/** ** Supermodel ** A Sega Model 3 Arcade Emulator. ** Copyright 2011-2012 Bart Trzynadlowski, Nik Henson ** ** This file is part of Supermodel. ** ** Supermodel is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under ** the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free ** Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) ** any later version. ** ** Supermodel is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ** ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or ** FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for ** more details. ** ** You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along ** with Supermodel. If not, see . **/ /* * Render2D.cpp * * Implementation of the CRender2D class: OpenGL tile generator graphics. * * To-Do List * ---------- * - Is there a universal solution to the 'ROLLING START' scrolling bug (Scud * Race) and the scrolling text during Magical Truck Adventure's attract * mode? To fix Scud Race, either the stencil mask or the h-scroll value must * be shifted by 16 pixels. Magical Truck Adventure is similar but opposite. * Perhaps this is a function of timing registers accessed via JTAG? * - Is there a better way to handle the overscan regions in wide screen mode? * Is clearing two thin viewports better than one big clear? * - Are v-scroll values 9 or 10 bits? (Does it matter?) Lost World seems to * have some scrolling issues. * - A proper shut-down function is needed! OpenGL might not be available when * the destructor for this class is called. * * Tile Generator Hardware Overview * -------------------------------- * * Model 3's medium resolution tile generator hardware appears to be derived * from the Model 2 and System 24 chipset, but is much simpler. It consists of * four 64x64 tile layers, comprised of 8x8 pixel tiles, with configurable * priorities. There may be additional features but so far, no known Model 3 * games use them. * * VRAM is comprised of 1 MB for tile data and an additional 128 KB for the * palette (each color occupies 32 bits). The four tilemap layers are referred * to as: A (0), A' (1), B (2), and B' (3). Palette RAM may be located on a * separate RAM IC. * * Registers * --------- * * Registers are listed by their byte offset in the PowerPC address space. Each * is 32 bits wide and little endian. Only those registers relevant to * rendering are listed here (see CTileGen for others). * * Offset: Description: * * 0x20 Layer configuration * 0x40 Layer A/A' color offset * 0x44 Layer B/B' color offset * 0x60 Layer A scroll * 0x64 Layer A' scroll * 0x68 Layer B scroll * 0x6C Layer B' scroll * * Layer configuration is formatted as: * * 31 0 * ???? ???? ???? ???? pqrs tuvw ???? ???? * * Bits 'pqrs' control the color depth of layers B', B, A', and A, * respectively. If set, the layer's pattern data is encoded as 4 bits, * otherwise the pixels are 8 bits. * * Bits 'tuvw' control priority for layers B', B, A', and A, respectively, * which is also the relative ordering of the layers from bottom to top. For * each layer, if its bit is clear, it will be drawn below the 3D layer, * otherwise it is drawn on top. * * The remaining registers are described where appropriate further below. * * VRAM Memory Map * --------------- * * The lower 1 MB of VRAM is used for storing tiles, per-line horizontal scroll * values, and the stencil mask, which determines which of each pair of layers * is displayed on a given line and column. * * 00000-F5FFF Tile pattern data * F6000-F63FF Layer A horizontal scroll table (512 lines) * F6400-F67FF Layer A' horizontal scroll table * F6800-F6BFF Layer B horizontal scroll table * F6C00-F6FFF Layer B' horizontal scroll table * F7000-F77FF Mask table (assuming 4 bytes per line, 512 lines) * F7800-F7FFF ? * F8000-F9FFF Layer A name table * FA000-FBFFF Layer A' name table * FC000-FDFFF Layer B name table * FE000-FFFFF Layer B' name table * * Tiles may actually address the entire 1 MB