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4c515a81cb
* Make each example its own workspace member * Fix runtime-shader example * Fix shader-include example * Fix teapot example * Fix `run_all.sh` * Fix output files getting saved in cwd * Fix spelling for examples readme filename * Remove wrong leftover dependencies for gl-interop * Fix pipeline-cache example * Clearer .gitignore * Help cargo be less useless
709 lines
34 KiB
Rust
709 lines
34 KiB
Rust
// Copyright (c) 2016 The vulkano developers
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// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0
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// <LICENSE-APACHE or
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// https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0> or the MIT
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// license <LICENSE-MIT or https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT>,
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// at your option. All files in the project carrying such
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// notice may not be copied, modified, or distributed except
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// according to those terms.
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// Welcome to the triangle example!
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//
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// This is the only example that is entirely detailed. All the other examples avoid code
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// duplication by using helper functions.
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//
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// This example assumes that you are already more or less familiar with graphics programming and
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// that you want to learn Vulkan. This means that for example it won't go into details about what a
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// vertex or a shader is.
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//
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// This version of the triangle example is written using dynamic rendering instead of render pass
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// and framebuffer objects. If your device does not support Vulkan 1.3 or the
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// `khr_dynamic_rendering` extension, or if you want to see how to support older versions, see the
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// original triangle example.
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use std::sync::Arc;
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use vulkano::{
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buffer::{Buffer, BufferContents, BufferCreateInfo, BufferUsage},
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command_buffer::{
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allocator::StandardCommandBufferAllocator, AutoCommandBufferBuilder, CommandBufferUsage,
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RenderingAttachmentInfo, RenderingInfo,
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},
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device::{
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physical::PhysicalDeviceType, Device, DeviceCreateInfo, DeviceExtensions, Features,
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QueueCreateInfo, QueueFlags,
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},
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image::{view::ImageView, Image, ImageUsage},
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instance::{Instance, InstanceCreateFlags, InstanceCreateInfo},
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memory::allocator::{AllocationCreateInfo, MemoryTypeFilter, StandardMemoryAllocator},
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pipeline::{
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graphics::{
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color_blend::{ColorBlendAttachmentState, ColorBlendState},
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input_assembly::InputAssemblyState,
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multisample::MultisampleState,
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rasterization::RasterizationState,
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subpass::PipelineRenderingCreateInfo,
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vertex_input::{Vertex, VertexDefinition},
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viewport::{Viewport, ViewportState},
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GraphicsPipelineCreateInfo,
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},
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layout::PipelineDescriptorSetLayoutCreateInfo,
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DynamicState, GraphicsPipeline, PipelineLayout, PipelineShaderStageCreateInfo,
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},
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render_pass::{AttachmentLoadOp, AttachmentStoreOp},
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swapchain::{
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acquire_next_image, Surface, Swapchain, SwapchainCreateInfo, SwapchainPresentInfo,
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},
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sync::{self, GpuFuture},
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Validated, Version, VulkanError, VulkanLibrary,
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};
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use winit::{
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event::{Event, WindowEvent},
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event_loop::{ControlFlow, EventLoop},
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window::WindowBuilder,
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};
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fn main() {
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let event_loop = EventLoop::new();
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let library = VulkanLibrary::new().unwrap();
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// The first step of any Vulkan program is to create an instance.
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//
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// When we create an instance, we have to pass a list of extensions that we want to enable.
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//
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// All the window-drawing functionalities are part of non-core extensions that we need to
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// enable manually. To do so, we ask `Surface` for the list of extensions required to draw to
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// a window.
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let required_extensions = Surface::required_extensions(&event_loop);
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// Now creating the instance.
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let instance = Instance::new(
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library,
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InstanceCreateInfo {
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// Enable enumerating devices that use non-conformant Vulkan implementations.
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// (e.g. MoltenVK)
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flags: InstanceCreateFlags::ENUMERATE_PORTABILITY,
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enabled_extensions: required_extensions,
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..Default::default()
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},
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)
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.unwrap();
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// The objective of this example is to draw a triangle on a window. To do so, we first need to
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// create the window. We use the `WindowBuilder` from the `winit` crate to do that here.
