Instructions for building this repository on Linux, Windows, and Android
If you intend to contribute, the preferred work flow is for you to develop your contribution in a fork of this repository in your GitHub account and then submit a pull request. Please see the CONTRIBUTING.md file in this repository for more details.
This repository contains the source code necessary to build the LunarG Vulkan Samples
- The Vulkan Samples repo is a set of source and data files in a specific
directory hierarchy:
- API-Samples - Samples that demonstrate the use of various aspects of the Vulkan API
- Vulkan Tutorial - Steps you through the process of creating a simple Vulkan application, learning the basics along the way. This Vulkan Tutorial link allows you to view the Vulkan Tutorial on LunarXchange as well.
- Sample-Programs - Samples that are more functional and go deeper than simple API use.
This repository does not contain a Vulkan-capable driver. You will need to obtain and install a Vulkan driver from your graphics hardware vendor or from some other suitable source if you intend to run Vulkan applications.
To create your local git repository:
git clone https://github.com/LunarG/VulkanSamples.git
This repository attempts to resolve some of its dependencies by using components found from the following places, in this order:
- CMake or Environment variable overrides (e.g., -DVULKAN_HEADERS_INSTALL_DIR)
- LunarG Vulkan SDK, located by the
VULKAN_SDK
environment variable - System-installed packages, mostly applicable on Linux
Dependencies that cannot be resolved by the SDK or installed packages must be resolved with the "install directory" override and are listed below. The "install directory" override can also be used to force the use of a specific version of that dependency.
This repository has a required dependency on the
Vulkan Headers repository.
You must clone the headers repository and build its install
target before
building this repository. The Vulkan-Headers repository is required because it
contains the Vulkan API definition files (registry) that are required to build
the samples. You must also take note of the headers' install
directory and pass it on the CMake command line for building this repository,
as described below.
The samples use glslangValidator to compile glsl shaders and spirv-as to assemble spirv assembly code. CMake is set up to fetch these executables if they are not found in your PATH.
The samples depend on the Vulkan loader when they execute and so a loader is needed only if the tests are built and run.
A loader can be used from an installed LunarG SDK, an installed Linux package, or from a driver installation on Windows.
If a loader is not available from any of these methods and/or it is important to use a loader built from a repository, then you must build the Vulkan-Loader repository with its install target. Take note of its install directory location and pass it on the CMake command line for building this repository, as described below.
There is a Python utility script, scripts/update_deps.py
, that you can use to
gather and build the dependent repositories mentioned above. This script uses
information stored in the scripts/known_good.json
file to check out dependent
repository revisions that are known to be compatible with the revision of this
repository that you currently have checked out. As such, this script is useful
as a quick-start tool for common use cases and default configurations.
For all platforms, start with:
git clone https://github.com/LunarG/VulkanSamples.git
cd VulkanSamples
mkdir build
cd build
For 64-bit Linux, continue with:
../scripts/update_deps.py
cmake -C helper.cmake ..
cmake --build .
For 64-bit Windows, continue with:
..\scripts\update_deps.py --arch x64
cmake -A x64 -C helper.cmake ..
cmake --build .
For 32-bit Windows, continue with:
..\scripts\update_deps.py --arch Win32
cmake -A Win32 -C helper.cmake ..
cmake --build .
Please see the more detailed build information later in this file if you have specific requirements for configuring and building these components.
- You may need to adjust some of the CMake options based on your platform. See the platform-specific sections later in this document.
- The
update_deps.py
script fetches and builds the dependent repositories in the current directory when it is invoked. In this case, they are built in thebuild
directory. - The
build
directory is also being used to build this (VulkanSamples) repository. But there shouldn't be any conflicts inside thebuild
directory between the dependent repositories and the build files for this repository. - The
--dir
option forupdate_deps.py
can be used to relocate the dependent repositories to another arbitrary directory using an absolute or relative path. - The
update_deps.py
script generates a file namedhelper.cmake
and places it in the same directory as the dependent repositories (build
in this case). This file contains CMake commands to set the CMake*_INSTALL_DIR
variables that are used to point to the install artifacts of the dependent repositories. You can use this file with thecmake -C
option to set these variables when you generate your build files with CMake. This lets you avoid entering several*_INSTALL_DIR
variable settings on the CMake command line. - If using "MINGW" (Git For Windows), you may wish to run
winpty update_deps.py
in order to avoid buffering all of the script's "print" output until the end and to retain the ability to interrupt script execution. - Please use
update_deps.py --help
to list additional options and read the internal documentation inupdate_deps.py
for further information.
When generating native platform build files through CMake, several options can be specified to customize the build. Some of the options are binary on/off options, while others take a string as input. The following is a table of all on/off options currently supported by this repository:
Option | Platform | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
BUILD_API_SAMPLES | All | ON |
Controls whether or not the basic api samples are built. |
These variables should be set using the -D
option when invoking CMake to
generate the native platform files.
- Windows
- Any Personal Computer version supported by Microsoft
- Microsoft Visual Studio
- CMake 3.10.2 is recommended.
- Use the installer option to add CMake to the system PATH
- Git Client Support
- Git for Windows is a popular solution for Windows
- Some IDEs (e.g., Visual Studio, GitHub Desktop) have integrated Git client support
The general approach is to run CMake to generate the Visual Studio project
files. Then either run CMake with the --build
option to build from the
command line or use the Visual Studio IDE to open the generated solution and
work with the solution interactively.