space, although in practice, * that would conflict with the other fixed memory regions. * * Palette * ------- * * The palette stores 32768 colors. Each entry is a little endian 32-bit word. * The upper 16 bits are unused and the lower 16 bits contain the color: * * 15 0 * tbbb bbgg gggr rrrr * * The 't' bit is for transparency. When set, pixels of that color are * transparent, unless they are the bottom-most layer. * * Tile Name Table and Pattern Layout * ---------------------------------- * * The name table is a 64x64 array of 16-bit words serving as indices for tile * pattern data and the palette. The first 64 words correspond to the first * row of tiles, the next 64 to the second row, etc. Although 64x64 entries * describes a 512x512 pixel screen, only the upper-left 62x48 tiles are * visible when the vertical and horizontal scroll values are 0. Scrolling * moves the 496x384 pixel 'window' around, with individual wrapping of the * two axes. * * The data is actually arranged in 32-bit chunks in little endian format, so * that tiles 0, 1, 2, and 3 will be stored as 1, 0, 3, 2. Fetching two name * table entries as a single 32-bit word places the left tile in the high 16 * bits and the right tile in the low 16 bits. * * The format of a name table entry in 4-bit color mode is: * * 15 0 * jkpp pppp pppp iiii * * The pattern index is '0ppp pppp pppi iiij'. Multiplying by 32 yields the * offset in VRAM at which the tile pattern data is stored. Note that the MSB * of the name table entry becomes the LSB of the pattern index. This allows * for 32768 4-bit tile patterns, each occupying 32 bytes, which means the * whole 1 MB VRAM space can be addressed. * * The 4-bit pattern data is stored as 8 32-bit words. Each word stores a row * of 8 pixels: * * 31 0 * aaaa bbbb cccc dddd eeee ffff gggg hhhh * * 'a' is the left-most pixel data. These 4-bit values are combined with bits * from the name table to form a palette index, which determines the final * color. For example, for pixel 'a', the 15-bit color index is: * * 14 0 * kpp pppp pppp aaaa * * Note that index bits are re-used to form the palette index, meaning that * the pattern address partly determines the color. * * In 8-bit color mode, the name table entry looks like: * * 15 0 * ?ppp pppp iiii iiii * * The low 15 'p' and 'i' bits together form the pattern index, which must be * multiplied by 64 to get the offset. The pattern data now consists of 16 32- * bit words, each containing four 8-bit pixels: * * 31 0 * aaaa aaaa bbbb bbbb cccc cccc dddd dddd * * 'a' is the left-most pixel. Each line is therefore comprised of two 32-bit * words. The palette index for pixel 'a' is now formed from: * * 14 0 * ppp pppp aaaa aaaa * * Stencil Mask * ------------ * * For any pixel position, there are in fact only two visible layers, despite * there being four defined layers. The layers are grouped in pairs: A (the * 'primary' layer) and A' (the 'alternate') form one pair, and B and B' form * the other. Only one of the primary or alternate layers from each group may * be visible at a given position. The 'stencil mask' controls this. * * The mask table is a bit field organized into 512 (or 384?) lines with each * bit controlling four columns (32 pixels). The mask does not appear to be * affected by scrolling -- that is, it does not scroll with the underlying * tiles, which do so independently. The mask remains fixed. * * Each mask entry is a little endian 32-bit word. The high 16 bits control * A/A' and the low 16 bits control B/B'. Each word controls an entire line * (32 pixels per bit, 512 pixels per 16-bit line mask, where the first 16 * pixels are allocated to the overscan region.) If a bit is set to 1, the * pixel from the primary layer is used, otherwise the alternate layer is * used when the mask is 0. It is important to remember that the layers may * have been scrolled independently. The mask operates on the final resultant * two pixels that are determined