Removed X11 display parameter from the config file, this is more
[wine.git] / documentation / opengl.sgml
blob1a021afa0a488011ca16d6566c72e1d38cd6bb6c
1 <chapter id="opengl">
2 <title>Wine and OpenGL</title>
4 <sect1 id="opengl-required">
5 <title>What is needed to have OpenGL support in Wine</title>
7 <para>
8 Basically, if you have a Linux OpenGL ABI compliant libGL
9 (<ulink url="http://oss.sgi.com/projects/ogl-sample/ABI/">
10 http://oss.sgi.com/projects/ogl-sample/ABI/</ulink>)
11 installed on your computer, you should have everything
12 that is needed.
13 </para>
14 <para>
15 To be more clear, I will detail one step after another what
16 the <command>configure</command> script checks.
17 </para>
18 <para>
19 If, after Wine compiles, OpenGL support is not compiled in,
20 you can always check <filename>config.log</filename> to see
21 which of the following points failed.
22 </para>
24 <sect2>
25 <title>Header files</title>
27 <para>
28 The needed header files to build OpenGL support in Wine are :
29 </para>
31 <variablelist>
32 <varlistentry>
33 <term><filename>gl.h:</filename></term>
34 <listitem>
35 <para>
36 the definition of all OpenGL core functions, types and enumerants
37 </para>
38 </listitem>
39 </varlistentry>
40 <varlistentry>
41 <term><filename>glx.h:</filename></term>
42 <listitem>
43 <para>
44 how OpenGL integrates in the X Window environment
45 </para>
46 </listitem>
47 </varlistentry>
48 <varlistentry>
49 <term><filename>glext.h:</filename></term>
50 <listitem>
51 <para>
52 the list of all registered OpenGL extensions
53 </para>
54 </listitem>
55 </varlistentry>
56 </variablelist>
58 <para>
59 The latter file (<filename>glext.h</filename>) is, as of
60 now, not necessary to build Wine. But as this file can be
61 easily obtained from SGI
62 (<ulink url="http://oss.sgi.com/projects/ogl-sample/ABI/glext.h">
63 http://oss.sgi.com/projects/ogl-sample/ABI/glext.h</ulink>),
64 and that all OpenGL should provide one, I decided to keep it here.
65 </para>
66 </sect2>
68 <sect2>
69 <title>OpenGL library thread-safety</title>
71 <para>
72 After that, the script checks if the OpenGL library relies
73 or not on the pthread library to provide thread safety (most
74 'modern' OpenGL libraries do).
75 </para>
76 <para>
77 If the OpenGL library explicitly links in libpthread (you
78 can check it with a <command>ldd libGL.so</command>), you
79 need to force OpenGL support by starting
80 <command>configure</command> with the
81 <parameter>--enable-opengl</parameter> flag.
82 </para>
83 <para>
84 The reason to this is that Wine contains some hacks done by
85 Ove to cohabit with pthread that are known to work well in
86 most of the cases (glibc 2.1.x). On the other hand, we never
87 got Wine to work with glibc 2.0.6. Thus, I deemed preferable
88 to play it safe : by default, I suppose that the hack won't
89 work and that it's the user's responsibility to enable it.
90 </para>
91 <para>
92 Anyway, it should be pretty safe to build with
93 <parameter>--enable-opengl</parameter>.
94 </para>
95 </sect2>
97 <sect2>
98 <title>OpenGL library itself</title>
100 <para>
101 To check for the presence of 'libGL' on the system, the
102 script checks if it defines the
103 <function>glXCreateContext</function> function. There should
104 be no problem here.
105 </para>
106 </sect2>
108 <sect2>
109 <title>glXGetProcAddressARB function</title>
111 <para>
112 The core of Wine's OpenGL implementation (at least for all
113 extensions) is the <function>glXGetProcAddressARB</function>
114 function. Your OpenGL library needs to have this function
115 defined for Wine to be able to support OpenGL.
116 </para>
117 <para>
118 If your library does not provide it, you are out of luck.
119 </para>
120 <note>
121 <para>
122 this is not completely true as one could rewrite a
123 <function>glXGetProcAddressARB</function> replacement
124 using <function>dlopen</function> and friends, but well,
125 telling people to upgrade is easier :-).
126 </para>
127 </note>
128 </sect2>
129 </sect1>
131 <sect1 id="opengl-configure">
132 <title>How to configure</title>
134 <para>
135 Configuration is quite easy : once OpenGL support has been
136 built in Wine, this internal OpenGL driver will be used each
137 time an application tries to load
138 <filename>opengl32.dll</filename>.
