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Eric Anholt 01ce694073 Add a compile-time test for missing #defines. 11 years ago
include/epoxy Add some more defines that are present in normal gl.h 11 years ago
registry Add a missing ATI enum token to the registry. 11 years ago
src Add missing #defines for GL versions and extensions. 11 years ago
test Add a compile-time test for missing #defines. 11 years ago
.dir-locals.el Add .dir-locals to tell emacs how to format by default. 11 years ago
.gitignore Add support for EGL. 11 years ago
Makefile.am Add an initial testsuite for GLX API. 11 years ago
README.md Add the generator and build infrastructure. 11 years ago
autogen.sh Add the generator and build infrastructure. 11 years ago
configure.ac Add a test for a bug when called during glBegin()/glEnd(). 11 years ago
epoxy.pc.in Add the generator and build infrastructure. 11 years ago

README.md

Epoxy is a library for handling OpenGL function pointer management for you.

It hides the complexity of dlopen(), dlsym(), glXGetProcAddress(), eglGetProcAddress(), etc. from the app developer, with very little knowledge needed on their part. Just read your GL specs and write code using undecorated function names like glCompileShader().

Don't forget to check for your extensions or versions being present before you use them, just like before! We'll tell you what you forgot to check for instead of just segfaulting, though.

Why does this library exist?

OpenGL on Linux (and other platforms) made some ABI decisions back in the days when symbol versioning and dlsym() weren't as widely available, that resulted in window-systems-specific APIs that looked kind of like dlsym. They allowed you to build an app that required OpenGL 1.2, but could optionally use features of OpenGL 1.4 if the implementation made those available through the glXGetProcAddress() (or other similarly-named) mechanism.

The downside is that the fixed OpenGL 1.2 ABI means that application developers have to GetProcAddress() out every modern GL entrypoint they want to use and stash that function pointer somewhere. Sometimes this is done in a pretty way (like libGLEW), sometimes it is done in an ad-hoc way (like most applications I've seen), but it's never done as well as we think it could be done.

Additionally, the proliferation of OpenGL ABIs (desktop GL, GLESv1, GLESv2) and window systems (GLX, AGL, WGL, all versus EGL) means that

Switching your code to using epoxy

It should be as easy as replacing:

#include <GL/gl.h> #include <GL/glx.h> #include <GL/glext.h>

with:

#include <epoxy/gl.h> #include <epoxy/glx.h>

Additionally, some new helpers become available, so you don't have to write them:

int epoxy_gl_version() returns the GL version:

12 for GL 1.2 20 for GL 2.0 44 for GL 4.4

bool epoxy_has_gl_extension() returns whether a GL extension is available ("GL_ARB_texture_buffer_object", for example).

Note that this is not terribly fast, so keep it out of your hot paths, ok?