Mesa-6.0.1 dosn't work and Mesa-6.0 won't even compile on SGIs. Only
Mesa-6.2 works. The release notes state that some bug fixes were made
for IRIX, however.
It could be something wrong with Tkinter though as it does work if I set
DISPLAY to a LINUX workstation.
Borlan
Wayne Boucher wrote:
>The SGIs seem to have both double buffered and single buffered visuals.
>For some reason Tkinter seems to be picking up the single buffered one
>when the SGI OpenGL is used, but the double buffered one when Mesa is
>used. I haven't a clue why that might be the case.
>
>Wayne
>
>On Thu, 28 Oct 2004, Borlan Pan wrote:
>
>
>
>>I installed the newly released Mesa-6.2 and it seems to work with that now.
>>
>>Borlan
>>
>>Wayne Boucher wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>>>Hello,
>>>
>>>After a bit of grief (just finding an SGI with a compiler on it) I can see
>>>what is causing the problem but the "solution" so far is not complete.
>>>
>>>In order to know what "drawable" (OpenGL jargon) is being drawn in, the
>>>Python widget gets passed to the C world and a "context" (more OpenGL
>>>jargon) is created, and to do that you need a "visual" (more OpenGL
>>>jargon). Then when you want to draw into that drawable you make a call to
>>>glXMakeCurrent() with that drawable and context as arguments. The
>>>glXMakeCurrent() man page says:
>>>
>>>"BadMatch is generated if drawable was not created with the same X screen
>>>and visual as ctx. It is also generated if drawable is None and ctx is not
>>>None."
>>>
>>>I checked explicitly and drawable and ctx (the context) are both not None.
>>>And there is only one screen. So it looks like the drawable was not
>>>created with the same visual as ctx. Like I said, the drawable comes from
>>>the Python world and which visual it is created with is a bit beyond our
>>>control. The visual in the C world is created as follows (this is in the
>>>function new_gl_handler() in ccpnmr1.0/c/ccpnmr/global/gl_handler.c):
>>>
>>> visual = glXChooseVisual(display, DefaultScreen(display), dblBuf);
>>>
>>>where dblBuf is defined a bit above that line as:
>>>
>>> static int dblBuf[] = {GLX_RGBA, GLX_DOUBLEBUFFER, None};
>>>
>>>The first two arguments mean:
>>>
>>> GLX_RGBA: If present, only TrueColor and DirectColor visuals are
>>>considered. Otherwise, only PseudoColor and StaticColor visuals are
>>>considered.
>>>
>>> GLX_DOUBLEBUFFER: If present, only double-buffered visuals are
>>>considered. Otherwise, only single-buffered visuals are considered.
>>>
>>>If I use dblBuf as is, or if I remove either but not both of those
>>>arguments, then I get the BadMatch problem. I am not too bothered about
>>>GLX_RGBA but I am about GLX_DOUBLEBUFFER. If I remove both, so have:
>>>
>>> static int dblBuf[] = {None};
>>>
>>>then I do not get the BadMatch problem. So I end up being able to display
>>>contours. Only the whole thing does not really work properly: the
>>>background is black instead of white, the crosshair does not get
>>>refreshed (so the xor mode is not working), etc. (This is probably
>>>because the Python code pretty much assumes double buffering is working.)
>>>So this is not sorted yet.
>>>
>>>Is there double buffering on these oldish SGIs? I thought there was, but
>>>perhaps not.
>>>
>>>Wayne
>>>
>>>On Tue, 26 Oct 2004, Borlan Pan wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>>Unfortunately, neither GL_FALSE and GL_TRUE help.
>>>>
>>>>Borlan
>>>>
>>>>Wayne Boucher wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>>Hello,
>>>>>
>>>>>I've done a bit of a trawl on google and as usual the question appears a
>>>>>few times but not the answer. In particular already back in 1999 someone
>>>>>had this problem with exactly the same note about it working on another
>>>>>display:
>>>>>
>>>>>http://oss.sgi.com/projects/performer/mail/info-performer/perf-99-08/0000.html
>>>>>
>>>>>Someone in 2002 also had this kind problem trying to use another display
>>>>>(so even worse than you are having, but the "X Error of failed request"
>>>>>was different):
>>>>>
>>>>>http://oss.sgi.com/projects/performer/mail/info-performer/perf-02-01/0004.html
>>>>>
>>>>>and said they had tried xhost to sort this out but it did not.
>>>>>
>>>>>Now recently we changed one of the parameters in one of the first OpenGL
>>>>>calls because it was causing the non-drawing of contours on Linux boxes
>>>>>using native Nvidia OpenGL drivers. You could try changing this back to
>>>>>see what happens. So in ccpnmr1.0/c/ccpnmr/global/gl_handler.c in the
>>>>>function new_gl_handler() there is a line:
>>>>>
>>>>>context = glXCreateContext(display, visual, None, GL_FALSE);
>>>>>
>>>>>and you could change this back to:
>>>>>
>>>>>context = glXCreateContext(display, visual, None, GL_TRUE);
>>>>>
>>>>>(it's commented out in the text above the current version). Then type
>>>>>"make" and "cd ../analysis" and "make" and try running Analysis again.
>>>>>
>>>>>If that works then we can try to put both variants in (somehow). (My
>>>>>guess is that it will not solve it but you never know.)
>>>>>
>>>>>Wayne
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
--
Borlan Pan, Ph.D.
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