Adds a BeforeInstall step to the InnoSetup installer which uses the msvc-redist-helper tool to automatically check for the necessary DLLs and install the required redistributable if some are found to be missing.
Additionally slightly modernized the installer with a design that isn't from the 90s, and paves the way for preventing updating StreamFX while OBS Studio is still running.
* "Quality" Minimum/Maximum is actually QP Minimum/Maximum
* Bitrate Limits is now just Limits
* Buffer Size and Quality Target have been moved into "Limits".
Proxies allow for older configurations to work fine on newer versions, without having to manually adjust the scene collection to match the new ids at all. Thanks to the migration system we can freely support any number of old versions, as long as we write migration code.
Occasionally, mostly due to other sources rebuilding their UI, an out-of-order lock freeze can be observed with Source Mirror. This is unwanted, so we need to move the freezing logic into a place where freezing shouldn't happen.
Fixes#228
Actually fixes#61
This allows building the plugin with compilers that pretend to be clang but aren't actually clang, like Googles 'Depot Tools' and some Clang-like compiler tools.
Moves the menu for StreamFX to the primary menu, so that it is not hidden under tools. This makes it clearer to the user if their installation of StreamFX is working correctly, in addition to reducing the steps necessary to use the menu.
Also the 'About StreamFX' dialog now actually shows up for every update, as expected.
Adds support for enumerations, a different way of selecting how something should behave in a shader. Enumerations rely on a continuous list of values, and will automatically detect how many values there are in the enumeration. Only non-vector types are supported as enumeration entries, and array/vector parameters can have each member set to a different enumeration value.
Furthermore suffixes now are properly assigned, and 'bool' no longer causes shaders to stop rendering. Additionally by inlining some functions and using std::string_view we can achieve a slightly better performance than before.
Using std::string_view over std::string (and const std::string&) has the advantage that we skip potential temporary std::string objects that are immediately thrown away, thus slowing down the code. It can also be implicitly cast to std::string, which makes it compatible with existing code that uses std::string.