cfbda24da7
* adds a new crate: ```bevy_registry_export``` to be able to create a json import of the registered component/type definitions * adds a new Blender addon: ```bevy_components``` that takes that json data to generate custom UIs for components , to be to add & edit components easily in Blender * also adds component metadata per object for more advanced features * etc * updates to bevy_gltf_components & bevy_gltf_blueprints to add legacy_mode to support the "old"/current style component definitions * same with gltf_auto_export Blender add_on * closes #60 |
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.. | ||
src | ||
Cargo.toml | ||
LICENSE.md | ||
LICENSE_APACHE.md | ||
LICENSE_MIT.md | ||
README.md |
README.md
bevy_gltf_save_load
Built upon bevy_gltf_blueprints this crate adds the ability to easilly save and load your game worlds for Bevy .
- leverages blueprints & seperation between
- dynamic entities : entities that can change during the lifetime of your app/game
- static entities : entities that do NOT change (typically, a part of your levels/ environements)
- and allows allow for :
- a simple save/load workflow thanks to the above
- ability to specify which entities to save or to exclude
- ability to specify which components to save or to exclude
- ability to specify which resources to save or to exclude
- small(er) save files (only a portion of the entities is saved)
Particularly useful when using Blender as an editor for the Bevy game engine, combined with the Blender plugin that does a lot of the work for you (including spliting generating seperate gltf files for your static vs dynamic assets)
A bit of heads up:
- very opinionated !
- still in the early stages & not 100% feature complete
- fun fact: as the static level structure is stored seperatly, you can change your level layout & still reload an existing save file
Usage
Here's a minimal usage example:
# Cargo.toml
[dependencies]
bevy="0.12"
bevy_gltf_save_load = "0.1"
bevy_gltf_blueprints = "0.6" // also needed
use bevy::prelude::*;
use bevy_gltf_save_load::*;
fn main() {
App::new()
.add_plugins((
DefaultPlugins,
SaveLoadPlugin::default()
))
.run();
}
// add a system to trigger saving
pub fn request_save(
mut save_requests: EventWriter<SaveRequest>,
keycode: Res<Input<KeyCode>>,
)
{
if keycode.just_pressed(KeyCode::S) {
save_requests.send(SaveRequest {
path: "save.scn.ron".into(),
})
}
}
// add a system to trigger loading
pub fn request_load(
mut load_requests: EventWriter<LoadRequest>,
keycode: Res<Input<KeyCode>>,
)
{
if keycode.just_pressed(KeyCode::L) {
save_requests.send(LoadRequest {
path: "save.scn.ron".into(),
})
}
}
// setting up your world
// on initial setup, the static entities & the dynamic entities are kept seperate for clarity & loaded as blueprints from 2 seperate files
pub fn setup_game(
mut commands: Commands,
mut next_game_state: ResMut<NextState<GameState>>,
) {
info!("setting up game world");
// here we actually spawn our game world/level
let world_root = commands
.spawn((
Name::from("world"),
GameWorldTag,
InAppRunning,
TransformBundle::default(),
InheritedVisibility::default(),
))
.id();
// and we fill it with static entities
let static_data = commands
.spawn((
Name::from("static"),
BluePrintBundle {
blueprint: BlueprintName("World".to_string()),
..Default::default()
},
StaticEntitiesRoot,
Library("models".into())
))
.id();
// and we fill it with dynamic entities
let dynamic_data = commands
.spawn((
Name::from("dynamic"),
BluePrintBundle {
blueprint: BlueprintName("World_dynamic".to_string()),
..Default::default()
},
DynamicEntitiesRoot,
NoInBlueprint,
Library("models".into())
))
.id();
commands.entity(world_root).add_child(static_data);
commands.entity(world_root).add_child(dynamic_data);
next_game_state.set(GameState::InGame)
}
take a look at the example for more clarity
Installation
Add the following to your [dependencies]
section in Cargo.toml
:
bevy_gltf_save_load = "0.1"
bevy_gltf_blueprints = "0.6" // also needed, as bevy_gltf_save_load does not re-export it at this time
Or use cargo add
:
cargo add bevy_gltf_save_load
Setup
use bevy::prelude::*;
use bevy_gltf_save_load::*;
fn main() {
App::new()
.add_plugins((
DefaultPlugins
SaveLoadPlugin::default()
))
.run();
}
you likely need to configure your settings (otherwise, not much will be saved)
use bevy::prelude::*;
use bevy_gltf_save_load::*;
fn main() {
App::new()
.add_plugins((
DefaultPlugins,
SaveLoadPlugin {
save_path: "scenes".into(), // where do we save files to (under assets for now) defaults to "scenes"
component_filter: SceneFilter::Allowlist(HashSet::from([ // this is using Bevy's build in SceneFilter, you can compose what components you want to allow/deny
TypeId::of::<Name>(),
TypeId::of::<Transform>(),
TypeId::of::<Velocity>(),
// and any other commponent you want to include/exclude
])),
resource_filter: SceneFilter::deny_all(), // same logic as above, but for resources : also be careful & remember to register your resources !