139 </para>
140 <para>
141 Due to restrictions (that do not exist in Windows) on OpenGL
142 contexts, if you want to prevent the screen to flicker when
143 using OpenGL applications (all games are using double-buffered
144 contexts), you need to set the following option in your
145 <filename>~/.wine/config</filename> file
146 in the [x11drv] section :
147 </para>
148 <programlisting>
149 DesktopDoubleBuffered = Y
150 </programlisting>
151 <para>
152 and to run Wine with the <parameter>--desktop</parameter>
153 option.
154 </para>
155 </sect1>
157 <sect1 id="opengl-works">
158 <title>How it all works</title>
160 <para>
161 The core OpenGL function calls are the same between Windows
162 and Linux. So what is the difficulty to support it in Wine ?
163 Well, there are two different problems :
164 </para>
166 <orderedlist>
167 <listitem>
168 <para>
169 the interface to the windowing system is different for
170 each OS. It's called 'GLX' for Linux (well, for X Window)
171 and 'wgl' for Windows. Thus, one need first to emulate one
172 (wgl) with the other (GLX).
173 </para>
174 </listitem>
175 <listitem>
176 <para>
177 the calling convention between Windows (the 'Pascal'
178 convention or 'stdcall') is different from the one used on
179 Linux (the 'C' convention or 'cdecl'). This means that
180 each call to an OpenGL function must be 'translated' and
181 cannot be used directly by the Windows program.
182 </para>
183 </listitem>
184 </orderedlist>
186 <para>
187 Add to this some brain-dead programs (using GL calls without
188 setting-up a context or deleting three time the same context)
189 and you have still some work to do :-)
190 </para>
192 <sect2>
193 <title>The Windowing system integration</title>
195 <para>
196 This integration is done at two levels :
197 </para>
199 <orderedlist>
200 <listitem>
201 <para>
202 At GDI level for all pixel format selection routines (ie
203 choosing if one wants a depth / alpha buffer, the size
204 of these buffers, ...) and to do the 'page flipping' in
205 double buffer mode. This is implemented in
206 <filename>graphics/x11drv/opengl.c</filename> (all these
207 functions are part of Wine's graphic driver function
208 pointer table and thus could be reimplemented if ever Wine
209 works on another Windowing system than X).
210 </para>
211 </listitem>
212 <listitem>
213 <para>
214 In the <filename>OpenGL32.DLL</filename> itself for all
215 other functionalities (context creation / deletion,
216 querying of extension functions, ...). This is done in
217 <filename>dlls/opengl32/wgl.c</filename>.
218 </para>
219 </listitem>
220 </orderedlist>
221 </sect2>
223 <sect2>
224 <title>The thunks</title>
226 <para>
227 The thunks are the Wine code that does the calling
228 convention translation and they are auto-generated by a Perl
229 script. In Wine's CVS tree, these thunks are already
230 generated for you. Now, if you want to do it yourself, there
231 is how it all works....
232 </para>
233 <para>
234 The script is located in <filename>dlls/opengl32</filename>
235 and is called <command>make_opengl</command>. It requires
236 Perl5 to work and takes two arguments :
237 </para>
239 <orderedlist>
240 <listitem>
241 <para>
242 The first is the path to the OpenGL registry. Now, you
243 will all ask 'but what is the OpenGL registry ?' :-)
244 Well, it's part of the OpenGL sample implementation
245 source tree from SGI (more informations at this URL :
246 <ulink url="http://oss.sgi.com/projects/ogl-sample/">
247 http://oss.sgi.com/projects/ogl-sample/</ulink>.
248 </para>
249 <para>
250 To summarize, these files contain human-readable but
251 easily parsed information on ALL OpenGL core functions
252 and ALL registered extensions (for example the
253 prototype, the OpenGL version, ...).
254 </para>
255 </listitem>
256 <listitem>
257 <para>
258 the second is the OpenGL version to 'simulate'. This
259 fixes the list of functions that the Windows application
260 can link directly to without having to query them from
261 the OpenGL driver. Windows is based, for now, on OpenGL
262 1.1, but the thunks that are in the CVS tree are
263 generated for OpenGL 1.2.
264 </para>
265 <para>
266 This option can have three values:
267 <literal>1.0</literal>, <literal>1.1</literal> and
268 <literal>1.2</literal>.
269 </para>
270 </listitem>
271 </orderedlist>
273 <para>
274 This script generates three files :
275 </para>
277 <orderedlist>
278 <listitem>
279 <para>
280 <filename>opengl32.spec</filename> gives Wine's linker
281 the signature of all function in the
282 <filename>OpenGL32.DLL</filename> library so that the
283 application can link them. Only 'core' functions are
284 listed here.
285 </para>
286 </listitem>
287 <listitem>
288 <para>
289 <filename>opengl_norm.c</filename> contains all the
290 thunks for the 'core' functions. Your OpenGL library
291 must provide ALL the function used in this file as these
292 are not queried at run time.