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//
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// Before we can render to a window, we must first create a `vulkano::swapchain::Surface`
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// object from it, which represents the drawable surface of a window. For that we must wrap the
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// `winit::window::Window` in an `Arc`.
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let window = Arc::new(WindowBuilder::new().build(&event_loop).unwrap());
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let surface = Surface::from_window(instance.clone(), window.clone()).unwrap();
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// Choose device extensions that we're going to use. In order to present images to a surface,
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// we need a `Swapchain`, which is provided by the `khr_swapchain` extension.
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let mut device_extensions = DeviceExtensions {
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khr_swapchain: true,
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..DeviceExtensions::empty()
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};
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// We then choose which physical device to use. First, we enumerate all the available physical
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// devices, then apply filters to narrow them down to those that can support our needs.
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let (physical_device, queue_family_index) = instance
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.enumerate_physical_devices()
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.unwrap()
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.filter(|p| {
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// For this example, we require at least Vulkan 1.3, or a device that has the
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// `khr_dynamic_rendering` extension available.
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p.api_version() >= Version::V1_3 || p.supported_extensions().khr_dynamic_rendering
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})
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.filter(|p| {
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// Some devices may not support the extensions or features that your application, or
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// report properties and limits that are not sufficient for your application. These
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// should be filtered out here.
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p.supported_extensions().contains(&device_extensions)
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})
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.filter_map(|p| {
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// For each physical device, we try to find a suitable queue family that will execute
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// our draw commands.
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//
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// Devices can provide multiple queues to run commands in parallel (for example a draw
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// queue and a compute queue), similar to CPU threads. This is something you have to
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// have to manage manually in Vulkan. Queues of the same type belong to the same queue
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// family.
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//
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// Here, we look for a single queue family that is suitable for our purposes. In a
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// real-world application, you may want to use a separate dedicated transfer queue to
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// handle data transfers in parallel with graphics operations. You may also need a
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// separate queue for compute operations, if your application uses those.
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p.queue_family_properties()
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.iter()
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.enumerate()
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.position(|(i, q)| {
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// We select a queue family that supports graphics operations. When drawing to
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// a window surface, as we do in this example, we also need to check that
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// queues in this queue family are capable of presenting images to the surface.
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q.queue_flags.intersects(QueueFlags::GRAPHICS)
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&& p.surface_support(i as u32, &surface).unwrap_or(false)
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})
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// The code here searches for the first queue family that is suitable. If none is
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// found, `None` is returned to `filter_map`, which disqualifies this physical
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// device.
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.map(|i| (p, i as u32))
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})
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// All the physical devices that pass the filters above are suitable for the application.
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// However, not every device is equal, some are preferred over others. Now, we assign each
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// physical device a score, and pick the device with the lowest ("best") score.
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//
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// In this example, we simply select the best-scoring device to use in the application.
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// In a real-world setting, you may want to use the best-scoring device only as a "default"
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// or "recommended" device, and let the user choose the device themself.
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.min_by_key(|(p, _)| {
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// We assign a lower score to device types that are likely to be faster/better.
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match p.properties().device_type {
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PhysicalDeviceType::DiscreteGpu => 0,
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PhysicalDeviceType::IntegratedGpu => 1,
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PhysicalDeviceType::VirtualGpu => 2,
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PhysicalDeviceType::Cpu => 3,
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PhysicalDeviceType::Other => 4,
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_ => 5,
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}
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})
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.expect("no suitable physical device found");
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// Some little debug infos.
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println!(
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"Using device: {} (type: {:?})",
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physical_device.properties().device_name,
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physical_device.properties().device_type,
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);
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// If the selected device doesn't have Vulkan 1.3 available, then we need to enable the
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// `khr_dynamic_rendering` extension manually. This extension became a core part of Vulkan
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// in version 1.3 and later, so it's always available then and it does not need to be enabled.
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// We can be sure that this extension will be available on the selected physical device,
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// because we filtered out unsuitable devices in the device selection code above.
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if physical_device.api_version() < Version::V1_3 {
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device_extensions.khr_dynamic_rendering = true;
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}
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// Now initializing the device. This is probably the most important object of Vulkan.
