Table 23.54 of the OpenGL 4.5 spec lists the minimum values for
GL_POINT_SIZE_RANGE as [1, 1]. So zero is not allowed (even though
arguably this could be useful for MSAA rendering, where a sub-1px
point might cover only some samples...)
This fixes the WebGL 2.0 conformance suite's state.gl-get-calls test
on Chromium on Linux, which uses desktop OpenGL. The test checks that
the minimum value of GL_ALIASED_POINT_SIZE_RANGE is 1. Unfortunately,
that query doesn't exist in desktop GL, so it checks POINT_SIZE_RANGE,
which is the anti-aliased value. There's not really anything better
for Chromium to do here, unfortunately. When running Chromium with
--api=es3, it maps it to the correct query and the test already works.
Reviewed-by: Jordan Justen <jordan.l.justen@intel.com>
Reviewed-by: Eric Anholt <eric@anholt.net>
c->MaxPointSizeAA =
_maxf(1.0f, screen->get_paramf(screen, PIPE_CAPF_MAX_POINT_WIDTH_AA));
- /* these are not queryable. Note that GL basically mandates a 1.0 minimum
- * for non-aa sizes, but we can go down to 0.0 for aa points.
- */
c->MinPointSize = 1.0f;
- c->MinPointSizeAA = 0.0f;
+ c->MinPointSizeAA = 1.0f;
c->MaxTextureMaxAnisotropy =
_maxf(2.0f,