vk-bootstrap/README.md
2023-10-30 11:43:57 -06:00

6.4 KiB

vk-bootstrap

A utility library that jump starts initialization of Vulkan

This library simplifies the tedious process of:

  • Instance creation
  • Physical Device selection
  • Device creation
  • Getting queues
  • Swapchain creation

It also adds several conveniences for:

  • Enabling validation layers
  • Adding a debug callback messenger
  • Enabling extensions on a physical device
  • Select a gpu based on a set of criteria like features, extensions, memory, etc

Read the Getting Started guide for a quick start on using vk-bootstrap

Basic Usage


#include "VkBootstrap.h"

bool init_vulkan () {
    vkb::InstanceBuilder builder;
    auto inst_ret = builder.set_app_name ("Example Vulkan Application")
                        .request_validation_layers ()
                        .use_default_debug_messenger ()
                        .build ();
    if (!inst_ret) {
        std::cerr << "Failed to create Vulkan instance. Error: " << inst_ret.error().message() << "\n";
        return false;
    }
    vkb::Instance vkb_inst = inst_ret.value ();

    vkb::PhysicalDeviceSelector selector{ vkb_inst };
    auto phys_ret = selector.set_surface (/* from user created window*/)
                        .set_minimum_version (1, 1) // require a vulkan 1.1 capable device
                        .require_dedicated_transfer_queue ()
                        .select ();
    if (!phys_ret) {
        std::cerr << "Failed to select Vulkan Physical Device. Error: " << phys_ret.error().message() << "\n";
        return false;
    }

    vkb::DeviceBuilder device_builder{ phys_ret.value () };
    // automatically propagate needed data from instance & physical device
    auto dev_ret = device_builder.build ();
    if (!dev_ret) {
        std::cerr << "Failed to create Vulkan device. Error: " << dev_ret.error().message() << "\n";
        return false;
    }
    vkb::Device vkb_device = dev_ret.value ();

    // Get the VkDevice handle used in the rest of a vulkan application
    VkDevice device = vkb_device.device;

    // Get the graphics queue with a helper function
    auto graphics_queue_ret = vkb_device.get_queue (vkb::QueueType::graphics);
    if (!graphics_queue_ret) {
        std::cerr << "Failed to get graphics queue. Error: " << graphics_queue_ret.error().message() << "\n";
        return false;
    }
    VkQueue graphics_queue = graphics_queue_ret.value ();

    // Turned 400-500 lines of boilerplate into less than fifty.
    return true;
}

See example/triangle.cpp for an example that renders a triangle to the screen.

Setting up vk-bootstrap

This library has no external dependencies beyond C++17, its standard library, and at least the 1.1 version of the Vulkan Headers.

Note: on Unix platforms, vk-bootstrap will require the dynamic linker in order to compile as the library doesn't link against vulkan-1.dll/libvulkan.so directly.

Copy-Paste

Copy the src/VkBootstrap.h, src/VkBootstrapDispatch.h, and src/VkBootstrap.cpp files into your project, include them into your build, then compile as you normally would.

vk-bootstrap is not a header only library, so no need to worry about macros in the header.

Linux specific

vk-bootstrap will load the required symbols at runtime, which requires that the application is linked to the system dynamic link. How the dynamic linker is linked into the project depends on the build system in question. If CMake is being used, link vk-bootstrap with ${CMAKE_DL_LIBS}.

git-submodule + CMake

Add this project as a git-submodule into the root directory. Suggested is using a subdirectory to hold all submodules.

git submodule add https://github.com/charles-lunarg/vk-bootstrap

With CMake, add the subdirectory to include the project

add_subdirectory(vk-bootstrap)

Then use target_link_libraries to use the library in whichever target needs it.

target_link_libraries(your_application_name vk-bootstrap::vk-bootstrap)

CMake Fetch Content

If cmake 3.12 is available, use the FetchContent capability of cmake to directly download and build the library for you.

include(FetchContent)
FetchContent_Declare(
    fetch_vk_bootstrap
    GIT_REPOSITORY https://github.com/charles-lunarg/vk-bootstrap
    GIT_TAG        BRANCH_OR_TAG #suggest using a tag so the library doesn't update whenever new commits are pushed to a branch
)
FetchContent_MakeAvailable(fetch_vk_bootstrap)
target_link_libraries(your_application_name vk-bootstrap::vk-bootstrap)

Manually Building

git clone https://github.com/charles-lunarg/vk-bootstrap
cd vk-bootstrap
mkdir build
cd build
cmake ..

Vulkan-Headers dependency

By default, when using vk-bootstrap through CMake, it will attempt to locate the Vulkan-Headers on the system and fall back to downloading them directly if they aren't present. If the VK_BOOTSTRAP_VULKAN_HEADER_DIR option is specified, it will use that directory instead.

Testing

Tests will be enabled if you open this project standalone. If you include this project as a subdirectory or sub-project, you can force enable tests by setting the option VK_BOOTSTRAP_TEST to ON. Testing requires GLFW and Catch2 but are acquired automatically using cmake fetch content.

cmake ../path/to/your_project/ -DVK_BOOTSTRAP_TEST=ON

Build Options

Name Type Default Value Description
VK_BOOTSTRAP_WERROR bool OFF Enable warnings as errors during compilation.
VK_BOOTSTRAP_TEST bool OFF Enable building of the tests in this project. Will download GLFW and Catch2 automatically if enabled.
VK_BOOTSTRAP_VULKAN_HEADER_DIR string "" Optional. Specify the directory that contains the Vulkan Headers. Useful if you are downloading the headers manually and don't want vk-bootstrap to download them itself.