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<!-- Copyright (C) 2002 Milan Ikits This documentation may not be modified or redistributed in any form, except by the copyright holder. --> <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html/4/loose.dtd"> <html> <head> <title> GLEW: The OpenGL Extension Wrangler Library </title> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII"> </head> <body bgcolor="#ffffff" text="#000000" link="#1010f0" vlink="#000080" alink="#800000"> <center> <table border=0 width="50%" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="10"> <tr> <td align=center><img src="./glew.png" alt="glew" width="97" height="75"></td> </tr> <tr> <td align=center><font size="+2"><b>The OpenGL Extension Wrangler Library</b></font></td> </tr> <tr> <td width="80%"> <table border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0 align=center> <tr><td align=center><a href="#Introduction"><font size="-1">Introduction</font></a></td></tr> <tr><td align=center><a href="#Download"><font size="-1">Obtaining GLEW</font></a></td></tr> <tr><td align=center><a href="#Supported"><font size="-1">Supported Extensions</font></a></td></tr> <tr><td align=center><a href="#Build"><font size="-1">How to Build Your Project with GLEW</font></a></td></tr> <tr><td align=center><a href="#Install"><font size="-1">How to Install GLEW</font></a></td></tr> <tr><td align=center><a href="#Use"><font size="-1">How to Use GLEW</font></a></td></tr> <tr><td align=center><a href="#Utilities"><font size="-1">Utilities</font></a></td></tr> <tr><td align=center><a href="#Issues"><font size="-1">Known Issues</font></a></td></tr> <tr><td align=center><a href="#Credits"><font size="-1">Credits, Copyright</font></a></td></tr> </table> <br> </td> </tr> <tr> <td bgcolor="#FFF0D0" align="center"><a name="Introduction"><font size="+1"><b>Introduction</b></font></a> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> The goal of the OpenGL Extension Wrangler Library (GLEW) is to assist C/C++ OpenGL developers with two tedious tasks: initializing and using extensions and writing portable applications. GLEW provides an efficient run-time mechanism to determine whether a certain extension is supported by the driver or not. OpenGL core and extension functionality is exposed via a single header file. GLEW currently supports the products of two commodity graphics card vendors, NVIDIA and ATI, on two operating systems, Windows and Linux. <p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td bgcolor="#FFF0D0" align="center"><a name="Download"><font size="+1"><b>Obtaining GLEW</b></font></a> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> The source and precompiled binaries are available at the <a href="http://glew.sourceforge.net/">project website</a>. <p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td bgcolor="#FFF0D0" align="center"><a name="Supported"><font size="+1"><b>Supported Extensions</b></font></a> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <table border=0 cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0"> <tr> <td>GLEW currently supports <a href="glew.html">OpenGL</a>, <a href="wglew.html">WGL</a>, and <a href="glxew.html">GLX</a> extensions. </td> </tr> </table> <p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td bgcolor="#FFF0D0" align="center"><a name="Build"><font size="+1"><b>How to Build Your Project with GLEW</b></font></a> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> There are two ways to build your project with GLEW. <p> <font size="+1"><b>Including the source files / project file</b></font> <p> The simpler but less flexible way is to include <tt>glew.h</tt> and <tt>glew.c</tt> into your project and define the <tt>GLEW_STATIC</tt> preprocessor constant for the static library or executable you are building together with GLEW. You also need to replace <tt><GL/gl.h></tt> and <tt><GL/glu.h></tt> with <tt><glew.h></tt> and set the appropriate include flag (<tt>-I</tt>) to tell the compiler where to look for it. For example: <blockquote><pre>#include <glew.h> #include <GL/glut.h> <gl, glu, and glut functionality is available here> </pre></blockquote> Note that if you are using GLEW together with GLUT, you have to include <tt>glew.h</tt> first. In addition, <tt>glew.h</tt> includes <tt>glu.h</tt>, so you don't need to include it separately. <p> On Windows you can also add the supplied project file (<tt>glew.dsp</tt> or <tt>glew.vcproj</tt>) to your workspace or solution and compile it together with your other projects. In this case you need to change the <tt>GLEW_BUILD</tt> preprocessor constant to <tt>GLEW_STATIC</tt>, otherwise you get build errors. <b>Note that GLEW does not use the C runtime library, so it