for each location. * * Example of a line mask: * * 31 15 0 * 0111 0000 0000 1111 0000 0000 1111 1111 * * These settings would display layer A' for the first 32 pixels of the line, * followed by layer A for the next 96 pixels, A' for the subsequent 256 * pixels, and A for the final 128 pixels. The first 256 pixels of the line * would display layer B' and the second 256 pixels would be from layer B. * * The stencil mask does not affect layer priorities, which are managed * separately regardless of mask settings. * * Scrolling * --------- * * Each of the four layers can be scrolled independently. Vertical scroll * values are stored in the appropriate scroll register and horizontal scroll * values can be sourced either from the register (in which case the entire * layer will be scrolled uniformly) or from a table in VRAM (which contains * independent values for each line). * * The scroll registers are laid out as: * * 31 0 * e??? ???y yyyy yyyy h??? ??xx xxxx xxxx * * The 'e' bit enables the layer when set. The 'y' bits comprise a vertical * scroll value in pixels. The 'x' bits form a horizontal scroll value. If 'h' * is set, then the VRAM table (line-by-line scrolling) is used, otherwise the * 'x' values are applied to every line. It is also possible that the scroll * values use more or less bits, but probably no more than 1. * * Each line must be wrapped back to the beginning of the same line. Likewise, * vertical scrolling wraps around back to the top of the tilemap. * * The horizontal scroll table is a series of 16-bit little endian words, one * for each line beginning at 0. It appears all the values can be used for * scrolling (no control bits have been observed). The number of bits actually * used by the hardware is irrelevant -- wrapping has the effect of making * higher order bits unimportant. * * Layer Priorities * ---------------- * * The layer control register (0x20) contains 4 bits that appear to control * layer priorities. It is assumed that the 3D graphics, output by the Real3D * pixel processors independently of the tile generator, constitute their own * 'layer' and that the 2D tilemaps appear in front or behind. There may be a * specific function for each priority bit or the field may be interpreted as a * single 4-bit value denoting preset layer orders. * * Color Offsets * ------------- * * Color offsets can be applied to the final RGB color value of every pixel. * This is used for effects such as fading to a certain color, lightning (Lost * World), etc. The current best guess is that the two registers control each * pair (A/A' and B/B') of layers. The format appears to be: * * 31 0 * ???? ???? rrrr rrrr gggg gggg bbbb bbbb * * Where 'r', 'g', and 'b' appear to be signed 8-bit color offsets. Because * they exceed the color resolution of the palette, they must be scaled * appropriately. * * Color offset registers are handled in TileGen.cpp. Two palettes are computed * -- one for A/A' and another for B/B'. These are passed to the renderer. */ #include #include "Pkgs/glew.h" #include "Supermodel.h" #include "Graphics/Shaders2D.h" // fragment and vertex shaders /****************************************************************************** Definitions and Constants ******************************************************************************/ // Shader program files (for use in development builds only) #define VERTEX_2D_SHADER_FILE "Src/Graphics/Vertex2D.glsl" #define FRAGMENT_2D_SHADER_FILE "Src/Graphics/Fragment2D.glsl" /****************************************************************************** Layer Rendering This code is quite slow and badly needs to be optimized. Dirty rectangles should be implemented first and tile pre-decoding second. ******************************************************************************/ template static inline void DrawTileLine(uint32_t *line, int pixelOffset, uint16_t tile, int patternLine, const uint32_t *vram, const uint32_t *palette, uint16_t mask) { static_assert(bits == 4 || bits == 8, "Tiles are either 4- or 8-bit"); // For 8-bit pixels, each line of tile pattern is two words if (bits == 8) patternLine *= 2; // Compute offset of pattern for this line int patternOffset; if (bits == 4) { patternOffset = ((tile & 0x3FFF) << 1) | ((tile >> 15) & 1); patternOffset *= 32; patternOffset /= 4; } else { patternOffset = tile & 0x3FFF; patternOffset *= 64; patternOffset /= 4; } // Name table entry provides high color bits uint32_t colorHi = tile & ((bits == 4) ? 