Passing the getUsedFrames argument will cause frames to be buffered
locally (and not added to the SheetBuilder) until they are explicitly
requested. This allows unused frames in sprite files to be skipped
instead of wasting space in GPU memory.
Previously ReleaseBuffer did not immediately null out the buffer, instead the releaseBufferOnCommit flag allows it to be nulled when the texture is next access and the pending changes from the buffer are committed to it. Now the texture is committed immediately, thus the buffer is null once ReleaseBuffer returns.
Once loaded, we force a GC to reclaim temporary memory used during loading. Previously the buffer would not be null as it was pending commit to the texture and thus could not be reclaimed. As soon as we rendered the first frame, the buffer is nulled but we are now in a low GC state - and the buffer will not be reclaimed until the next gen 2 GC which may be dozens of minutes away.
This change ensures the buffer is null in time for the post-load GC, and thus can be reclaimed before we start rendering.
Callers can provide 3D points easily, and this avoids the need to allocate and slow down enumeration via the points.Select(p => new float3(p, 0)) wrapper.
The render bounds for an actor now include the area covered
by bibs, shadows, and any other widgets. In many cases this
area is much larger than we really want to consider for
tooltips and mouse selection.
An optional Margin is added to Selectable to support cases
like infantry, where we want the mouse area of the actor
to be larger than the drawn selection box.
Avoid allocating the sheet builder each frame until it is needed. For mods that do not need to render models, this avoids allocating a large buffer and backing sheet as it will never render to the sheet. For mods that do render models, but don't need any this frame, this avoids allocating a new SheetBuilder that will not be used.
Additionally, internally renamed VisualBounds to SelectionOverlayBounds to avoid confusion with RenderBounds.
This step was necessary to prevent actors with selectable area smaller than their graphics to be removed too early from ScreenMap even though part of the graphics should still be visible.
RA cruisers were a prime example, but to a lesser extent several other actors were affected as well.
This separation also serves as preparation to determine the final RenderBounds from multiple source bounds later, to fix the remaining ScreenMap issues (building 'bibs', aircraft shadows).
- A 512x512 sheet is about half full after precaching and some usage, but uses 16x less memory than the default 2048x2048 sheet. This saving occurs twice as we maintain a managed buffer for this sheet.
- Only precache smaller fonts, as the larger fonts are less used and take up more space than is worthwhile.
- Only precache in white, as red is largely unused.