ash | ||
examples | ||
generator | ||
.gitignore | ||
.gitmodules | ||
.travis.yml | ||
appveyor.yml | ||
bors.toml | ||
Cargo.toml | ||
Changelog.md | ||
imdone-help.md | ||
LICENSE-APACHE | ||
LICENSE-MIT | ||
README.md | ||
rustfmt.toml |
Ash
A very lightweight wrapper around Vulkan
Overview
- A true Vulkan API without compromises
- Convenience features without limiting functionality
- Additional type safety
- Device local function pointer loading
- No validation, everything is unsafe
- Generated from
vk.xml
- Support for Vulkan 1.1
Features
Explicit returns with Result
// function signature
pub fn create_instance(&self,
create_info: &vk::InstanceCreateInfo,
allocation_callbacks: Option<&vk::AllocationCallbacks>)
-> Result<Instance, InstanceError> { .. }
let instance = entry.create_instance(&create_info, None)
.expect("Instance creation error");
Vec<T>
instead of mutable slices
pub fn get_swapchain_images(&self,
swapchain: vk::SwapchainKHR)
-> VkResult<Vec<vk::Image>>;
let present_images = swapchain_loader.get_swapchain_images_khr(swapchain).unwrap();
Note: Functions don't return Vec<T>
if this would limit the functionality. See p_next
.
Slices
pub fn cmd_pipeline_barrier(&self,
command_buffer: vk::CommandBuffer,
src_stage_mask: vk::PipelineStageFlags,
dst_stage_mask: vk::PipelineStageFlags,
dependency_flags: vk::DependencyFlags,
memory_barriers: &[vk::MemoryBarrier],
buffer_memory_barriers: &[vk::BufferMemoryBarrier],
image_memory_barriers: &[vk::ImageMemoryBarrier]);
Strongly typed handles
Each Vulkan handle type is exposed as a newtyped struct for improved type safety. Null handles can be constructed with
T::null()
, and handles may be freely converted to and from u64
with Handle::from_raw
and Handle::as_raw
for
interop with non-Ash Vulkan code.
Default implementation for all types
// No need to manually set the structure type
let desc_alloc_info = vk::DescriptorSetAllocateInfo {
descriptor_pool: self.pool,
descriptor_set_count: self.layouts.len() as u32,
p_set_layouts: self.layouts.as_ptr(),
..Default::default()
};
Builder pattern
let pipeline_vertex_input_state_create_info = vk::PipelineVertexInputStateCreateInfo::builder()
.vertex_binding_descriptions(&Vertex::binding_descriptions())
.vertex_attribute_descriptions(&Vertex::attribute_descriptions()).build();
Builders implement Deref
targeting their corresponding Vulkan struct, so references to builders can be passed directly
to Vulkan functions. This is encouraged as doing so allows Rust to check the lifetimes of captured objects are valid,
whereas calling build
discards lifetime information, making inadvertent use-after-free errors more likely.
Flags and constants as associated constants
// Bitflag
vk::AccessFlags::COLOR_ATTACHMENT_READ | vk::AccessFlags::COLOR_ATTACHMENT_WRITE
// Constant
vk::PipelineBindPoint::GRAPHICS,
Debug/Display for Flags
let flag = vk::AccessFlags::COLOR_ATTACHMENT_READ
| vk::AccessFlags::COLOR_ATTACHMENT_WRITE;
println!("Debug: {:?}", flag);
println!("Display: {}", flag);
// Prints:
// Debug: AccessFlags(110000000)
// Display: COLOR_ATTACHMENT_READ | COLOR_ATTACHMENT_WRITE
Function pointer loading
Ash also takes care of loading the function pointers. Function pointers are split into 3 categories.
- Entry: Loads the Vulkan library. Needs to outlive
Instance
andDevice
. - Instance: Loads instance level functions. Needs to outlive the
Device
s it has created. - Device: Loads device local functions.
The loader is just one possible implementation:
- Device level functions are retrieved on a per device basis.
- Everything is loaded by default, functions that failed to load are initialized to a function that always panics.
- Do not call Vulkan 1.1 functions if you have created a 1.0 instance. Doing so will result in a panic.
Custom loaders can be implemented.
Extension loading
Additionally, every Vulkan extension has to be loaded explicitly. You can find all extensions under ash::extensions.
use ash::extensions::khr::Swapchain;
let swapchain_loader = Swapchain::new(&instance, &device);
let swapchain = swapchain_loader.create_swapchain(&swapchain_create_info).unwrap();
Raw function pointers
Raw function pointers are available, if something hasn't been exposed yet in the higher level API. Please open an issue if anything is missing.
device.fp_v1_0().destroy_device(...);
Support for extension names
use ash::extensions::{Swapchain, XlibSurface, Surface, DebugReport};
#[cfg(all(unix, not(target_os = "android")))]
fn extension_names() -> Vec<*const i8> {
vec![
Surface::name().as_ptr(),
XlibSurface::name().as_ptr(),
DebugReport::name().as_ptr()
]
}
Implicit handles
Handles from Instance or Device are passed implicitly.
pub fn create_command_pool(&self,
create_info: &vk::CommandPoolCreateInfo)
-> VkResult<vk::CommandPool>;
let pool = device.create_command_pool(&pool_create_info).unwrap();
Example
You can find the examples here.
All examples currently require: the LunarG Validation layers and a Vulkan library that is visible in your PATH
. An easy way to get started is to use the LunarG Vulkan SDK
Windows
Make sure that you have a Vulkan ready driver and install the LunarG Vulkan SDK.
Linux
Make sure that you have a Vulkan ready driver and install the LunarG Vulkan SDK. You also have to add the library and layers to your path. Have a look at my post if you are unsure how to do that.
Triangle
Displays a triangle with vertex colors.
cd examples
cargo run --bin triangle
macOS
Install the LunarG Vulkan SDK. This basically entails extracting the downloaded tarball to any location you choose and then setting a few environment variables. Specifically, if SDK_PATH
is set to the root extracted SDK directory,
DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH = $SDK_PATH/macOS/lib
VK_ICD_FILENAMES = $SDK_PATH/macOS/etc/vulkan/icd.d/MoltenVK_icd.json
VK_LAYER_PATH = $SDK_PATH/macOS/etc/vulkan/explicit_layer.d
Texture
Displays a texture on a quad.
cd examples
cargo run --bin texture