does not matter which version (single-threaded, multi-threaded or multi-threaded DLL) it is linked with</b>. <p> <font size="+1"><b>Using GLEW as a shared library</b></font> <p> Alternatively, you can use the provided project files / makefile to build a separate shared library you can link your projects with later. In this case the best practice is to install <tt>glew.h</tt>, <tt>glew32.lib</tt>, and <tt>glew32.dll</tt> / <tt>libGLEW.so</tt> to where the OpenGL equivalents <tt>gl.h</tt>, <tt>opengl32.lib</tt>, and <tt>opengl32.dll</tt> / <tt>libGL.so</tt> are located. Note that you need administrative privileges to do this. If you do not have administrator access and your system administrator will not do it for you, you can install GLEW into your own lib and include subdirectories and tell the compiler where to find it. Then you can just replace <tt><GL/gl.h></tt> with <tt><GL/glew.h></tt> in your program: <blockquote><pre>#include <GL/glew.h> #include <GL/glut.h> <gl, glu, and glut functionality is available here> </pre></blockquote> or: <blockquote><pre>#include <GL/glew.h> <gl and glu functionality is available here> </pre></blockquote> <p> Don't forget to link your project with <tt>glew32.lib</tt>, <tt>glu32.lib</tt>, and <tt>opengl32.lib</tt> on Windows and <tt>libGLEW.so</tt>, <tt>libGLU.so</tt>, and <tt>libGL.so</tt> on Linux (<tt>-lGLEW -lGLU -lGL</tt>). <p> It is important to keep in mind that <tt>glew.h</tt> includes neither <tt>windows.h</tt> nor <tt>gl.h</tt>. Also, GLEW will warn you by issuing a preprocessor error in case you have included <tt>gl.h</tt>, <tt>glext.h</tt>, or <tt>glATI.h</tt> before <tt>glew.h</tt>. <p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td bgcolor="#FFF0D0" align="center"><a name="Install"><font size="+1"><b>How to Install GLEW</b></font></a> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <p> To install the shared library version of GLEW you need to copy the headers and libraries into their destination directories. On Windows this boils down to copying (no, we will not write a Windows installer for you). <p> <center> <table border=0 cellpadding=0 cellspacing=0> <tr><td><tt>lib/glew32.dll</tt></td><td> to </td> <td><tt>%SystemRoot%/system32</tt>, usually <tt>C:/WINDOWS/system32</tt></td></tr> <tr><td><tt>lib/glew32.lib</tt></td><td> to </td> <td><tt>{VC Root}/Lib</tt></td></tr> <tr><td><tt>include/GL/glew.h</tt></td><td> to </td> <td><tt>{VC Root}/Include/GL</tt></td></tr> <tr><td><tt>include/GL/wglew.h</tt></td><td> to </td> <td><tt>{VC Root}/Include/GL</tt></td></tr> </table> </center> <p> where <tt>{VC Root}</tt> is your Visual C++ directory, typically <tt>C:/Program Files/Microsoft Visual Studio/VC98</tt> for Visual Studio 6.0 or <tt>C:/Program Files/Microsoft Visual Studio/Vc7/PlatformSDK</tt> for Visual Studio .NET. <b>However, if you build GLEW with Visual Studio .NET, the project file will automatically install it into these directories, so you don't have to worry about installation at all</b>. <p> On Linux, typing <tt>"make install"</tt> will attempt to install GLEW into <tt>/usr/include/GL</tt> and <tt>/usr/lib</tt>. You can customize the installation target via the <tt>GLEW_DEST</tt> environment variable if you do not have write access to these directories. <p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td bgcolor="#FFF0D0" align="center"><a name="Use"><font size="+1"><b>How to Use GLEW</b></font></a> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <font size="+1"><b>Initializing GLEW</b></font> <p> First you need to create a valid OpenGL rendering context and call <tt>glewInit()</tt> to initialize the extension entry points. If <tt>glewInit()</tt> returns <tt>GLEW_OK</tt> the initialization succeeded and you can use the available extensions as well as core OpenGL functionality. For example: <blockquote><pre>#include <GL/glew.h> #include <GL/glut.h> ... glutInit(&argc, argv); glutCreateWindow("GLEW Test"); int err = glewInit(); if (GLEW_OK != err) { /* problem: glewInit failed, something is seriously wrong */ fprintf(stderr, "Error: %s\n", glewGetErrorString(err)); ... } </pre></blockquote> <p> <font size="+1"><b>Querying the available OpenGL extensions</b></font> <p> To find out if a particular extension is available on your platform, use the globally defined structure <tt>glew</tt>: <blockquote><pre>if (glew.ARB_vertex_program) { /* it is safe to use the ARB_vertex_program extension here */ glGenProgramsARB(...); } </pre></blockquote> You can also check for core OpenGL functionality. For example, to see if OpenGL 1.3 is supported you can use the following: <blockquote><pre>if (glew.GL_13) { /* Yay! OpenGL 1.3 is supported! */ } </pre></blockquote> In general, you can check if <tt>glew.