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//
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// An iterator of created queues is returned by the function alongside the device.
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let (device, mut queues) = Device::new(
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// Which physical device to connect to.
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physical_device,
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DeviceCreateInfo {
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// The list of queues that we are going to use. Here we only use one queue, from the
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// previously chosen queue family.
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queue_create_infos: vec![QueueCreateInfo {
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queue_family_index,
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..Default::default()
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}],
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// A list of optional features and extensions that our program needs to work correctly.
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// Some parts of the Vulkan specs are optional and must be enabled manually at device
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// creation. In this example the only things we are going to need are the
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// `khr_swapchain` extension that allows us to draw to a window, and
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// `khr_dynamic_rendering` if we don't have Vulkan 1.3 available.
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enabled_extensions: device_extensions,
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// In order to render with Vulkan 1.3's dynamic rendering, we need to enable it here.
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// Otherwise, we are only allowed to render with a render pass object, as in the
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// standard triangle example. The feature is required to be supported by the device if
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// it supports Vulkan 1.3 and higher, or if the `khr_dynamic_rendering` extension is
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// available, so we don't need to check for support.
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enabled_features: Features {
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dynamic_rendering: true,
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..Features::empty()
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},
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..Default::default()
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},
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)
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.unwrap();
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// Since we can request multiple queues, the `queues` variable is in fact an iterator. We only
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// use one queue in this example, so we just retrieve the first and only element of the
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// iterator.
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let queue = queues.next().unwrap();
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// Before we can draw on the surface, we have to create what is called a swapchain. Creating a
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// swapchain allocates the color buffers that will contain the image that will ultimately be
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// visible on the screen. These images are returned alongside the swapchain.
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let (mut swapchain, images) = {
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// Querying the capabilities of the surface. When we create the swapchain we can only pass
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// values that are allowed by the capabilities.
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let surface_capabilities = device
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.physical_device()
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.surface_capabilities(&surface, Default::default())
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.unwrap();
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// Choosing the internal format that the images will have.
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let image_format = device
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.physical_device()
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.surface_formats(&surface, Default::default())
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.unwrap()[0]
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.0;
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// Please take a look at the docs for the meaning of the parameters we didn't mention.
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Swapchain::new(
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device.clone(),
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surface,
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SwapchainCreateInfo {
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// Some drivers report an `min_image_count` of 1, but fullscreen mode requires at
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// least 2. Therefore we must ensure the count is at least 2, otherwise the program
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// would crash when entering fullscreen mode on those drivers.
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min_image_count: surface_capabilities.min_image_count.max(2),
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image_format,
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// The size of the window, only used to initially setup the swapchain.
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//
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// NOTE:
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// On some drivers the swapchain extent is specified by
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// `surface_capabilities.current_extent` and the swapchain size must use this
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// extent. This extent is always the same as the window size.
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//
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// However, other drivers don't specify a value, i.e.
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// `surface_capabilities.current_extent` is `None`. These drivers will allow
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// anything, but the only sensible value is the window size.
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//
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// Both of these cases need the swapchain to use the window size, so we just
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// use that.
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image_extent: window.inner_size().into(),
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image_usage: ImageUsage::COLOR_ATTACHMENT,
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// The alpha mode indicates how the alpha value of the final image will behave. For
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// example, you can choose whether the window will be opaque or transparent.
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composite_alpha: surface_capabilities
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.supported_composite_alpha
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.into_iter()
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.next()
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.unwrap(),
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..Default::default()
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},
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)
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.unwrap()
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};
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let memory_allocator = Arc::new(StandardMemoryAllocator::new_default(device.clone()));
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// We now create a buffer that will store the shape of our triangle. We use `#[repr(C)]` here
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// to force rustc to use a defined layout for our data, as the default representation has *no
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// guarantees*.