293 </para>
294 </listitem>
295 <listitem>
296 <para>
297 <filename>opengl_ext.c</filename> contains all the
298 functions that are not part of the 'core' functions.
299 Contrary to the thunks in
300 <filename>opengl_norm.c</filename>, these functions do
301 not depend at all on what your libGL provides.
302 </para>
303 <para>
304 In fact, before using one of these thunks, the Windows
305 program first needs to 'query' the function pointer. At
306 this point, the corresponding thunk is useless. But as
307 we first query the same function in libGL and store the
308 returned function pointer in the thunk, the latter
309 becomes functional.
310 </para>
311 </listitem>
312 </orderedlist>
313 </sect2>
314 </sect1>
316 <sect1 id="opengl-problems">
317 <title>Known problems - shortcomings</title>
319 <sect2>
320 <title>Missing GLU32.DLL</title>
322 <para>
323 GLU is a library that is layered upon OpenGL. There is a
324 100% correspondence between the
325 <filename>libGLU.so</filename> that is used on Linux and
326 <filename>GLU32.DLL</filename>.
327 </para>
328 <para>
329 As for the moment, I did not create a set of thunks to support this
330 library natively in Wine (it would easy to do, but I am waiting for
331 a better solution than adding another autogenerated thunk file), you
332 can always download anywhere on the net (it's free) a
333 <filename>GLU32.DLL</filename> file (by browsing, for example,
334 <ulink url="http://www.dll-files.com/dllindex/index.shtml">
335 http://www.dll-files.com/dllindex/index.shtml</ulink>).
336 </para>
337 </sect2>
339 <sect2>
340 <title>OpenGL not detected at configure time</title>
342 <para>
343 See section (I) for a detailed explanation of the
344 <filename>configure</filename> requirements.
345 </para>
346 </sect2>
348 <sect2>
349 <title>When running an OpenGL application, the screen flickers</title>
351 <para>
352 See section (II) for how to create the context
353 double-buffered and thus preventing this flicker effect.
354 </para>
355 </sect2>
357 <sect2>
358 <title>Wine gives me the following error message : </title>
360 <screen>
361 Extension defined in the OpenGL library but NOT in opengl_ext.c...
362 Please report (lionel.ulmer@free.fr) !
363 </screen>
365 <para>
366 This means that the extension requested by the application
367 is found in the libGL used by Linux (ie the call to
368 <function>glXGetProcAddressARB</function> returns a
369 non-<constant>NULL</constant> pointer) but that this string
370 was NOT found in Wine's extension registry.
371 </para>
372 <para>
373 This can come from two causes :
374 </para>
376 <orderedlist>
377 <listitem>
378 <para>
379 The <filename>opengl_ext.c</filename> file is too old
380 and needs to be generated again.
381 </para>
382 </listitem>
383 <listitem>
384 <para>
385 Use of obsolete extensions that are not supported
386 anymore by SGI or of 'private' extensions that are not
387 registered. An example of the former are
388 <function>glMTexCoord2fSGIS</function> and
389 <function>glSelectTextureSGIS</function> as used by
390 Quake 2 (and apparently also by old versions of Half
391 Life). If documentation can be found on these functions,
392 they can be added to Wine's extension set.
393 </para>
394 </listitem>
395 </orderedlist>
397 <para>
398 If you have this, run with <parameter>--debugmsg
399 +opengl</parameter> and send me
400 <email>lionel.ulmer@free.fr</email> the TRACE.
401 </para>
402 </sect2>
404 <sect2>
405 <title><filename>libopengl32.so</filename> is built but it is still not working</title>
407 <para>
408 This may be caused by some missing functions required by
409 <filename>opengl_norm.c</filename> but that your Linux
410 OpenGL library does not provide.
411 </para>
412 <para>
413 To check for this, do the following steps :
414 </para>
416 <orderedlist>
417 <listitem>
418 <para>
419 create a dummy <filename>.c</filename> file :
420 </para>
421 <programlisting>
422 int main(void) {
423 return 0;
425 </programlisting>
426 </listitem>
427 <listitem>
428 <para>
429 try to compile it by linking both libwine and
430 libopengl32 (this command line supposes that you
431 installed the Wine libraries in
432 <filename>/usr/local/lib</filename>, YMMV) :
433 </para>
434 <programlisting>
435 gcc dummy.c -L/usr/local/lib -lwine -lopengl32
436 </programlisting>
437 </listitem>
438 <listitem>
439 <para>
440 if it works, the problem is somewhere else (and you can
441 send me an email). If not, you could re-generate the
442 thunk files for OpenGL 1.1 for example (and send me your
443 OpenGL version so that this problem can be detected at
444 configure time).
445 </para>
446 </listitem>
447 </orderedlist>
448 </sect2>
449 </sect1>
450 </chapter>
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