0x7FF0 : 0x7F00); // Draw if (bits == 4) { uint32_t pattern = vram[patternOffset + patternLine]; for (int p = 7; p >= 0; p--) { if (!clip || (clip && pixelOffset >= 0 && pixelOffset < 496)) { uint16_t maskTest = 1 << (15-((pixelOffset+0)/32)); bool visible = (mask & maskTest) != 0; uint32_t pixel = palette[((pattern >> (p*4)) & 0xF) | colorHi]; if (alphaTest) { if (visible && (pixel >> 24) != 0) // only draw opaque pixels line[pixelOffset] = pixel; } else { if (visible) line[pixelOffset] = pixel; else line[pixelOffset] = 0; } } ++pixelOffset; } } else { for (int i = 0; i < 2; i++) // 4 pixels per word { uint32_t pattern = vram[patternOffset + patternLine + i]; for (int p = 3; p >= 0; p--) { if (!clip || (clip && pixelOffset >= 0 && pixelOffset < 496)) { uint16_t maskTest = 1 << (15-((pixelOffset+0)/32)); bool visible = (mask & maskTest) != 0; uint32_t pixel = palette[((pattern >> (p*8)) & 0xFF) | colorHi]; if (alphaTest) { if (visible && (pixel >> 24) != 0) line[pixelOffset] = pixel; } else { if (visible) line[pixelOffset] = pixel; else line[pixelOffset] = 0; // transparent } } ++pixelOffset; } } } } template static void DrawLayer(uint32_t *pixels, int layerNum, const uint32_t *vram, const uint32_t *regs, const uint32_t *palette) { const uint16_t *nameTableBase = (const uint16_t *) &vram[(0xF8000 + layerNum * 0x2000) / 4]; const uint16_t *hScrollTable = (const uint16_t *) &vram[(0xF6000 + layerNum * 0x400) / 4]; bool lineScrollMode = (regs[0x60/4 + layerNum] & 0x8000) != 0; int hFullScroll = regs[0x60/4 + layerNum] & 0x3FF; int vScroll = (regs[0x60/4 + layerNum] >> 16) & 0x1FF; const uint16_t *maskTable = (const uint16_t *) &vram[0xF7000 / 4]; if (layerNum < 2) // little endian: layers A and A' use second word in each pair maskTable += 1; // If mask bit is clear, alternate layer is shown. We want to test for non- // zero, so we flip the mask when drawing alternate layers (layers 1 and 3). const uint16_t maskPolarity = (layerNum & 1) ? 0xFFFF : 0x0000; uint32_t *line = pixels; for (int y = 0; y < 384; y++) { int hScroll = (lineScrollMode ? hScrollTable[y] : hFullScroll) & 0x1FF; int hTile = hScroll / 8; int hFine = hScroll & 7; // horizontal pixel offset within tile line int vFine = (y + vScroll) & 7; // vertical pixel offset within 8x8 tile const uint16_t *nameTable = &nameTableBase[(64 * ((y + vScroll) / 8)) & 0xFFF]; // clamp to 64x64 = 0x1000 uint16_t mask = *maskTable ^ maskPolarity; // each bit covers 32 pixels int pixelOffset = -hFine; int extraTile = (hFine != 0) ? 1 : 0; // h-scrolling requires part of 63rd tile // First tile may be clipped int tx = 0; DrawTileLine(line, pixelOffset, nameTable[(hTile ^ 1) & 63], vFine, vram, palette, mask); ++hTile; pixelOffset += 8; // Middle tiles will not be clipped for (tx = 1; tx < (62 - 1 + extraTile); tx++) { DrawTileLine(line, pixelOffset, nameTable[(hTile ^ 1) & 63], vFine, vram, palette, mask); ++hTile; pixelOffset += 8; } // Last tile may be clipped DrawTileLine(line, pixelOffset, nameTable[(hTile ^ 1) & 63], vFine, vram, palette, mask); ++hTile; pixelOffset += 8; // Advance one line maskTable += 2; line += 496; } } std::pair CRender2D::DrawTilemaps(uint32_t *pixelsBottom, uint32_t *pixelsTop) { unsigned priority = (m_regs[0x20/4] >> 8) & 0xF; // Render bottom layers bool noBottomSurface = true; static const int bottomOrder[4] = { 3, 2, 1, 0 }; for (int i = 0; i < 4; i++) { int layerNum = bottomOrder[i]; bool is4Bit = (m_regs[0x20/4] & (1 << (12 + layerNum))) != 0; bool enabled = (m_regs[0x60/4 + layerNum] & 0x80000000) != 0; bool selected = (priority & (1 << layerNum)) == 0; if (enabled && selected) { if (noBottomSurface) { if (is4Bit) DrawLayer<4, false>(pixelsBottom, layerNum, m_vram, m_regs, m_palette[layerNum / 2]); else DrawLayer<8, false>(pixelsBottom, layerNum, m_vram, m_regs, m_palette[layerNum / 2]); } else { if (is4Bit) DrawLayer<4, true>(pixelsBottom, layerNum, m_vram, m_regs, m_palette[layerNum / 2]); else DrawLayer<8, true>(pixelsBottom, layerNum, m_vram, m_regs, m_palette[layerNum / 2]); } noBottomSurface = false; } } // Render top layers // NOTE: layer ordering is different according to MAME (which has 3, 2, 0, 1 // for top layer). Until I see evidence that this is correct and not a typo, // I will assume consistent layer ordering. bool noTopSurface = true; static const int topOrder[4] = { 3, 2, 1, 0 }; for (int i = 0; i < 4; i++) { int layerNum = topOrder[i]; bool is4Bit = (m_regs[0x20/4] & (1 << (12 + layerNum))) != 0; bool enabled = (m_regs[0x60/4 + layerNum] & 0x80000000) != 0; bool selected = (priority & (1 << layerNum)) != 0; if (enabled && selected) { if (noTopSurface) { if (is4Bit) DrawLayer<4, false>(pixelsTop, layerNum, m_vram, m_regs, m_palette[layerNum / 2]); else DrawLayer<8, false>(pixelsTop, layerNum, m_vram, m_regs, m_palette[layerNum / 2]); } else { if (is4Bit) DrawLayer<4, true>(pixelsTop, layerNum, m_vram, m_regs, m_palette[layerNum / 2]); else DrawLayer<8, true>(pixelsTop, layerNum, m_vram, m_regs, m_palette[layerNum / 2]); } noTopSurface = false; } } // Indicate whether top and bottom surfaces have to be rendered return std::pair(!noTopSurface, !noBottomSurface); } /****************************************************************************** Frame Display Functions ******************************************************************************/ // Draws a surface to the screen (0 is top and 1 is bottom) void CRender2D::DisplaySurface(int surface) { // Draw the surface glActiveTexture(GL_TEXTURE0); // texture unit 0 glBindTexture(GL_TEXTURE_2D, m_texID[surface]); glBegin(GL_QUADS); glTexCoord2f(0.0f, 0.0f); glVertex2f(0.0f, 0.0f); glTexCoord2f(1.0f, 0.0f); glVertex2f(1.0f, 0.0f); glTexCoord2f(1.0f, 1.0f); glVertex2f(1.0f, 1.0f); glTexCoord2f(0.0f, 1.0f); glVertex2f(0.0f, 1.0f); glEnd(); } // Set up viewport and OpenGL state for 2D rendering (sets up blending function but disables blending) void CRender2D::Setup2D(bool isBottom) { glBlendFunc(GL_SRC_ALPHA, GL_ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA); // alpha of 1.0 is opaque, 0 is transparent glDisable(GL_BLEND); // Disable Z-buffering glDisable(GL_DEPTH_TEST); // Shader program glUseProgram(m_shaderProgram); // Clear everything if requested or just overscan areas for wide screen mode if (isBottom) { glClearColor(0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0); glViewport(0, 0, m_totalXPixels, m_totalYPixels); glDisable(GL_SCISSOR_TEST); // scissor is enabled to fix the 2d/3d miss match problem glClear(GL_COLOR_BUFFER_BIT); // we want to clear outside the scissored areas so must disable it glEnable(GL_SCISSOR_TEST); } // Set up the viewport and orthogonal projection glViewport(m_xOffset - m_correction, m_yOffset + m_correction, m_xPixels, m_yPixels); glMatrixMode(GL_PROJECTION); glLoadIdentity(); glOrtho(0.0, 1.0, 1.0, 0.0, 1.0, -1.0); glMatrixMode(GL_MODELVIEW); glLoadIdentity(); } void CRender2D::BeginFrame(void) { } void CRender2D::PreRenderFrame(void) { // Update all layers m_surfaces_present = DrawTilemaps(m_bottomSurface, m_topSurface); glActiveTexture(GL_TEXTURE0); // texture unit 0 if (m_surfaces_present.first) { glBindTexture(GL_TEXTURE_2D, m_texID[0]); glTexSubImage2D(GL_TEXTURE_2D, 0, 0, 0, 496, 384, GL_RGBA, GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE, m_topSurface); } if (m_surfaces_present.second) { glBindTexture(GL_TEXTURE_2D, m_texID[1]); glTexSubImage2D(GL_TEXTURE_2D, 