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#[derive(BufferContents, Vertex)]
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#[repr(C)]
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struct Vertex {
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#[format(R32G32_SFLOAT)]
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position: [f32; 2],
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}
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let vertices = [
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Vertex {
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position: [-0.5, -0.25],
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},
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Vertex {
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position: [0.0, 0.5],
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},
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Vertex {
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position: [0.25, -0.1],
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},
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];
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let vertex_buffer = Buffer::from_iter(
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memory_allocator,
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BufferCreateInfo {
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usage: BufferUsage::VERTEX_BUFFER,
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..Default::default()
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},
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AllocationCreateInfo {
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memory_type_filter: MemoryTypeFilter::PREFER_DEVICE
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| MemoryTypeFilter::HOST_SEQUENTIAL_WRITE,
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..Default::default()
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},
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vertices,
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)
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.unwrap();
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// The next step is to create the shaders.
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//
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// The raw shader creation API provided by the vulkano library is unsafe for various reasons,
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// so The `shader!` macro provides a way to generate a Rust module from GLSL source - in the
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// example below, the source is provided as a string input directly to the shader, but a path
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// to a source file can be provided as well. Note that the user must specify the type of shader
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// (e.g. "vertex", "fragment", etc.) using the `ty` option of the macro.
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//
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// The items generated by the `shader!` macro include a `load` function which loads the shader
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// using an input logical device. The module also includes type definitions for layout
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// structures defined in the shader source, for example uniforms and push constants.
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//
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// A more detailed overview of what the `shader!` macro generates can be found in the
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// vulkano-shaders crate docs. You can view them at https://docs.rs/vulkano-shaders/
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mod vs {
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vulkano_shaders::shader! {
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ty: "vertex",
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src: r"
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#version 450
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layout(location = 0) in vec2 position;
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void main() {
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gl_Position = vec4(position, 0.0, 1.0);
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}
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",
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}
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}
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mod fs {
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vulkano_shaders::shader! {
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ty: "fragment",
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src: r"
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#version 450
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layout(location = 0) out vec4 f_color;
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void main() {
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f_color = vec4(1.0, 0.0, 0.0, 1.0);
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}
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",
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}
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}
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// At this point, OpenGL initialization would be finished. However in Vulkan it is not. OpenGL
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// implicitly does a lot of computation whenever you draw. In Vulkan, you have to do all this
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// manually.
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// Before we draw, we have to create what is called a **pipeline**. A pipeline describes how
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// a GPU operation is to be performed. It is similar to an OpenGL program, but it also contains
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// many settings for customization, all baked into a single object. For drawing, we create
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// a **graphics** pipeline, but there are also other types of pipeline.
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let pipeline = {
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// First, we load the shaders that the pipeline will use:
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// the vertex shader and the fragment shader.
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//
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// A Vulkan shader can in theory contain multiple entry points, so we have to specify which
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// one.
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let vs = vs::load(device.clone())
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.unwrap()
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.entry_point("main")
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.unwrap();
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let fs = fs::load(device.clone())
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.unwrap()
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.entry_point("main")
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.unwrap();
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// Automatically generate a vertex input state from the vertex shader's input interface,
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// that takes a single vertex buffer containing `Vertex` structs.
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let vertex_input_state = Vertex::per_vertex()
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.definition(&vs.info().input_interface)
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.unwrap();
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// Make a list of the shader stages that the pipeline will have.
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let stages = [
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PipelineShaderStageCreateInfo::new(vs),
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PipelineShaderStageCreateInfo::new(fs),
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];
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// We must now create a **pipeline layout** object, which describes the locations and types of
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// descriptor sets and push constants used by the shaders in the pipeline.
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//
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// Multiple pipelines can share a common layout object, which is more efficient.
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// The shaders in a pipeline must use a subset of the resources described in its pipeline
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// layout, but the pipeline layout is allowed to contain resources that are not present in the
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// shaders; they can be used by shaders in other pipelines that share the same layout.
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// Thus, it is a good idea to design shaders so that many pipelines have common resource
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// locations, which allows them to share pipeline layouts.
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let layout = PipelineLayout::new(
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device.clone(),
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// Since we only have one pipeline in this example, and thus one pipeline layout,
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// we automatically generate the creation info for it from the resources used in the
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// shaders. In a real application, you would specify this information manually so that you
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// can re-use one layout in multiple pipelines.
