Book Image

Learning Vulkan

By : Parminder Singh
Book Image

Learning Vulkan

By: Parminder Singh

Overview of this book

Vulkan, the next generation graphics and compute API, is the latest offering by Khronos. This API is the successor of OpenGL and unlike OpenGL, it offers great flexibility and high performance capabilities to control modern GPU devices. With this book, you'll get great insights into the workings of Vulkan and how you can make stunning graphics run with minimum hardware requirements. We begin with a brief introduction to the Vulkan system and show you its distinct features with the successor to the OpenGL API. First, you will see how to establish a connection with hardware devices to query the available queues, memory types, and capabilities offered. Vulkan is verbose, so before diving deep into programing, you’ll get to grips with debugging techniques so even first-timers can overcome error traps using Vulkan’s layer and extension features. You’ll get a grip on command buffers and acquire the knowledge to record various operation commands into command buffer and submit it to a proper queue for GPU processing. We’ll take a detailed look at memory management and demonstrate the use of buffer and image resources to create drawing textures and image views for the presentation engine and vertex buffers to store geometry information. You'll get a brief overview of SPIR-V, the new way to manage shaders, and you'll define the drawing operations as a single unit of work in the Render pass with the help of attachments and subpasses. You'll also create frame buffers and build a solid graphics pipeline, as well as making use of the synchronizing mechanism to manage GPU and CPU hand-shaking. By the end, you’ll know everything you need to know to get your hands dirty with the coolest Graphics API on the block.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Learning Vulkan
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Summary


In this chapter, we learned about the various pipelines available in the Vulkan API. We understood the graphics and compute pipelines and implemented one of the former in our sample example. We also learned about the pipeline cache object, which is a pool of pipelines that help in achieving better performance. The pipeline cache object can be stored in binary form and can be later uploaded and reused between application runs.

The graphics pipeline comprises many pipeline state objects. In this chapter, we covered all the states in detail along with their implementation. As part of these pipeline state objects, we discussed the dynamics state, vertex input state, input assembly state, rasterization, blending, viewport management, depth and stencil test, and multisampling state.

Finally, we used the pipeline cache object and pipeline state objects to build a graphics pipeline object.

In the next chapter, we will make use of the created graphics pipeline object and render our first Vulkan...