{extension_name}</tt> or <tt>glew.GL_{version}</tt> is set or not. For extensions <tt>glewGetExtension</tt> provides a slower alternative: <blockquote><pre>if (GL_TRUE == glewGetExtension("GL_ARB_fragment_program")) { /* Looks like ARB_fragment_program is supported. */ } </pre></blockquote> <p> <font size="+1"><b>Experimental drivers</b></font> <p> GLEW works by querying the supported extensions from the graphics driver. Experimental drivers, however, might not report every available extension through the standard mechanism, in which case GLEW will report it unsupported. To circumvent this situation, the <tt>glewExperimental</tt> global switch can be turned on by setting it to <tt>GL_TRUE</tt> before calling <tt>glewInit()</tt>. This makes sure that all extensions with valid entry points will be exposed. <p> <font size="+1"><b>Platform specific extensions</b></font> <p> Platform specific extensions are separated into two header files: <tt>wglew.h</tt> and <tt>glxew.h</tt>. These files define the available <tt>WGL</tt> and <tt>GLX</tt> extensions as well as the global <tt>wglew</tt> and <tt>glxew</tt> structs, which work similarly to the <tt>glew</tt> structure. To determine if a given <tt>WGL</tt> or <tt>GLX</tt> extension is supported, query <tt>wglew.{extension name}</tt> or <tt>glxew.{extension_name}</tt>. For example: <blockquote><pre>#include <GL/wglew.h> if (wglew.ARB_pbuffer) { /* OK, we can use pbuffers */ } else { /* Sorry, pbuffers will not work on this platform */ } </pre></blockquote> <tr> <td bgcolor="#FFF0D0" align="center"><a name="Utilities"><font size="+1"><b>Utilities</b></font></a> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> GLEW provides two command line tools: one for creating a list of available extensions and visuals; and another for verification of extension entry points. <p> <font size="+1"><b>wglinfo: extensions and visuals on Windows</b></font> <p> <tt>wglinfo</tt> is the Windows version of <tt>glxinfo</tt>. By default it creates a file called <tt>wglinfo.txt</tt> that contains a list of available OpenGL, WGL, and GLU extensions as well as a table of visuals aka. pixelformats. PBuffer and multiple output capable visuals are also included. The format of the table is described <a href="wglinfo.txt">here</a>. For additional usage information, type <tt>wglinfo -h</tt>. <p> <font size="+1"><b>glewinfo: extension verification utility</b></font> <p> <tt>glewinfo</tt> allows you to verify the entry points for the extensions supported on your platform. It uses GLEW to find out which extensions and entry points are available and reports the results to a text file called <tt>glewinfo.txt</tt>. <p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td bgcolor="#FFF0D0" align="center"><a name="Issues"><font size="+1"><b>Known Issues</b></font></a> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> GLEW requires GLX 1.2 to assure compatibility with GLUT. In addition, the SGI GLX video extensions are not supported, because they depend on external libraries. <p> Note that according to the <a href="http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/default.asp?url=/library/en-us/opengl/ntopnglr_6yer.asp">WGL documentation</a> you have to initialize the entry points for every rendering context you create. GLEW ignores this requirement, and does not define per context entry points. This means that you need to call <tt>glewInit()</tt> only once in your program, or more precisely once per process. We have not noticed any problems so far from ignoring the specification. <p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td bgcolor="#FFF0D0" align="center"><a name="Credits"><font size="+1"><b>Credits, Copyright</b></font></a> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> GLEW was developed by Milan Ikits. He also performs occasional maintainance to make sure that GLEW stays in mint condition. Aaron Lefohn, Joe Kniss, and Chris Wyman were the first users and also assisted with the design and debugging process. The acronym originates from Aaron Lefohn. Pasi Kärkkäinen identified and fixed several problems with GLX and SDL. The RPM packages are maintained by Karol Pietrzak. Nate Robins created the <tt>wglinfo</tt> utility, to which modifications were added by Michael Wimmer. <p> <p> GLEW is derived from the EXTGL project by Lev Povalahev. The source code is licensed under the modified BSD license, the SGI Free Software License B, and the GLX Public License. <blockquote><pre></pre></blockquote> <tr> <td bgcolor="#FFF0D0"> <table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" width="100%"> <tr> <td align="left"> <i>Last update: 05-01-03</i></td> </tr> </table> </td> </tr> </table> </center> </body>