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PipelineDescriptorSetLayoutCreateInfo::from_stages(&stages)
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.into_pipeline_layout_create_info(device.clone())
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.unwrap(),
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)
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.unwrap();
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// We describe the formats of attachment images where the colors, depth and/or stencil
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// information will be written. The pipeline will only be usable with this particular
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// configuration of the attachment images.
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let subpass = PipelineRenderingCreateInfo {
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// We specify a single color attachment that will be rendered to. When we begin
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// rendering, we will specify a swapchain image to be used as this attachment, so here
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// we set its format to be the same format as the swapchain.
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color_attachment_formats: vec![Some(swapchain.image_format())],
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..Default::default()
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};
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// Finally, create the pipeline.
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GraphicsPipeline::new(
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device.clone(),
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None,
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GraphicsPipelineCreateInfo {
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stages: stages.into_iter().collect(),
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// How vertex data is read from the vertex buffers into the vertex shader.
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vertex_input_state: Some(vertex_input_state),
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// How vertices are arranged into primitive shapes.
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// The default primitive shape is a triangle.
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input_assembly_state: Some(InputAssemblyState::default()),
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// How primitives are transformed and clipped to fit the framebuffer.
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// We use a resizable viewport, set to draw over the entire window.
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viewport_state: Some(ViewportState::default()),
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// How polygons are culled and converted into a raster of pixels.
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// The default value does not perform any culling.
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rasterization_state: Some(RasterizationState::default()),
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// How multiple fragment shader samples are converted to a single pixel value.
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// The default value does not perform any multisampling.
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multisample_state: Some(MultisampleState::default()),
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// How pixel values are combined with the values already present in the framebuffer.
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// The default value overwrites the old value with the new one, without any blending.
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color_blend_state: Some(ColorBlendState::with_attachment_states(
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subpass.color_attachment_formats.len() as u32,
|
|
ColorBlendAttachmentState::default(),
|
|
)),
|
|
// Dynamic states allows us to specify parts of the pipeline settings when
|
|
// recording the command buffer, before we perform drawing.
|
|
// Here, we specify that the viewport should be dynamic.
|
|
dynamic_state: [DynamicState::Viewport].into_iter().collect(),
|
|
subpass: Some(subpass.into()),
|
|
..GraphicsPipelineCreateInfo::layout(layout)
|
|
},
|
|
)
|
|
.unwrap()
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
// Dynamic viewports allow us to recreate just the viewport when the window is resized.
|
|
// Otherwise we would have to recreate the whole pipeline.
|
|
let mut viewport = Viewport {
|
|
offset: [0.0, 0.0],
|
|
extent: [0.0, 0.0],
|
|
depth_range: 0.0..=1.0,
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
// When creating the swapchain, we only created plain images. To use them as an attachment for
|
|
// rendering, we must wrap then in an image view.
|
|
//
|
|
// Since we need to draw to multiple images, we are going to create a different image view for
|
|
// each image.
|
|
let mut attachment_image_views = window_size_dependent_setup(&images, &mut viewport);
|
|
|
|
// Before we can start creating and recording command buffers, we need a way of allocating
|
|
// them. Vulkano provides a command buffer allocator, which manages raw Vulkan command pools
|
|
// underneath and provides a safe interface for them.
|
|
let command_buffer_allocator =
|
|
StandardCommandBufferAllocator::new(device.clone(), Default::default());
|
|
|
|
// Initialization is finally finished!
|
|
|
|
// In some situations, the swapchain will become invalid by itself. This includes for example
|
|
// when the window is resized (as the images of the swapchain will no longer match the
|
|
// window's) or, on Android, when the application went to the background and goes back to the
|
|
// foreground.
|
|
//
|
|
// In this situation, acquiring a swapchain image or presenting it will return an error.
|
|
// Rendering to an image of that swapchain will not produce any error, but may or may not work.
|
|
// To continue rendering, we need to recreate the swapchain by creating a new swapchain. Here,
|
|
// we remember that we need to do this for the next loop iteration.
|
|
let mut recreate_swapchain = false;
|
|
|
|
// In the loop below we are going to submit commands to the GPU. Submitting a command produces
|
|
// an object that implements the `GpuFuture` trait, which holds the resources for as long as
|
|
// they are in use by the GPU.