0, 0, 0, 496, 384, GL_RGBA, GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE, m_bottomSurface); } } void CRender2D::RenderFrameBottom(void) { // Display bottom surface if anything was drawn there, else clear everything Setup2D(true); if (m_surfaces_present.second) DisplaySurface(1); } void CRender2D::RenderFrameTop(void) { // Display top surface only if it exists if (m_surfaces_present.first) { Setup2D(false); glEnable(GL_BLEND); DisplaySurface(0); } } void CRender2D::EndFrame(void) { } /****************************************************************************** Emulation Callbacks ******************************************************************************/ // Deprecated void CRender2D::WriteVRAM(unsigned addr, uint32_t data) { } /****************************************************************************** Configuration, Initialization, and Shutdown ******************************************************************************/ void CRender2D::AttachRegisters(const uint32_t *regPtr) { m_regs = regPtr; DebugLog("Render2D attached registers\n"); } void CRender2D::AttachPalette(const uint32_t *palPtr[2]) { m_palette[0] = palPtr[0]; m_palette[1] = palPtr[1]; DebugLog("Render2D attached palette\n"); } void CRender2D::AttachVRAM(const uint8_t *vramPtr) { m_vram = (uint32_t *) vramPtr; DebugLog("Render2D attached VRAM\n"); } // Memory pool and offsets within it #define MEMORY_POOL_SIZE (2*512*384*4) #define OFFSET_TOP_SURFACE 0 // 512*384*4 bytes #define OFFSET_BOTTOM_SURFACE (512*384*4) // 512*384*4 bool CRender2D::Init(unsigned xOffset, unsigned yOffset, unsigned xRes, unsigned yRes, unsigned totalXRes, unsigned totalYRes) { // Load shaders if (OKAY != LoadShaderProgram(&m_shaderProgram, &m_vertexShader, &m_fragmentShader, m_config["VertexShader2D"].ValueAs(), m_config["FragmentShader2D"].ValueAs(), s_vertexShaderSource, s_fragmentShaderSource)) return FAIL; // Get locations of the uniforms glUseProgram(m_shaderProgram); // bind program m_textureMapLoc = glGetUniformLocation(m_shaderProgram, "textureMap"); glUniform1i(m_textureMapLoc, 0); // attach it to texture unit 0 // Allocate memory for layer surfaces m_memoryPool = new(std::nothrow) uint8_t[MEMORY_POOL_SIZE]; if (NULL == m_memoryPool) return ErrorLog("Insufficient memory for tilemap surfaces (need %1.1f MB).", float(MEMORY_POOL_SIZE) / 0x100000); memset(m_memoryPool, 0, MEMORY_POOL_SIZE); // clear textures // Set up pointers to memory regions m_topSurface = (uint32_t *) &m_memoryPool[OFFSET_TOP_SURFACE]; m_bottomSurface = (uint32_t *) &m_memoryPool[OFFSET_BOTTOM_SURFACE]; // Resolution m_xPixels = xRes; m_yPixels = yRes; m_xOffset = xOffset; m_yOffset = yOffset; m_totalXPixels = totalXRes; m_totalYPixels = totalYRes; m_correction = (UINT32)(((yRes / 384.f) * 2) + 0.5f); // for some reason the 2d layer is 2 pixels off the 3D // Create textures glActiveTexture(GL_TEXTURE0); // texture unit 0 glGenTextures(2, m_texID); for (int i = 0; i < 2; i++) { glBindTexture(GL_TEXTURE_2D, m_texID[i]); glTexParameteri(GL_TEXTURE_2D, GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_S, GL_CLAMP_TO_EDGE); glTexParameteri(GL_TEXTURE_2D, GL_TEXTURE_WRAP_T, GL_CLAMP_TO_EDGE); glTexParameteri(GL_TEXTURE_2D, GL_TEXTURE_MAG_FILTER, GL_LINEAR); glTexParameteri(GL_TEXTURE_2D, GL_TEXTURE_MIN_FILTER, GL_LINEAR); glTexImage2D(GL_TEXTURE_2D, 0, GL_RGBA8, 496, 384, 0, GL_RGBA, GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE, NULL); } DebugLog("Render2D initialized (allocated %1.1f MB)\n", float(MEMORY_POOL_SIZE) / 0x100000); return OKAY; } CRender2D::CRender2D(const Util::Config::Node &config) : m_config(config) { DebugLog("Built Render2D\n"); } CRender2D::~CRender2D(void) { DestroyShaderProgram(m_shaderProgram, m_vertexShader, m_fragmentShader); glDeleteTextures(2, m_texID); if (m_memoryPool) { delete [] m_memoryPool; m_memoryPool = 0; } m_vram = 0; m_topSurface = 0; m_bottomSurface = 0; DebugLog("Destroyed Render2D\n"); }