Awesome
Vulkan tutorial
This repository hosts the contents of vulkan-tutorial.com. The website itself is based on daux.io, which supports GitHub flavored Markdown. The actual site runs daux.io with a custom theme and a few modifications (https://github.com/Overv/daux.io) and this is built into a Docker image.
Use issues and pull requests to provide feedback related to the website. If you have a problem with your code, then use the comments section in the related chapter to ask a question. Please provide your operating system, graphics card, driver version, source code, expected behaviour and actual behaviour.
E-book
This guide is now available in e-book formats as well:
The e-book can be built from the existing content by running:
python3 build_ebook.py
This script depends on the following utilities being available on the path:
inkscape
: SVG to PNG conversion (tested with version 1.0.2)pandoc
: Building a PDF and EPUB from the Markdown code (tested with version 2.13)
You also need to install a LaTeX distribution for PDF generation.
Changing code across chapters
It is sometimes necessary to change code that is reused across many chapters,
for example a function like createBuffer
. If you make such a change, then you
should update the code files using the following steps:
- Update any chapters that reference the modified code.
- Make a copy of the first file that uses it and modify the code there, e.g.
base_code_fixed.cpp
. - Create a patch using
diff -Naur base_code.cpp base_code_fixed.cpp > patch.txt
. - Apply the patch to the specified code file and all files in later chapters
using the
incremental_patch.sh
script. Run it like this:./incremental_patch.sh base_code.cpp patch.txt
. - Clean up the
base_code_fixed.cpp
andpatch.txt
files. - Commit.
Rendering the tutorial
To render the tutorial (i.e. convert the markdown to html), you have two options:
- Serve rendered files on the fly using a web server that has php installed
- Generate static html files that you can view locally or put on a server
For either of these options, you'll need php and a patch'ed daux.
PHP
- Make sure PHP is installed (Daux is written
in PHP)
- Both the
php_mbstring
andphp_openssl
extensions need to be enabled - The
phar.readonly
setting needs to be set toOff
(to be able to rebuild Daux)
- Both the
- Make sure Composer is installed, a php dependency manager that Daux uses
Clone, patch, and rebuild daux
- Clone daux
git clone https://github.com/dauxio/daux.io.git
- Make a new branch at the older revision that the VulkanTutorial patch is
against:
git checkout d45ccff -b vtpatch
- Making a new branch isn't strictly necessary, as you could reset
master
, but this keeps master intact.
- Copy over the
daux.patch
file into the daux.io directory, make sure line endings are UNIX style (in case you're using Windows), and apply the patch. It should apply cleanly.git am daux.patch
- Run composer in the daux.io directory so that it downloads the dependencies
Daux needs in order to be built
composer install
- Rebuild Daux
php bin/compile
(this can take a while)- A newly made
daux.phar
will now be in your base directory
Using Daux to serve rendered files on the fly
Once you've completed the above, follow the instructions on the daux site for how to run daux using a web server.
As a simple option considering you have php installed, you can also use php's built in development web server if you just need to locally see what things look like:
- In the
daux.io
directory, editglobal.json
so that thedocs_directory
option points at your VulkanTutorial directory"docs_directory": "../VulkanTutorial",
- In the
daux.io
directory, runphp -S localhost:8080 index.php
- Type
localhost:8080
in your web browser URL bar and hit enter. You should now see the VulkanTutorial front page.
Using Daux to statically generate html files
Before we generate the static files, we need to tweak daux and the tutorial setup to prevent it from trying to load a few outside resources (which will stall your browser when trying to load the otherwise static page)
- In the
VulkanTutorial
directory, editconfig.json
and remove thegoogle_analytics
line so daux doesn't try to load that. - In the
daux.io
directory, editthemes/daux/config.json
and remove thefont
line so that daux doesn't try to load an external font. - Rebuild daux according to the earlier instructions so it picks up the theme changes.
We're working on improvements so in the future the above steps won't be necessary.
Now with the above done, we can generate the static files. Asuming the daux.io
and VulkanTutorial directories are next to each other, go into the daux.io
directory and run a command similar to:
php generate -s ../VulkanTutorial -d ../VulkanTutorial/out
.
-s
tells it where to find the documentation, while -d
tells it where to put
the generated files.
Note: if you want to generate the docs again, delete the out
directory first
or daux will make a new out
directory within the existing out
directory.
License
The contents of this repository are licensed as CC BY-SA 4.0, unless stated otherwise. By contributing to this repository, you agree to license your contributions to the public under that same license.
The code listings in the code
directory are licensed as CC0 1.0 Universal.
By contributing to that directory, you agree to license your contributions to
the public under that same public domain-like license.