|
|
//
|
|
// Destroying the `GpuFuture` blocks until the GPU is finished executing it. In order to avoid
|
|
// that, we store the submission of the previous frame here.
|
|
let mut previous_frame_end = Some(sync::now(device.clone()).boxed());
|
|
|
|
event_loop.run(move |event, _, control_flow| {
|
|
match event {
|
|
Event::WindowEvent {
|
|
event: WindowEvent::CloseRequested,
|
|
..
|
|
} => {
|
|
*control_flow = ControlFlow::Exit;
|
|
}
|
|
Event::WindowEvent {
|
|
event: WindowEvent::Resized(_),
|
|
..
|
|
} => {
|
|
recreate_swapchain = true;
|
|
}
|
|
Event::RedrawEventsCleared => {
|
|
// Do not draw the frame when the screen size is zero. On Windows, this can
|
|
// occur when minimizing the application.
|
|
let image_extent: [u32; 2] = window.inner_size().into();
|
|
|
|
if image_extent.contains(&0) {
|
|
return;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// It is important to call this function from time to time, otherwise resources
|
|
// will keep accumulating and you will eventually reach an out of memory error.
|
|
// Calling this function polls various fences in order to determine what the GPU
|
|
// has already processed, and frees the resources that are no longer needed.
|
|
previous_frame_end.as_mut().unwrap().cleanup_finished();
|
|
|
|
// Whenever the window resizes we need to recreate everything dependent on the
|
|
// window size. In this example that includes the swapchain, the framebuffers and
|
|
// the dynamic state viewport.
|
|
if recreate_swapchain {
|
|
let (new_swapchain, new_images) = swapchain
|
|
.recreate(SwapchainCreateInfo {
|
|
image_extent,
|
|
..swapchain.create_info()
|
|
})
|
|
.expect("failed to recreate swapchain");
|
|
|
|
swapchain = new_swapchain;
|
|
|
|
// Now that we have new swapchain images, we must create new image views from
|
|
// them as well.
|
|
attachment_image_views =
|
|
window_size_dependent_setup(&new_images, &mut viewport);
|
|
|
|
recreate_swapchain = false;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Before we can draw on the output, we have to *acquire* an image from the
|
|
// swapchain. If no image is available (which happens if you submit draw commands
|
|
// too quickly), then the function will block. This operation returns the index of
|
|
// the image that we are allowed to draw upon.
|
|
//
|
|
// This function can block if no image is available. The parameter is an optional
|
|
// timeout after which the function call will return an error.
|
|
let (image_index, suboptimal, acquire_future) =
|
|
match acquire_next_image(swapchain.clone(), None).map_err(Validated::unwrap) {
|
|
Ok(r) => r,
|
|
Err(VulkanError::OutOfDate) => {
|
|
recreate_swapchain = true;
|
|
return;
|
|
}
|
|
Err(e) => panic!("failed to acquire next image: {e}"),
|
|
};
|
|
|
|
// `acquire_next_image` can be successful, but suboptimal. This means that the
|
|
// swapchain image will still work, but it may not display correctly. With some
|
|
// drivers this can be when the window resizes, but it may not cause the swapchain
|
|
// to become out of date.
|
|
if suboptimal {
|
|
recreate_swapchain = true;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// In order to draw, we have to build a *command buffer*. The command buffer object
|
|
// holds the list of commands that are going to be executed.
|
|
//
|
|
// Building a command buffer is an expensive operation (usually a few hundred
|
|
// microseconds), but it is known to be a hot path in the driver and is expected to
|
|
// be optimized.
|
|
//
|
|
// Note that we have to pass a queue family when we create the command buffer. The
|
|
// command buffer will only be executable on that given queue family.
|
|
let mut builder = AutoCommandBufferBuilder::primary(
|
|
&command_buffer_allocator,
|
|
queue.queue_family_index(),
|
|
CommandBufferUsage::OneTimeSubmit,
|
|
)
|
|
.unwrap();
|
|
|
|
builder
|
|
// Before we can draw, we have to *enter a render pass*. We specify which
|
|
// attachments we are going to use for rendering here, which needs to match
|
|
// what was previously specified when creating the pipeline.
