _mesa_error(ctx, GL_INVALID_ENUM,
+ "%s(unknown textarget 0x%x)", caller, textarget);
+ return false;
}
if (err) {