..Default::default()
},
// you need to configure the blueprints plugin as well (might be pre_configured in the future, but for now you need to do it manually)
BlueprintsPlugin {
library_folder: "models/library".into(),
format: GltfFormat::GLB,
aabbs: true,
..Default::default()
},
))
.run();
}
How to make sure your entites will be saved
- only entites that have a Dynamic component will be saved ! (the component is provided as part of the crate)
- you can either add that component at runtime or have it baked-in in the Blueprint
Component Filter:
-
by default only the following components are going to be saved
- Parent
- Children
- BlueprintName : part of bevy_gltf_blueprints, used under the hood
- SpawnHere :part of bevy_gltf_blueprints, used under the hood
- Dynamic : included in this crate, allows you to tag components as dynamic aka saveable ! Use this to make sure your entities are saved !
-
you CANNOT remove these as they are part of the boilerplate
-
you CAN add however many other components you want, allow them all etc as you see fit
-
you can find more information about the SceneFilter object here and here
Events
- to trigger saving use the
SaveRequest
event
// add a system to trigger saving
pub fn request_save(
mut save_requests: EventWriter<SaveRequest>,
keycode: Res<Input<KeyCode>>,
)
{
if keycode.just_pressed(KeyCode::S) {
save_requests.send(SaveRequest {
path: "save.scn.ron".into(),
})
}
}
- to trigger loading use the
LoadRequest
event
// add a system to trigger saving
pub fn request_load(
mut load_requests: EventWriter<LoadRequest>,
keycode: Res<Input<KeyCode>>,
)
{
if keycode.just_pressed(KeyCode::L) {
save_requests.send(LoadRequest {
path: "save.scn.ron".into(),
})
}
}
- you also notified when saving / loading is done
SavingFinished
for savingLoadingFinished
for loading
Note: I highly recomend you change states when you start/finish saving & loading, otherwise things will get unpredictable Please see the example for this.
Additional notes
- the name + path of the static level blueprint/gltf file will be saved as part of the save file, and reused to dynamically load the correct static assets, which is necessary when you have multiple levels, and thus all required information to reload a save is contained within the save
SystemSet
For convenience bevy_gltf_save_load
provides two SystemSets
Examples
Highly advised to get a better understanding of how things work ! To get started I recomend looking at
- world setup
- various events & co
All examples are here:
Compatible Bevy versions
The main branch is compatible with the latest Bevy release, while the branch bevy_main
tries to track the main
branch of Bevy (PRs updating the tracked commit are welcome).
Compatibility of bevy_gltf_save_load
versions:
bevy_gltf_save_load |
bevy |
---|---|
0.1 |
0.12 |
branch main |
0.12 |
branch bevy_main |
main |
License
This crate, all its code, contents & assets is Dual-licensed under either of
- Apache License, Version 2.0, (LICENSE-APACHE or https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
- MIT license (LICENSE-MIT or https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)