Change your current directory to the top of the cloned repository directory, create a build directory and generate the Visual Studio project files:
cd VulkanSamples
mkdir build
cd build
cmake -A x64 -DVULKAN_HEADERS_INSTALL_DIR=absolute_path_to_install_dir \
-DVULKAN_LOADER_INSTALL_DIR=absolute_path_to_install_dir \
-DGLSLANG_INSTALL_DIR=absolute_path_to_install_dir ..
Note: The
..
parameter tellscmake
the location of the top of the repository. If you place your build directory someplace else, you'll need to specify the location of the repository top differently.
The -A
option is used to select either the "Win32" or "x64" architecture.
If a generator for a specific version of Visual Studio is required, you can specify it for Visual Studio 2015, for example, with:
64-bit: -G "Visual Studio 14 2015 Win64"
32-bit: -G "Visual Studio 14 2015"
When generating the project files, the absolute path to a Vulkan-Headers
install directory must be provided. This can be done by setting the
VULKAN_HEADERS_INSTALL_DIR
environment variable or by setting the
VULKAN_HEADERS_INSTALL_DIR
CMake variable with the -D
CMake option. In
either case, the variable should point to the installation directory of a
Vulkan-Headers repository built with the install target.
When generating the project files, the absolute path to a Vulkan-Loader
install directory must be provided. This can be done by setting the
VULKAN_LOADER_INSTALL_DIR
environment variable or by setting the
VULKAN_LOADER_INSTALL_DIR
CMake variable with the -D
CMake option. In
either case, the variable should point to the installation directory of a
Vulkan-Loader repository built with the install target.
Note that if you don't want to use specific revisions of HEADERS, LOADER, and GLSLANG, the update_deps.py script mentioned above will handle all of the dependencies for you.
The above steps create a Windows solution file named
VulkanSamples.sln
in the build directory.
At this point, you can build the solution from the command line or open the generated solution with Visual Studio.
While still in the build directory:
cmake --build .
to build the Debug configuration (the default), or:
cmake --build . --config Release
to make a Release build.
Launch Visual Studio and open the "VulkanSamples.sln" solution file in the build folder. You may select "Debug" or "Release" from the Solution Configurations drop-down list. Start a build by selecting the Build->Build Solution menu item.
CMake 3.10.2 is recommended.
This repository has been built and tested on the two most recent Ubuntu LTS versions. Currently, the oldest supported version is Ubuntu 16.04, meaning that the minimum officially supported C++11 compiler version is GCC 5.4.0, although earlier versions may work. It should be straightforward to adapt this repository to other Linux distributions.
sudo apt-get install git build-essential libx11-xcb-dev \
libxkbcommon-dev libwayland-dev libxrandr-dev
CMake 3.10.2 is recommended.
The general approach is to run CMake to generate make files. Then either run
CMake with the --build
option or make
to build from the command line.
Change your current directory to the top of the cloned repository directory, create a build directory and generate the make files.
cd Vulkan-Samples
mkdir build
cd build
cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug \
-DVULKAN_HEADERS_INSTALL_DIR=absolute_path_to_install_dir \
-DVULKAN_LOADER_INSTALL_DIR=absolute_path_to_install_dir \
-DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=install ..
Note: The
..
parameter tellscmake
the location of the top of the repository. If you place yourbuild
directory someplace else, you'll need to specify the location of the repository top differently.
Use -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE
to specify a Debug or Release build.
When generating the project files, the absolute path to a Vulkan-Headers
install directory must be provided. This can be done by setting the
VULKAN_HEADERS_INSTALL_DIR
environment variable or by setting the
VULKAN_HEADERS_INSTALL_DIR
CMake variable with the -D
CMake option. In
either case, the variable should point to the installation directory of a
Vulkan-Headers repository built with the install target.
When generating the project files, the absolute path to a Vulkan-Loader
install directory must be provided. This can be done by setting the
VULKAN_LOADER_INSTALL_DIR
environment variable or by setting the
VULKAN_LOADER_INSTALL_DIR
CMake variable with the -D
CMake option. In
either case, the variable should point to the installation directory of a
Vulkan-Headers repository built with the install target.
Note that if you don't want to use specific revisions of HEADERS or LOADER, the update_deps.py script mentioned above will handle all of the dependencies for you.
You can just run make
to begin the build.
To speed up the build on a multi-core machine, use the -j
option for make
to specify the number of cores to use for the build. For example:
make -j4
You can also use
cmake --build .
If your build system supports ccache, you can enable that via CMake option -DUSE_CCACHE=On
By default, the repository components are built with support for the
Vulkan-defined WSI display servers: Xcb, Xlib, and Wayland. It is recommended
to build the repository components with support for these display servers to
maximize their usability across Linux platforms. If it is necessary to build
these modules without support for one of the display servers, the appropriate
CMake option of the form BUILD_WSI_xxx_SUPPORT
can be set to OFF
.
Install the required tools for Linux/Mac OS/Windows covered above, plus the following instructions
- Generate Android Studio Projects
$ cd YOUR_DEV_DIRECTORY/VulkanSamples/API-Samples
$ cmake -DANDROID=ON -DABI_NAME=<armeabi-v7a|arm64-v8a|...>
- Precompile Shaders
$ cd android
$ python3 ./compile_shaders.py
- Import VulkanSamples/API-Samples/android/build.gradle into Android Studio 3.6.0+.
- If building from a terminal, do:
$ ./gradlew build