|
|
.begin_rendering(RenderingInfo {
|
|
// As before, we specify one color attachment, but now we specify the image
|
|
// view to use as well as how it should be used.
|
|
color_attachments: vec![Some(RenderingAttachmentInfo {
|
|
// `Clear` means that we ask the GPU to clear the content of this
|
|
// attachment at the start of rendering.
|
|
load_op: AttachmentLoadOp::Clear,
|
|
// `Store` means that we ask the GPU to store the rendered output in
|
|
// the attachment image. We could also ask it to discard the result.
|
|
store_op: AttachmentStoreOp::Store,
|
|
// The value to clear the attachment with. Here we clear it with a blue
|
|
// color.
|
|
//
|
|
// Only attachments that have `AttachmentLoadOp::Clear` are provided
|
|
// with clear values, any others should use `None` as the clear value.
|
|
clear_value: Some([0.0, 0.0, 1.0, 1.0].into()),
|
|
..RenderingAttachmentInfo::image_view(
|
|
// We specify image view corresponding to the currently acquired
|
|
// swapchain image, to use for this attachment.
|
|
attachment_image_views[image_index as usize].clone(),
|
|
)
|
|
})],
|
|
..Default::default()
|
|
})
|
|
.unwrap()
|
|
// We are now inside the first subpass of the render pass.
|
|
//
|
|
// TODO: Document state setting and how it affects subsequent draw commands.
|
|
.set_viewport(0, [viewport.clone()].into_iter().collect())
|
|
.unwrap()
|
|
.bind_pipeline_graphics(pipeline.clone())
|
|
.unwrap()
|
|
.bind_vertex_buffers(0, vertex_buffer.clone())
|
|
.unwrap()
|
|
// We add a draw command.
|
|
.draw(vertex_buffer.len() as u32, 1, 0, 0)
|
|
.unwrap()
|
|
// We leave the render pass.
|
|
.end_rendering()
|
|
.unwrap();
|
|
|
|
// Finish building the command buffer by calling `build`.
|
|
let command_buffer = builder.build().unwrap();
|
|
|
|
let future = previous_frame_end
|
|
.take()
|
|
.unwrap()
|
|
.join(acquire_future)
|
|
.then_execute(queue.clone(), command_buffer)
|
|
.unwrap()
|
|
// The color output is now expected to contain our triangle. But in order to
|
|
// show it on the screen, we have to *present* the image by calling
|
|
// `then_swapchain_present`.
|
|
//
|
|
// This function does not actually present the image immediately. Instead it
|
|
// submits a present command at the end of the queue. This means that it will
|
|
// only be presented once the GPU has finished executing the command buffer
|
|
// that draws the triangle.
|
|
.then_swapchain_present(
|
|
queue.clone(),
|
|
SwapchainPresentInfo::swapchain_image_index(swapchain.clone(), image_index),
|
|
)
|
|
.then_signal_fence_and_flush();
|
|
|
|
match future.map_err(Validated::unwrap) {
|
|
Ok(future) => {
|
|
previous_frame_end = Some(future.boxed());
|
|
}
|
|
Err(VulkanError::OutOfDate) => {
|
|
recreate_swapchain = true;
|
|
previous_frame_end = Some(sync::now(device.clone()).boxed());
|
|
}
|
|
Err(e) => {
|
|
println!("failed to flush future: {e}");
|
|
previous_frame_end = Some(sync::now(device.clone()).boxed());
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
_ => (),
|
|
}
|
|
});
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
/// This function is called once during initialization, then again whenever the window is resized.
|
|
fn window_size_dependent_setup(
|
|
images: &[Arc<Image>],
|
|
viewport: &mut Viewport,
|
|
) -> Vec<Arc<ImageView>> {
|
|
let extent = images[0].extent();
|
|
viewport.extent = [extent[0] as f32, extent[1] as f32];
|
|
|
|
images
|
|
.iter()
|
|
.map(|image| ImageView::new_default(image.clone()).unwrap())
|
|
.collect::<Vec<_>>()
|
|
}
|